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2.6: Conclusion

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    41682

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    While climate disruption is a global reality, it affects various populations and nations in significantly disproportionate and uneven ways. The movement for climate justice is inseparable from the debate over solutions to the climate crisis. From global South communities in Africa to African American communities, individuals and organizations have demonstrated against climate injustices and have offered visions for ways to mitigate and reverse this problem. The question on many people’s minds is whether those nations and institutions most responsible for contributing to the climate crisis are willing to take these communities and their ideas seriously.

    This chapter is intended to raise questions that might inform the policy debate and action around climate disruption and climate justice. Toward that end, we urge you to consider the following questions:

    • How can we work with and empower community-based social movements to change the discourse and policymaking around climate disruption?
    • How can we bring a deeper understanding of social inequalities and social justice to climate change debates?
    • What are some alternatives to market-based solutions in the climate change debate, and how can we promote them?
    • What might climate justice look like?

    To sum up, climate justice and climate injustice are key concepts that every informed person should be familiar with because they are at the core of both how the problem of climate change developed and how we must address this challenge.

    In short, we cannot understand and confront climate change without attention to social inequality. Profits derived from stolen Indigenous lands and the labor of enslaved African people powered the Industrial Revolution, which set the world on a course toward today’s intensive use of fossil fuels. That is, racism and the conquest of people and ecosystems led to climate disruption in the first place. Justice is not a side issue.

    Finally, grassroots social change movements are critical for pushing dialogue and action forward in order to imagine and realize climate justice. How do we build those kinds of movements? Luckily, they’re all around us, and they are filled with everyday people like you and me. If you’re already involved in that kind of work, keep it up, step it up, and do so in ways that are peaceful, respectful, and nonviolent. And if you’re not yet involved in that kind of work, the door is wide open and the climate justice movement welcomes you. But we also encourage you to devise new and even more creative ways of thinking about and acting to solve our climate challenges. Thank you for reading this chapter, and all the best of luck.


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