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Last year I was fortunate enough to be joined by four remarkable women in the British environmental movement. We were speaking at a Deep Adaptation conference in Glastonbury. The way the discussion…
As the climate movement hits another impasse, activists Luisa Neubauer and Kumi Naidoo explain why we need to mobilise many more people from all walks of life
Activiste pour le climat et cofondatrice de Rise Up Movement et Fridays For Future Uganda, Vanessa Nakate fait partie d'un groupe de représentantes de la société civile ougandaise actuellement en Europe. Elles témoignent des impacts négatifs de projets pétroliers de Total en Ouganda et Tanzanie, en matière de droits humains et d'environnement. Ils dénoncent également les menaces et harcèlement auxquels certains d'entre eux font face en tant que défenseurs des droits et de l’environnement.
Only rarely does a book truly change the world. In the nineteenth century, such a book was Charles Darwin’s On the Origin of Species. For the twentieth century, it was The Limits to Growth. Not only did this best-selling 1972 publication help spur the environmental movement, but it showed that the underlying dynamics of the modern industrial world are unsustainable on the timescale of a couple of human lifetimes. This was profoundly important information, and it was delivered credibly and clearly, so that every policy maker could understand it.
At COP26 this week, some of the world’s biggest corporate polluters sent huge delegations to proclaim the need for climate action. They’re presenting themselves as the new climate saviors, but averting disaster won’t come from those who make a profit from killing the planet.
The “degrowth” movement to fight the climate crisis offers a romantic, utopian vision. But it’s not a policy agenda.
International lawyers, environmentalists and a growing number of world leaders say “ecocide”—widespread destruction of the environment—would serve as a “moral red line” for the planet.
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For the last three decades, environmental groups have diligently lobbied their governments to slow carbon and methane emissions. Activists have put pressure on industry too. They’ve been smart, full of energy and creative. Yet, despite several big international treaties — especially the Kyoto Protocol and the Paris Agreement — and some impressive accomplishments including holding up pipelines and getting institutional investors to divest from fossil fuels, the pollution and the warming have not stopped.
Le Mouvement pour l'extinction volontaire de l'humanité, ou VHEMTN 1 (de l'anglais Voluntary Human Extinction Movement), est un mouvement écologiste qui appelle tous les humains à s'abstenir de se reproduire pour provoquer l'extinction progressive de l'humanité.