Organizing Cools the Planet: Tools and Reflections on Navigating the Climate Crisis
Organizing Cools The Planet weaves together stories, analysis, organizing tools, and provocative questions, to offer a snapshot of U.S. climate activism and provide pathways for readers to participate in it. Authors share hard lessons learned, reflect on strategy, and grapple with the challenges of their roles as organizers who do not come from “frontline” communities, but work to amplify and build a climate justice movement led by low-income people, communities of color, Indigenous, youth and other constituencies most directly impacted by the crisis. Rooted in the authors’ experiences organizing in local, national, and international arenas, this pamphlet grapples with the challenges and overwhelming odds young activists face today. Organizing Cools the Planet challenges readers to look at the scale of ecological collapse with open eyes, without falling prey to disempowering doomsday narratives. It asks key pressing questions for those who wish to take our generational challenge seriously. This pamphlet is for anyone who wants to build a movement with the resiliency to navigate one of the most rapid transitions in human history.
1103040797
Organizing Cools the Planet: Tools and Reflections on Navigating the Climate Crisis
Organizing Cools The Planet weaves together stories, analysis, organizing tools, and provocative questions, to offer a snapshot of U.S. climate activism and provide pathways for readers to participate in it. Authors share hard lessons learned, reflect on strategy, and grapple with the challenges of their roles as organizers who do not come from “frontline” communities, but work to amplify and build a climate justice movement led by low-income people, communities of color, Indigenous, youth and other constituencies most directly impacted by the crisis. Rooted in the authors’ experiences organizing in local, national, and international arenas, this pamphlet grapples with the challenges and overwhelming odds young activists face today. Organizing Cools the Planet challenges readers to look at the scale of ecological collapse with open eyes, without falling prey to disempowering doomsday narratives. It asks key pressing questions for those who wish to take our generational challenge seriously. This pamphlet is for anyone who wants to build a movement with the resiliency to navigate one of the most rapid transitions in human history.
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Organizing Cools the Planet: Tools and Reflections on Navigating the Climate Crisis

Organizing Cools the Planet: Tools and Reflections on Navigating the Climate Crisis

by Joshua Kahn Russell, Hilary Moore
Organizing Cools the Planet: Tools and Reflections on Navigating the Climate Crisis

Organizing Cools the Planet: Tools and Reflections on Navigating the Climate Crisis

by Joshua Kahn Russell, Hilary Moore

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Overview

Organizing Cools The Planet weaves together stories, analysis, organizing tools, and provocative questions, to offer a snapshot of U.S. climate activism and provide pathways for readers to participate in it. Authors share hard lessons learned, reflect on strategy, and grapple with the challenges of their roles as organizers who do not come from “frontline” communities, but work to amplify and build a climate justice movement led by low-income people, communities of color, Indigenous, youth and other constituencies most directly impacted by the crisis. Rooted in the authors’ experiences organizing in local, national, and international arenas, this pamphlet grapples with the challenges and overwhelming odds young activists face today. Organizing Cools the Planet challenges readers to look at the scale of ecological collapse with open eyes, without falling prey to disempowering doomsday narratives. It asks key pressing questions for those who wish to take our generational challenge seriously. This pamphlet is for anyone who wants to build a movement with the resiliency to navigate one of the most rapid transitions in human history.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781604866377
Publisher: PM Press
Publication date: 11/01/2011
Series: PM Pamphlet
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 64
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Joshua Kahn Russell is a strategy and non-violent direct action trainer with the Ruckus Society, and serves communities impacted by fossil fuel extraction. He works internationally with the Climate Justice Now! network to bring justice to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and has been a leading voice in the International Youth Climate Movement. Joshua spent four years as Rainforest Action Network’s Grassroots Actions Manager, campaigning to end our addiction to coal and oil. His articles have appeared in Yes! Magazine, Left Turn Magazine, Peacework Magazine, Upping the Anti, and Z Magazine. 

Hilary Moore is a core organizer with Rising Tide Bay Area, a grassroots all-volunteer organization focused on direct action and education to confront the root causes of climate change. She is a founding organizer of the Mobilization for Climate Justice-West, a grassroots coalition of advocacy, community-based, and direct action organizations in the Bay Area dedicated to keeping frontline communities at the forefront of the struggle. She is finishing a graduate degree with the Institute for Social Ecology, focusing on building collective practices of care within communities engaged in resistance and struggle.

Read an Excerpt

Organizing Cools the Planet

Tools and Reflections to Navigate the Climate Crisis


By Hilary Moore, Joshua Kahn Russell

PM Press

Copyright © 2011 Hilary Moore and Joshua Kahn Russell
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-60486-637-7



CHAPTER 1

FIND YOUR FRONTLINE


The challenge of modernity is to live without illusions and without becoming disillusioned.

— Antonio Gramsci


THE WORLD AS WE SEE IT

Two days before the manuscript for this booklet was due, Japan had the largest earthquake in its history, pushing tsunami waves across the entire Pacific Ocean. The earthquake shifted Japan's coastline eight feet and tilted the whole Earth's axis. This year, the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration recorded the highest land temperatures in human history, yet again. Immediate effects include fifteen thousand heat deaths in Russia, accompanied by record wildfires devastating crops and skyrocketing prices of corn and wheat. Record droughts have ravaged Pakistan. In Latin America, record rainfalls washed away entire mountainsides. While the two of us refuse to be paralyzed by the end-of-the-world-mongers, it is undeniable that we're living in exponential times.

But digging up all the carbon Mother Nature sequestered underground and burning it for energy didn't just happen. It was the result of an ever-expanding global economy. Turns out, it's impossible to have infinite growth on a finite planet. The basic logic in our economic system is bursting.

Just as the climate crisis is one symptom of our current economic system, we're facing other ecological crises too: fisheries are collapsing, species are disappearing faster than the last great extinction, drinkable water is vanishing. The climate crisis is just one expansive element of many overlapping crises associated with the collapse of the ecological systems that support life on this planet. In fact, we're living during a period of the most rapid transformation in human history on all facets of life: technological, political, cultural, ecological, economic ...

Okay. That's a bit overwhelming. But it's clear that stoking our cultural fear of some "doomsday" in the future is not useful for building organizations, community, and mobilizing people to create a livable future; or for preventing the worst impacts of runaway climate chaos.

People often talk of climate change as a single apocalyptic event that may happen in the future; either humanity averts it, or we do not. The reality is that the impacts of climate change have been happening for quite a while to peoples across the planet and are now increasing in their number, severity, and location. In fact, climate destabilization accelerates and amplifies the other crises that marginalized people have been dealing with for generations.

Therefore, we see our main challenge as finding ways to navigate the multiple crises that are already changing our lives. What we do next will determine the scale and the scope of our transition. When we think about it that way, having hope at the center of our work makes sense in the face of such overwhelming odds.

So if collapses are already here, and we see more and more coming, our question isn't whether we can "solve the climate crisis," but how do we navigate change? Will there be justice on the other side? That is our work together. That is where we find vision and inspiration.

Liberation struggles throughout history have always been urgent. They have always been life-or-death, but each have had their own timeline. For example, if you are working to decolonize your country from a European occupier, you fight until you win. The ecological crisis we face has that dimension, plus a science-based timeline that we can't negotiate with. What we do in the next two years will determine the landscape for the next ten years, which will determine the landscape for the next one hundred years.

No pressure.

Because of this timeline imposed on us by Nature (and revealed by science), social movements must ask new questions that we wouldn't be asking if we had all the time we wanted. Because ecological collapse is embedded in all aspects of life on this planet, we need to think about scale in new ways. Social movements need to make unlikely alliances that we wouldn't otherwise make. We therefore need a political compass with which to navigate these choices in a strategic and principled way.

This booklet is an effort to tune that compass for the task ahead of all of us. We hope it will be useful to you too, in locating yourself and your work in relation to the expanding North American Climate Justice movement.

The least likely future is one in which things stay the same. One way or another, the existing culture and economy will need to shift to meet the ecological disruptions it is causing.

We may face a scorched and lifeless earth. But they're accountable to their shareholders first. That's how the world works.

— Propagandhi


Some of those in power are squinting over these turbulent, unpredictable waters along with us, wondering how to make it across. Corporations are finding ways to fleece our crises, proposing schemes to make money from our disasters and calling them "climate solutions." Pentagon projections focus on new kinds of warfare in a resource-depleted landscape driven by climate chaos. It's clear that the business-as-usual crowd is thinking about scale in this transition. Their main motivation is to keep the big "status quo" ship sailing through the storm, maintaining their own wealth and power as much as they can. The "status quo" is dynamic and adaptive.

Unlike the power-holders, when we gaze across the rough sea, our motivation is to create the most equitable lifeboats possible, so we can all live well through what will be a bumpy ride. Our task is to navigate change differently than those in power.


THE POINT OF THIS BOOKLET


Find your frontline — Align it with others'


Walk the street with us into history. Get off the sidewalk.

— Dolores Huerta


We're still wrestling with our own particular roles inside movements for social change in general, and understanding the framework of "climate justice" in particular. Unsatisfied with the notions of "solidarity" (though we also do solidarity work) or the identity of "ally" (though we also consider ourselves allies) that used to offer us clarity, we searched for a way to think of our work that can holistically capture the nuance of our moment.

We are part of a community of practice that has been thinking through useful ways to understand these concepts, and we owe a lot to the ideas of our peers and mentors. The thinking in this section is drawn heavily from contributions from grassroots organizers involved in the 2010 U.S. Social Forum EcoJustice People's Movement Assembly process, the "CJ in the USA: Root-Cause Remedies, Rights, Reparations, and Representation statement," the "Grassroots Organizing Cools the Planet" open letter (inspired by La Via Campesina's slogan "Small Farmers Cool the Planet'), the work of Movement Generation, Occidental Arts and Ecology Center, and others who have been making thoughtful contributions to how we articulate our challenge.

The fact is that climate change does affect everybody. We believe that in order to build a popular movement, we need to reach out to everyone we can to help them understand the ways that their own lives are impacted by the crisis, and that there are real ways to take action. Therefore we need to start by helping people name their own impact. But as organizers, we need to take a step back first, and understand the context we're operating in. The slogan "We're all in this together" is true but misleading: climate change certainly doesn't affect everybody equally.


Environmental Justice

Our framework starts by honoring the roots of the U.S. Environmental Justice (EJ) movement and how it has contributed to Climate Justice. While we all have a stake in a livable planet, the insight that EJ offers the world is understanding disproportionate impact. The Environmental Justice sense of "impact" is how racism and poverty determine which communities choke on exhaust from incinerators and refineries, and which communities have their land razed and resources taken to power U.S. cities. Those of us who have the luxury of turning on our lights and not thinking about where that power came from have a lot of privilege at the expense of others. That privilege determines which communities don't suffer from skyrocketing rates of asthma or leukemia, rare cancers, and other manifestations of toxic dumping, spewing, and pumping.


Impact

When we move from Environmental Justice to Climate Justice, the ways we think about impact become much broader. We're not just focusing on root causes of point-source pollution or heavy metals in the water supply; we're taking a step back and looking at other parts of the broader climate crisis, too. From that vantage point, frontlines are all around us, and the "win" is transformation of the economy and our relationships.

Ways you are impacted might be ...

• Your sister or brother is stationed in the ongoing occupation of Iraq or another war to secure fossil fuel resources.

• You live in California where two nuclear power plants are sited on fault lines, just like Japan.

• You are a U.S.-born child of undocumented immigrants in Phoenix, Arizona, facing deportation. You find there are some out-of-touch environmentalists using "resource consumption" and population growth as an argument in support of inhumane anti-immigration laws.

• Your family has worked in the Michigan auto industry for generations, but no one in your town can find those jobs since they've been outsourced to the global economy.

• You live on the coast of Maine and the fisheries that have sustained your family for generations are no longer viable.

• You are a union teacher in Wisconsin who just lost your collective bargaining rights under the pretence of "balancing the budget" in a recession driven by chronic insecurity.

• You live in a place like Las Vegas, which will have a watershed that is incapable of supporting its population in the foreseeable future.

• You live in the Gulf Coast and the oil spills have destroyed your family's ability to fish for a living.


As we can see, not all "impact" is equal or the same, but when we look at the economic and political roots of the climate crisis, we can all find ways we're affected.


Community

For now, let's define "community" loosely as a group of people. We'll zoom in to some of the different kinds of communities and the ways organizers relate to them on page 27.


Frontline

The reason we differentiate between "frontline" communities and "impacted" communities is an added layer of action. Frontline communities are directly impacted communities who have been able to collectively name the ways they are burdened and are organizing for action together.


Frontline Solutions

Organizing for action doesn't just mean stopping the bad stuff. We believe in building a movement that lifts up, and leads with, climate solutions from the frontlines. The communities most directly impacted on the frontlines are not only dealing with the brunt of the problem, but are also best equipped with the knowledge and skills to chart the way forward. For example, the cycle of globalized industrial extraction, production, consumption and waste, also produces chronic food insecurity. Over one billion people struggling to afford more than one meal a day are mostly small farming communities that know best how to feed people, in their own context. Such traditional farming techniques remain sustainable and viable when freed from the stranglehold of the global economy. This doesn't mean that frontline communities "have all the answers" or can offer a one-size-fits-all solution to a global crisis, but it does mean that when building viable solutions, we don't need to start from scratch. Humans have known how to live in balance with their environment for the majority of our history, and many still do today. Furthermore, because frontline communities are by definition organized, they are in a position to apply their knowledge to the problem.


Tuning Our Political Compass:

• How can taking inspiration from frontline solutions inform your own solutions where you live?

• How do we think about the scale of our solutions to make a credible case for closing the door to geoengineering and other proposals that make our problem worse?

• There are lots of community solutions everywhere you look, but often people don't see them. How can we connect them into a broader popular narrative that is accessible and compelling?


Learning from these communities helps all of us envision what genuine solutions look like in our own communities and gives us inspiration to build them. That's why there's room for everybody in this movement. We need everybody in this movement if we're going to navigate the transition. But it does mean that our roles are different depending on our impact. So what happens if I am not from an "EJ community" or a place that fits traditional notions of what a "frontline community" is? What's my role in this work?


Find Your Frontline

My role becomes clearer if I find my frontline. Figure out the material and systemic impact that climate change has on me and my community, name it, and get organized around it.

Maybe that's where I should take action — and maybe not. Everyone has a frontline, but not all frontlines are equally strategic.

Here's an example. Both of us writing this booklet have been relatively insulated from skyrocketing food prices or toxic emissions from the polluting industries that are screwing up our planet, and we can see that that very insulation has shifted burden further on the poor. But we also know that eventually water insecurity will hit us. In that case, that particular frontline may not feel so urgent that it's constraining our immediate choices today. Maybe the best way to serve our own com-munities — to intervene on our frontlines — is to throw down directly with other folks on their frontline.

The mantra "think globally, act locally" works for individual action but quickly breaks down when we're thinking about systematic change, since not all localities are equally relevant to the global economy. Instead, Climate Justice calls on us to "think structurally, act strategically" (though it may not be as catchy on a bumper sticker). Therefore, if your frontline doesn't offer immediate action opportunities (or if they are not impactful at this moment), you need to align it with other frontlines.


Taking Action: Aligning Your Frontline with Others'

If "finding your frontline" is about your relation to impact, "aligning your frontline" is about the relationship to our political moment. It is fundamentally about strategy.

We can assess that some frontline fights are critical to all other struggles, and can help us all change the game. For example, coal is a key piece of the fossil fuel puzzle. Right now there is a critical fight happening in Appalachia around ending mountaintop removal coal mining. If it's won, many other struggles become a little bit easier. The same can be said for the current union fights for collective bargaining rights in Wisconsin and Indiana.

Ask yourself or your group:

• What does our frontline have in common with another frontline that we want to align ourselves with?

• What is different about our relation to impact?

• What is our common ground politically? Where can we collaborate?

• How do our differences build barriers? How can we navigate and overcome these barriers?


A key piece of this strategic assessment is that it is difficult, if not impossible, to do alone. That's why "finding your frontline" starts with naming your impact and working in a group. With a group, you can assess your capacity and priorities much more effectively than an individual drifting in the stormy sea. Our political landscape is shifting, offering us different pressure points, where we have unique opportunities, or where our opponents are particularly vulnerable. Even though many local communities each have their own priorities and urgent fights they must focus on, we all need common strategic frameworks to move together or collectively assess critical moments that need national or international solidarity. That is why interlocking action is grounded in community organizing, but certainly not limited to it. There are many large-scale flashpoints which require other complimentary avenues for action.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Organizing Cools the Planet by Hilary Moore, Joshua Kahn Russell. Copyright © 2011 Hilary Moore and Joshua Kahn Russell. Excerpted by permission of PM Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

INTRO,
CHAPTER ONE: FIND YOUR FRONTLINE,
CHAPTER TWO: CLIMATE JUSTICE,
CHAPTER THREE: ALIGN YOUR FRONTLINE,
CHAPTER FOUR: TAKE ACTION,
CHAPTER FIVE: CONCLUSION,

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