Climate Politics and Race in the Pacific Northwest

The collective politics of climate justice makes the important claim that lowering emissions is not enough; society must also undertake radical transformation to address both the climate and inequality crises. Owing to its roots in the environmental justice movement, addressing systemic racism is ce...

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Main Author: Rachel Slocum
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-10-01
Series:Social Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0760/7/10/192
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author Rachel Slocum
author_facet Rachel Slocum
author_sort Rachel Slocum
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description The collective politics of climate justice makes the important claim that lowering emissions is not enough; society must also undertake radical transformation to address both the climate and inequality crises. Owing to its roots in the environmental justice movement, addressing systemic racism is central to climate justice praxis in the United States, which is a necessary intervention in typically technocratic climate politics. What emerges from US climate justice is a moral appeal to ‘relationship’ as politics, the procedural demand that communities of color (the ‘frontline’) lead the movement, and a distributive claim on carbon pricing revenue. However, this praxis precludes a critique of racial capitalism, the process that relies on structural racism to enhance accumulation, alienating, exploiting, and immiserating black, brown, and white, while carrying out ecocide. The lack of an analysis of how class and race produce the crises climate justice confronts prevents the movement from demanding that global north fossil fuel abolition occur in tandem with the reassertion of the public over the private and de-growth. Drawing on research conducted primarily in Oregon and Washington, I argue that race works to both create and limit the transformative possibilities of climate politics.
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spelling doaj.art-a9080f58364641df938facb580d9e8b22022-12-21T17:56:36ZengMDPI AGSocial Sciences2076-07602018-10-0171019210.3390/socsci7100192socsci7100192Climate Politics and Race in the Pacific NorthwestRachel Slocum0Independent Scholar, Portland, OR, USAThe collective politics of climate justice makes the important claim that lowering emissions is not enough; society must also undertake radical transformation to address both the climate and inequality crises. Owing to its roots in the environmental justice movement, addressing systemic racism is central to climate justice praxis in the United States, which is a necessary intervention in typically technocratic climate politics. What emerges from US climate justice is a moral appeal to ‘relationship’ as politics, the procedural demand that communities of color (the ‘frontline’) lead the movement, and a distributive claim on carbon pricing revenue. However, this praxis precludes a critique of racial capitalism, the process that relies on structural racism to enhance accumulation, alienating, exploiting, and immiserating black, brown, and white, while carrying out ecocide. The lack of an analysis of how class and race produce the crises climate justice confronts prevents the movement from demanding that global north fossil fuel abolition occur in tandem with the reassertion of the public over the private and de-growth. Drawing on research conducted primarily in Oregon and Washington, I argue that race works to both create and limit the transformative possibilities of climate politics.http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0760/7/10/192climate justice movementcarbon pricingracial capitalismde-growth
spellingShingle Rachel Slocum
Climate Politics and Race in the Pacific Northwest
Social Sciences
climate justice movement
carbon pricing
racial capitalism
de-growth
title Climate Politics and Race in the Pacific Northwest
title_full Climate Politics and Race in the Pacific Northwest
title_fullStr Climate Politics and Race in the Pacific Northwest
title_full_unstemmed Climate Politics and Race in the Pacific Northwest
title_short Climate Politics and Race in the Pacific Northwest
title_sort climate politics and race in the pacific northwest
topic climate justice movement
carbon pricing
racial capitalism
de-growth
url http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0760/7/10/192
work_keys_str_mv AT rachelslocum climatepoliticsandraceinthepacificnorthwest