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Adverse Climate: Addressing Inclusion and Diversity Issues in the IPCC’s Sixth Assessment and beyond

Adverse Climate: Addressing Inclusion and Diversity Issues in the IPCC’s Sixth Assessment and beyond

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Authors

Shobha Maharaj , Elisabeth A Gilmore, Rachel Bezner Kerr, Michelle North, Martina Angela Caretta, Miriam Gay-Antaki, Anamika Vajpeyi, Andrew J Constable, Indra D Bhatt, Christopher H Trisos, Daniela N. Schmidt, Debora Ley, Debra C Roberts, Edmond Totin, Francesca Spagnuolo, Mariana M Vale, Melinda Tignor, Yukiko Hirabayashi, Zelina Z Ibrahim, Gautam Talukdar

Abstract

In this essay, we reflect on what it means for the scientific community to collaborate effectively in global scientific assessments, drawing on our experience within the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and with relevance beyond the IPCC to many other scientific collaborations. An effective research culture goes beyond quantitative diversity metrics, which by themselves cannot capture these complexities. Here we amplify IPCC author voices through lived-experience narratives that reveal how systemic barriers limited participation of Global South authors, people of colour, non-native English speakers, early-career scientists, women, and those outside academia during the IPCC's Sixth Assessment Report (AR6), particularly in Working Group II.

These experiences expose the "meritocracy myth" in academia, where privileged individuals claim recognition while ignoring structural advantages, thereby perpetuating power imbalances and limiting equity. We focus on overarching issues that perpetuate exclusion within global scientific assessment reports, some costs if these remain unaddressed, and key considerations toward more inclusive future collaborations. We stress that an effective collaborative culture requires moving beyond diversity metrics: the scientific community must actively dismantle colonial knowledge hierarchies that are silencing diverse perspectives and instead embody the very transformations that we call for in our reports.

Alternative forms of knowledge are often only accepted when verified through reductionist, positivist methods of Western science, and are therefore downplayed. This narrow focus on physics-first objectivity has also proven costly and resource-intensive, reinforcing one-way knowledge and technology transfers from the Global North to the Global South. This devaluation extends beyond knowledge systems themselves, as reflected in the lived experiences we share below—where Global South contributions were marginalized even when discussions centered on so-called ‘objective’ science. Unless these deeper dynamics—and the value systems that sustain them—are confronted and addressed, well-intentioned reforms risk sliding into tokenism, treating symptoms rather than causes.

We cannot continue with business as usual, celebrating diversity statistics while power structures remain unchanged. We must embrace diversity and inclusion for the difficult work of genuine transformation. This choice extends far beyond the IPCC to every major scientific collaboration, every editorial board, every hiring decision, every funding decision and every assessment report.

DOI

https://doi.org/10.31223/X59X6S

Subjects

Social and Behavioral Sciences

Keywords

climate change, IPCC, Diversity Equity and Inclusion, Global South - Global North dynamics, People of Colour, Lived experiences

Dates

Published: 2025-09-12 17:25

Last Updated: 2025-09-12 17:25

License

CC BY Attribution 4.0 International

Additional Metadata

Data Availability (Reason not available):
This is an essay based on the lived experiences of authors from the IPCC's AR6 (WGII). Our data consists of first and 3rd person quotes experiences of discrimination faced during the Report's development. Due to the sensitive nature of these quotes, we are unable to share beyond what is written in the essay itself.