Abstract
This report organizes a scholarly operational-epistemic constellation of “racial weathering.” I use this as an expansive framework that draws together critical public health, Black, feminist, Indigenous geographies, critical science studies, and anticolonial work on bodies, weather, and environment. Interweaving bio, geo-, and socio-political scales and insights on the conditioning of bodies, I consider the power-laden complexities of embodied processes and non-deterministic, materially embedded conditions of living and of weathering violence that shape health and well-being. Report 1 reviews current scholarship and diverse case studies on weaponized weathering and violent climatizations, followed by breathing and storytelling to highlight abolitionist/decolonial responses.
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