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5.6: Summary

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    41896

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    We have taken a journey together over the course of this chapter, so let us pause here to summarize what we have learned. We started by recognizing that climate change is not a problem that can be solved by any one fix. Solutions that involve technological innovation, economic incentives, communications, and information are all important in addressing it. But climate change is also a problem of power, so our efforts to confront it also have to include collective action and social movements. Sections 5.1 and 5.2 defined problems of power as those in which the people who need change the most don’t have the authority or ability to make that change.

    Social movements and collective action help us address those power imbalances. Sections 5.2 and 5.3 discussed examples of social movements and examined the role that leadership plays in enabling such movements to make change. We focused on how social movements transform individuals and then society. Social movements address power imbalances by engaging people in political action that is fundamentally transformative—through transformational organizing, which differs from transactional mobilizing. In particular, Section 5.3 focused on the role that social movement leaders play in engaging people in ways that build their capacity for sustained activism.

    Finally, in Sections 5.4 and 5.5, we ended by looking at a particular set of leadership practices that enable transformation. Leadership practices that are focused on building power include developing relational commitment, creating shared purpose, and building interdependent structures. Social movement leaders then take all the power that they’ve built and deploy it to create political influence by developing creative strategy and taking measurable, effective action.

    We hope that this chapter has shown how you, as climate champions, can embrace opportunities to join with others to build social movements that can enable and demand action on climate change.

    Remember that social movements are much more than marches, and seek out your Joe’s Bar—the local place that can serve as a focus for your actions on this global problem.


    This page titled 5.6: Summary is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.