Perkins, Patricia E. (Ellie)2020-02-292020-02-292019-08“Commoning and climate justice,” in ​Making commons dynamic: Understanding change through commonisation and decommonisation​, edited by Prateep Nayak, (Routledge Studies in Environment, Culture, and Society Series), submitted April 2018.https://hdl.handle.net/10315/37030Commoning represents a dynamic and emergent means of risk-reduction and livelihood provision which can address the shortcomings of both market and state-oriented economic systems -- increasingly relevant as climate change threatens human subsistence worldwide. This paper brings together international examples of responses to climate-related threats that are collective (not privatizing), to provide preliminary empirical evidence about how and in what circumstances people may develop equitable communal institutions rather than ones that worsen community fragmentation. The examples include traditional and new forms of commons which help to meet local subsistence needs and develop communities’ social, political and economic resilience in the face of climate change, exploring how climate justice -- improving the local and global equity of climate change impacts and processes – can advance in parallel with commons development.enAttribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.5 Canadacommoningcommunity resiliencecommunity developmentclimate justiceclimate risk reductionparticipatory governancesocial capitalecological economicspolitical ecologyequityecofeminismsocial learningsubsistencelivelihoodsCommoning and climate justiceBook Chapter