Globally, climate activism has shifted over the past few years. It’s more constant now and includes more direct action than ever before. Some of that action has critics, including climate scientists and climate advocates, clutching their pearls and worrying that protest will turn the public away from the urgent need to act on the climate crisis. But social science researchers who study structural change and protest say there’s no historical evidence to back that up; that in fact the only time social movements have ever affected change is when they’ve been wildly disruptive, and a whole lot of the people who love to quote MLK are missing a significant part of his approach to social change. In this week's ep we hear from social scientists on how radical or not climate protests really are, and what factors make direct action work or fail.
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The Coordinated Attack on Shareholder Activism
Climate News Update: The New Carbon Majors + Swiss Elders Win Landmark Climate Case
Sainte-Soline, the Government Effort to Disband a Movement in France, and the Radical Solidarity of the Earth Uprisings
The U.S. Anti-Renewables Movement, Explained
Nearly 30 Years After the Ogoni 9 Tragedy, Nigerians Are Still Resisting Oil Colonialism
What Ecuador's Yasuní Referendum Really Means for Oil, in Yasuní and Beyond
Introducing: Hazard NYC
Dana R. Fisher on the Past, Present and Future of Climate Protest
Department of Homeland Security, the Manufactured "EcoTerrorist" Panic, and Cop City
Meet the UN's First Special Rapporteur on Environmental Defenders
How UK Courts Became the New Climate Protest Battleground
What Happened At Bayou Bridge? The Other End of the Dakota Access Pipeline
Seven Years Later, an Environmental Impact Statement for the Dakota Access Pipeline
Modern-Day Bead Trading: The Fossil Fuel Industry Meets Indigenous Protest with "Redwashing" and Repression in Canada
Abeer Butmeh: Living on the Front Lines of a War and the Climate Crisis, in Palestine
Messy Conversations: Magatte Wade, Atlas Network's Center for African Prosperity
In Brazil, A Tale as Old as Colonization: Why Indigenous Land Defenders Are Particularly Targeted by Extractive Industries
The Same Australian Think Tanks That Have Pushed Against Climate Policy for Years Say No to Indigenous Rights
Guyana Update: Gas to Energy for Guyana, or Problem to Profit for Exxon?
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