Home » Resource Hub

Southeast [US Climate Reslience Toolkit]

The Southeast’s population faces increasing threats from rising sea levels and increased frequency, intensity, and duration of heat waves, which prompt greater risks of wildfires. These extreme weather events impact human health, ecosystems, economies, infrastructure, and food systems, particularly in urban areas of the region. Climate stressors such as drought and increases in heat extremes are expected to disproportionately affect communities of color and other energy-burdened groups. The Southeast is projected to have the highest number of premature deaths due to climate-induced increases in air pollution. Compared with other regions, the Southeast faces the largest economic risks from climate change impacts. Rural and place-based economies that rely on the region’s ecosystems are particularly at risk from current and future climate changes, including fishing, agricultural, and tourism-based economies. Coordinated climate strategies could improve equity, well-being, and economic vitality. While there have been notable advancements in adaptation throughout the region, these efforts tend to be concentrated in wealthier coastal and metropolitan areas, leaving rural and other under-resourced communities at risk.

Resource Details

Organization: US Climate Reslience Toolkit
Date: 16 November 2023 - 12:20pm
Resource Type: Data, Resources
Topic: Climate Adaptation & Resilience, Conservation & Biodiversity, Environmental Justice, Green Space, Popular Education

Related resources (by topic)

AFRICAN AMERICAN SCIENTISTS, ENVIRONMENTALISTS AND ACTIVISTS YOU SHOULD KNOW (PART 1)

Hello Internet. It’s February and you know what that means. Well, you might know what that means. In California the evergreen pear, Pyrus kawakamii, is in bloom and it’s limbs are heavy with white flowers. Valentine’s day, the pink and…

Agents of Change Podcast

Biweekly conversations that dive into the career paths, the research, and the big ideas from past and present fellows and other leaders in the field of environmental justice.

Alaska and the Arctic [US Climate Reslience Toolkit]

Warming temperatures, thawing permafrost, and other climate-related changes in Alaska are transforming ecosystems, disrupting cultural practices, harming fisheries and other livelihoods, exacerbating health disparities, and placing critical infrastructure at risk. Many Alaskans, particularly Alaska Native Peoples, have a distinct connection…

All My Environmental Heroes Are Black Women

I don’t want to read about John Muir anymore. I know his story after studying Environmental Science and Policy because it flows throughout the curriculum. I’ve grown tired of single-lens environmental narratives that prioritize male, mostly white, perspectives. Why are…

Help us expand the Resource Hub

Share resources that you think would be a good addition to this tool and our team will review them for inclusion in future updates.