Goldin, J.Owen, G.Lebese, A.2021-08-022021-08-022017Goldin, J. et al. (2017).Towards an ethnography of climate change variability: Perceptions and coping mechanisms of women and men from Lambani village, Limpopo province . Human Geography(United Kingdom), 10(2), 1–15. https://doi.org/10.1177/1942778617010002012633-674Xhttps://doi.org/10.1177/194277861701000201http://hdl.handle.net/10566/6480Attention to gender and equity has lagged behind in climate change research, programming, national policy-making and in the international negotiations. Studies on climate change and gender links with climate change have initially and by necessity been somewhat speculative in nature. While all societies are affected by climate change, the impacts also vary by location, exposure, and context specific social characteristics, identity, power relations and political economy. This draws attention to recognition of difference and sameness and the way in which common, confusing, contradictory results emerge across and within terrains. In its concern for gender-blindness, this paper specifically considers the way in which climate variability impacts on men and women in a given locale and captures the enriched narratives and voices of both rural women and men in two selected villages in Lambani, Limpopo Province, South Africa.enClimate changeEntanglementsEmoticonsGenderLimpopo provinceTowards an ethnography of climate change variability: Perceptions and coping mechanisms of women and men from Lambani village, Limpopo provinceArticle