Risingtide gathering October 2001: Manchester
The workshop was aimed at discussing the relationship
between social and environmental issues, what this means for campaigning,
relationships between activists and diversity in movements for change.
One way to unite these things is with the approach of environmental
justice, which connects environmental and social issues from
a grassroots perspective. The concept originated in the US and the
south from local campaigning activities in communities.
What became clear was that poverty and environmental problems went
hand in hand. This seems an obvious conclusion but the activist
movement in Europe and the west has been largely unsuccessful at
incorporating this reality into their work, thus preventing true
solidarity leading the way.
The main topic of discussion in the workshop was
how this reality could influence the work of activists within the
UK specifically. The answer was to take on, talk to, research, read
and learn the realities first of the communities that activists
would like to reach out to, then approach them on their own terms.
Find out what climate change means to people in their lives. One
concrete way to do this, after a little bit of brainstorming, was
the idea of campaigning for the end to fuel poverty.
On the international level, and in terms of solidarity
with people in the south (the first and most severely
affected by climate change) we must take account of other issues
that these communities are also affected by. Many progressive southern
NGOs and communities link climate change with economic and social
inequality caused by international economic institutions such as
the World Bank and the World Trade Organisation. In order to work
effectively together, activists in the west should be aware of these
connections and take on this analysis when viewing the problem of
climate change. This is why aspects of the Kyoto Protocol such as
the Flexible Mechanisms can be seen as undesirable solutions
to climate change. They may have an effect on reducing CO2 emissions
(although this is also scientifically unproven) but they have negative
social and economic implications inequalities in the world. Climate
change can be seen as a catalyst for those inequalities but also
an opportunity to prevent them worsening or even to reverse them.
This is the most important aspect of approaching climate change
from an environmental justice perspective.
For more info email: heidi@risingtide.nl