Description
Book SynopsisAcross the world, millions of people are taking to the streets demanding urgent action on climate breakdown and other environmental emergencies. Extinction Rebellion, Fridays for Future and Climate Strikes are part of a new lexicon of environmental protest advocating civil disobedience to leverage change. This groundbreaking book -- also a Special Issue of the
Journal of Human Rights and the Environment -- critically unveils the legal and political context of this new wave of eco-activisms. It illustrates how the practise of dissent builds on a long tradition of grassroots activism, such as the Anti-Nuclear movement, but brings into focus new participants, such as school children, and new distinctive aesthetic tactics, such as the mass ‘die-ins’ and ‘discobedience’ theatrics in public spaces.
Expert international authors offer fresh insights into the strategies and goals of these protest movements, the changing vocabulary of environmental activism, such as the ‘climate emergency’, and the contribution of specific protest actors, particularly youth and Indigenous peoples. They also consider how some governments have responded to these actions with draconian anti-protest legislation, and by using the Covid-19 pandemic as cover to keep protesters off the streets. The scholarly analyses are complemented with first-hand interviews of some leading protagonists, including Extinction Rebellion leaders and Green Party politicians. The result is an unrivalled analysis of the role of new environmental protest movements seeking to drive a new generation of policies and laws for climate action and social justice.
This impressive book will prove an important and insightful read for students and scholars interested in environmental law, climate law, and grass roots activism specifically.
Trade Review’Extinction Rebellion, children’s climate strikes, Indigenous anti-pipeline protests and proliferating citizen science brigades have lent new urgency to the perennial question of the role of direct action and civil disobedience in struggles for environmental and racial justice. This timely, eclectic, interdisciplinary volume provides invaluable insight into the sources, goals, tactics, prospects and impacts of -- and often draconian governmental reactions to -- these exciting contemporary movements that employ non-violent mass mobilisation to spur action on ecological and social emergencies. It makes a landmark contribution to empirical and theoretical knowledge in this rapidly evolving field.’ -- Stepan Wood, Canada Research Chair in Law, Society & Sustainability, University of British Columbia, Canada
Table of ContentsVolume 11, Special Issue, 2020 Contents: Editorial Introduction Benjamin J. Richardson Articles Can climate activism deliver transformative change: Extinction Rebellion, business & people power Neil Gunningham Cultivating ethics of decolonizing allyship in climate organizing: reflections on Extinction Rebellion Vancouver Dana James and Trevor Mack Moral education in the face of orthodoxy – environmental crisis and dissent Francine Rochford Exploring legitimization strategies for contested uses of citizen-generated data for policy? Anna Berti Suman, Sven Schade and Yasuhito Abe Victim, litigant, activist, messiah: the child in a time of climate change Nicole Rogers A colonized COP: Indigenous exclusion and youth climate justice activism at the United Nations climate change negotiations Corrie Grosse and Brigid Mark Pipelines in the time of Indigenous resurgence Tyler McCreary Interviews XR representatives Claire Burgess and Rupert Reed Green politicians Jonathan Bartley, Paul Manley and Chloe Swarbrick