Climate change poses a threat to heritage globally. Decolonial approaches to climate change heritage research and practice can begin to address systemic inequities, recognise the breadth of heritage, and strengthen adaptation action globally.
Main textClimate change is an increasing focus of heritage research across Europe and North America, including identification of site-specific adaptation options for heritage perservation 1, 2 . In contrast, climate change research in low-and middle-income countries (LMICs) is limited due to systemic gaps in access to funding and its associated knowledge generation and thought leadership 3,4 , and rarely concentrates on heritage 5,6 (see Fig. 1). As heritage includes all the inherited traditions, monuments, objects, places and culture, as well as contemporary activities, knowledge, meanings and behaviours that are drawn from them 7 , its preservation is crucial for all societies. Heritage can be tangible, in the case of objects or monuments, or intangible, including cultural practices and traditions, cultural identity, and sense of place. Across LMICs, tangible and intangible heritage coexist, commonly without clear delineations between them.