Inequality, Pandemics and Climate Change featuring Richard Wilkinson
2021 間眅埶AV Vancouver Speaker Series
2021, Equity + Justice, Climate + Environment, Series 間眅埶AV Vancouver Speaker Series
Richard Wilkinson is one of the worlds leading experts on the health and social impacts of inequalitywhich have been impossible to ignore, and deeply exacerbated, during the COVID-19 pandemic.
His decades of research show that countries with greater income inequality have worse health and social outcomes at all levels of society. Lifespans are shorter, rates of violence, addiction and imprisonment are higher, and educational performance is lower. Inequality also is tied to chronic stress, anxiety and depression.
Wilkinson argues that socioeconomic inequality erodes our social fabric, decreases our trust in each other, reduces political stability and undermines our resilience to major shocksfrom pandemics to climate change. Thus, addressing inequality must be central to Canadas policy framework, and at the heart of our response to all our challenges.
In this 間眅埶AV Vancouver Speaker Series lecture, Wilkinson will address how inequality affected the pandemic experience and response, and how we can improve quality of life post-COVID as we face the ultimate challenge of the climate crisis.
Wilkinson will be joined by Maya Gislason (Assistant Professor in 間眅埶AVs Faculty of Health Sciences) and Chuka Ejeckam (political researcher and writer) for a wide-ranging conversation and audience Q&A moderated by CBC journalist Laura Lynch, host of on CBC Radio.
Points of discussion will include:
- What is the relationship between inequality, rates of transmission and vaccination and vaccine hesitancy?
- How did inequality in Canada affect the worst outcomes of the COVID-19 pandemic?
- How can reducing inequality better equip us to respond to the climate crisis?
- How does the reduction of inequality improve economic outcomes for everyone?
12:00 p.m. (PT)
Online Event
Accessibility
ASL interpretation and closed captioning in English will be available at this event.
間眅埶AV Vancouver Speaker Series
The 間眅埶AV Vancouver Speaker Series brings global experts to a local audience. Launched in 2012, the series builds on 間眅埶AVs rich history of community engagement by exploring critical issues to contribute to better understanding among Vancouvers citizens through an intellectually enriching experience.
The 間眅埶AV Vancouver Speaker Series is presented by 間眅埶AV Public Square, in partnership with 間眅埶AV Vancouver and 間眅埶AVs Vancity Office of Community Engagement.
Richard Wilkinson has played a formative role in international research on the social determinants of health and on the societal effects of income inequality. He studied economic history at the London School of Economics before training in epidemiology and is a Professor Emeritus of Social Epidemiology at the University of Nottingham Medical School, Honorary Professor at University College London and Visiting Professor at the University of York.
Wilkinson's books and papers have drawn attention to the tendency for societies with bigger income differences between rich and poor to have a higher prevalence of a wide range of health and social problems. The Spirit Level: Why More Equal Societies Almost Always Do Better, co-written by Wilkinson and Kate Pickett, is a best-seller available in 24 languages. It won the 2011 Political Studies Association Publication of the Year Award and the 2010 Bristol Festival of Ideas Prize, and was chosen as one of the Top Ten Books of the Decade by The New Statesman. In their 2019 book, The Inner Level: How More Equal Societies Reduce Stress, Restore Sanity and Improve Everyone's Well-Being, Wilkinson and Pickett move from the study of inequality on societies to how it affects us individually, and how material inequities have powerful psychological effects.
Wilkinson is also the co-founder of (with support from the Joseph Rowntree Charitable Trust), which seeks to promote public understanding of the effects of inequality. In 2013 Wilkinson received SOLIDAR's Silver Rose Award and Community Access Unlimiteds Humanitarian of the Year Award. The Irish Cancer Society awarded him the 2014 Charles Cully Memorial Medal, and he was the 2017 medalist of the Australian Society for Medical Research.
In the last few years he has given many hundreds of conference addresses and media interviews round the world, including at the World Health Organization, the European Union, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, and the World Bank.
Respondents
Maya Gislason
Assistant Professor, Faculty of Health Sciences, 間眅埶AV
Dr. Gislason is a Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research Scholar, Assistant Professor in the Faculty of Health Sciences at 間眅埶AV and founder of the Research for Eco-social and Equitable Transformation (RESET) team. As an eco-social equity scholar, she works with a range of partners on projects rooted in the ethic of intergenerational climate justice and towards the goal of improving health for people and the planet. Dr. Gislason works with governments using sex- and gender-based analysis approaches to address the impacts of climate change on equity-deserving groups and is championing new work on childrens mental health resilience and climate change.
Chuka Ejeckam
Political researcher and writer
Chuka Ejeckam is a political researcher and writer in British Columbia, and a research associate with the BC Office of the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives. He holds a master's student in political science from the University of British Columbia. He also serves on the steering and advisory committee of the 間眅埶AV Labour Studies Program, and has served on the organizing committee for a UBC Lind Initiative speaker series. His writings can be found at and elsewhere.
Chuka is also a member of the advisory committee for our Towards Equity Community Summit. For more from him, read our On Equity interview with him!
Moderator
Laura Lynch
CBC Journalist
Laura Lynch is an award-winning journalist with the CBC. She is the host of on CBC Radio, which . In the course of her career, she has reported from across Canada and around the world, and has won the prestigious Nieman fellowship from Harvard University, awards from the British Bar Association, the Canadian Bar Association, RTNDA (Canada and U.S.), Overseas Press Club of America, Amnesty International, RNAO and the Gabriel awards. Laura has a law degree from the University of Victoria and a journalism degree from Carleton University.
Recap of Inequality, Pandemics and Climate Change featuring Richard Wilkinson
By Charlene Aviles, Peer Educator, 間眅埶AV Public Square
As part of the 間眅埶AV Vancouver Speaker Series, 間眅埶AV Public Square hosted Inequality, Pandemics, and Climate Change with social epidemiologist Richard Wilkinson. Along with Wilkinson, the event featured 間眅埶AV health sciences associate professor Maya Gislason and political researcher Chuka Ejeckam, with CBC journalist Laura Lynch as moderator.
Read More
At the start of the event, Wilkinson warned against the common theme of unrealistic optimism when talking about climate change. He recognized natural disasters and heat waves are warning signs that climate change is an immediate concern with severe consequences, such as political instability.
According to Wilkinson, the dialogue regarding climate change requires honesty. He pointed out how extreme the climate crisis is: More than half of the [global CO2] emissions, human emissions, since 1750 have come since 1990. That is an indication of the enormous scale at which we are tipping this into the atmosphere.
Wilkinson advocated against fossil fuel use of any kind, while acknowledging that the transition from fossil fuels to renewable energy will be a labour-intensive and time-consuming process. While renewable energy is an alternative energy source, this industry still uses fossil fuels, especially through mining.
We would have to erect, every year for the next 15 years, four times as many wind turbines and three times as many solar panels as the US did in 2019, and then replace the whole stock every 15 to 30 years.
We can no longer hold a comforting idea that sustainability is simply a matter of switching to a new energy system and continuing our high impact lifestyles into the future, said Wilkinson.
He also recognized that as industrialization has increased, overpopulation has exacerbated climate change. Large-scale industrial production means were using somewhere around 1.6 or 1.75 planets, and that means were eating into natural stocks, he said.
According to Wilkinson, increased consumption and consumerism are especially common in regions with higher levels of inequality. Thus, equality for all and climate action are interconnected goals.
Survey results revealed that business leaders in more equal countries give a higher priority to international environmental agreements. For example, these countries have the highest rates of recycled waste.
Chuka Ejeckam responded to Wilkinsons comments on the likelihood of refugees increasing. He was concerned with how governments should balance domestic and international political interests.
The political system, the public and the government have to be willing to reduce the aggregate well-being of people within their own country or jurisdiction to increase the aggregate well-being outside of their countrys jurisdiction, said Ejeckam.
In contrast to Wilkinson, Maya Gislason agreed conversations about climate change should be honest but should circle back to hope.
I think what we call grounded hope in our work is this idea that we tell the truth to ourselves and one another. We are grounded in science, said Gislason. She recognized that youth want to balance out the conversation with ambition, with love [ . . . ] and with a commitment to doing things differently.
Event Recording
CBC's The Early Edition with Stephen Quinn (October 27, 2021)
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