Franco, Jennifer C.Borras Jr., Saturnino M.2020-09-292020-09-292019-03-200264-8377http://hdl.handle.net/10625/59539Climate change and green grabbing/resource grabbing together call for nuanced understanding of governance imperatives, and for constructing a knowledge base appropriate to political intervention. This paper offers preliminary ways in which interconnections can be seen and understood, and their implications for research and politics explored. It concludes by way of a preliminary discussion of the notion of ‘agrarian climate justice’ as a possible framework for formal governance or political activism relevant to tackling grey area interconnections. “Green grabbing” is resource grabbing in the name of the environment; the paper recognizes politics of climate change as analytically distinct from ‘climate change.’application/pdfenLAND GRABBINGGREEN GRABBINGCLIMATE CHANGE VULNERABILITYMONITORING AND EVALUATIONCLIMATE CHANGE POLICYLAND ADMINISTRATIONAGRARIAN STRUCTURELAND USE CHANGEEXPLOITATIONLAND RIGHTSVULNERABLE GROUPSCLIMATE JUSTICECAMBODIAMYANMARFAR EAST ASIAGrey areas in green grabbing : subtle and indirect interconnections between climate change politics and land grabs and their implications for researchJournal Article (peer-reviewed)