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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/22508
Title: In A World Where Climate Change Is Everything...; Conceptualizing Climate Activism And Exploring the People’s Climate Movement
Other Titles: CLIMATE CHANGE ACTIVISM AND THE PEOPLE’S CLIMATE MOVEMENT 
Authors: Del Rio, Fiona
Advisor: Rethmann, Petra
Department: Anthropology
Publication Date: Nov-2017
Abstract: This thesis explores the strategies and imaginations of activists working to inspire action on climate change. It is based on my ethnographic fieldwork with the Toronto People’s Climate Movement as well as my own experiences as an activist living and working in Toronto. In conceptualizing climate activists anthropologically, I understand social movement actors as connected by shared imaginations rooted in universalizing scientific discourses and defined by deeply-held concerns for climate change and the motivation to take action. I devise an explanatory schema for the climate movement based on the “code-sort” method that shows how the strategies of climate activists are informed by four key values: crisis mitigation, social change, collective organizing and individual agency. These values converge in different iterations to inspire a variety of activist strategies and imaginations. Some are about getting climate change onto the public agenda and emphasize the urgent need for top-down solutions to reduce emissions. Others work to factor personal autonomy and well-being into their goals and methods, taking as their starting point the understanding that, for solutions to climate change to be adopted by society at large, they must consider the needs of both people and the environment in their designs of sustainable systems. To begin to understand “how climate change comes to matter” (Callison 2014) demands that we venture into a different world; a world in which the threat of ecological catastrophe is not the elephant in the room but the guiding lens of every conversation; in which subject matter avoided in polite society is the focus of every planning meeting, potluck and PowerPoint presentation; in which the not-so-novel question of how to live a moral life meets the far-more-recent dilemma of how to live one that is also sustainable. In the imaginations of those who inhabit this world, climate change is everything.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/22508
Appears in Collections:Open Access Dissertations and Theses

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