From Soup on Paintings to Lawsuits: Climate Activism Strategy and Where It's Headed Next - Brewminate: A Bold Blend of News and Ideas (2024)

From Soup on Paintings to Lawsuits: Climate Activism Strategy and Where It's Headed Next - Brewminate: A Bold Blend of News and Ideas (2)

Activists are radically rethinking how to be most effective in the streets, political arenas, and courtrooms.

From Soup on Paintings to Lawsuits: Climate Activism Strategy and Where It's Headed Next - Brewminate: A Bold Blend of News and Ideas (3)

By Dr. Shannon Gibson
Associate Professor of International Relations and Environmental Studies
Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
University of Southern California

Introduction

Climate activism has been on a wild ride lately, from the shock tactics of young activists throwingsoup on famous paintingsto asurge in climate lawsuitsby savvy plaintiffs.

While some people considerdisruptive “antics”like attacking museum artwork with food to be confusing andalienating for the public, research into social movements shows there is a method to the seeming madness.

Bystrategically usingboth radical forms of civil disobedience and more mainstream public actions, such as lobbying and state-sanctioned demonstrations, activists can grab the public’s attention while making less aggressive tactics seem much more acceptable.

I studythe role of disruptive politics and social movements in global climate policy and have chronicled the ebb, flow and dynamism of climate activism over time. With today’spolitical institutionslargely focused on short-term desires over long-term planetary health, and global climate negotiations moving far too slowly to meet the challenge, climate activists have been reconsidering their tactics – andradically rethinkinghow to make their activism most effective.

In meetings with global activists in recent weeks, my colleagues and I have noticed a shifting emphasis to local climate battles – in the streets, political arenas and courtrooms. The lines between reformists and radicals, and betweenglobal and grassroots mobilizers, are blurring, and a new sense of strategic engagement is taking root.

When Global Institutions Fail the Public

Activist groups have long relied on a strategyknown as the boomerang effect– using international networks and global institutions such as the United Nations’ climate talks to influence national governments’ policy choices.

But while this tactic was initially well suited to climate change,results showthe talks have beentoo slow and insufficient. The growing influence of the fossil fuel industry, whose products are the leading cause of global warming, has left some activists seriouslyquestioning whether the U.N. climate process is still useful.

From Soup on Paintings to Lawsuits: Climate Activism Strategy and Where It's Headed Next - Brewminate: A Bold Blend of News and Ideas (5)

The 2023 U.N. climate conference solidified these concerns when the conference’s host, the United Arab Emirates, put its state oil company CEO in charge of the climate talks. Some people argue thatoil companies have to be part of the solution. But the conference was overrun by arecord number of oil and gas lobbyistsmore than 2,400 of them. And it was tainted by allegations thatit was being used to further, rather than halt, fossil fuel development. Thefinal agreement of COP28left room for the continuing expansion of fossil fuels.

Theannouncement in January 2024 that Azerbaijan, host of the next U.N. climate conference in late 2024, would place another oil industry veteran in charge of COP29 putanother nail in the coffinof any faith many activists still had in the system.

Climate Activists Go Local

In response to the weakness of global climate negotiations and failing climate policy, my colleagues and I are seeing signs of activiststurning more to their local roots. Notably, we are seeing a ramp-up in sophisticated legal battles over climate change.

From Soup on Paintings to Lawsuits: Climate Activism Strategy and Where It's Headed Next - Brewminate: A Bold Blend of News and Ideas (6)

Over 2,000 new climate change caseshave been filed in the past five years. Most seek to compel governments and corporations to reduce their emissions or keep fossil fuels in the ground, and the majority arein the United States.Over halfof the cases decided between June 2022 and May 2023 had a favorable outcome for the climate, though most still face appeals.

From Soup on Paintings to Lawsuits: Climate Activism Strategy and Where It's Headed Next - Brewminate: A Bold Blend of News and Ideas (7)

In 2023,a judge in Montanarecognized the state’s constitutional duty to protect residents from climate change. In another case, a court inThe Netherlands in 2021 set a precedentby ordering the oil company Shell to reduce its emissions by 45% by 2030 in official compliance with the international Paris climate agreement.

How Radical Spectacles Create Space for Progress

When radical activism takes place at the same time as formal institutional challenges, studies show the combination can help increase support for more moderate activism.

Researchers call this the “radical flank effect.” It was effective for boththe civil rightsandfeminist movements, and it is evident in other political movements in the U.S. today.

When people are exposed to radical forms of environmental protest, they become aware of the problems. Seeing the extremes can also leave them more comfortable with supporting less extreme tactics.

For example, the idea ofthrowing tomato soup on Van Gogh’s glass-covered “Sunflowers”painting may have been polarizing, but itgot the general public talkingabout the soup-throwers’ cause – ending fossil fuel use. And that can open doors for political leaders to discuss viable solutions to climate change.

We see this happening in the U.K. After initially disapproving of protests,London Mayor Sadiq Khan met with Extinction Rebellion, a group known for dramatic actions such as spraying fake blood on the steps of the U.K. treasury. Then-U.K. environment secretaryMichael Gove met with the climate activiststo discuss emissions reductions. Days later,the U.K. Parliament declared a climate emergency– the first country to do so.

From Soup on Paintings to Lawsuits: Climate Activism Strategy and Where It's Headed Next - Brewminate: A Bold Blend of News and Ideas (8)

Politicians under pressure from climate protesters are shifting course in the U.S. as well. President Joe Biden made climate change a focus of his first campaign, but activistsaren’t getting anywhere close to everything they wantand have made Biden a recent target of climate protests and even hecklers.

While it is hard to get into the mind of judges and juries, research shows that in cases such as workers’ and women’s rights struggles,radical and anti-government protests can have an impacton them. While court decisions rarely produce radical societal change, they are frequently followed by legislative changes that meet more moderate demands.

The Real Aim

Criticism of extreme activism oftenmisses a crucial point: The public’s reaction isn’t necessarily the activists’ end goal. Often, their ultimate aim is to influence government and business decision-makers. And while decision-makers are rarely, if ever, going to attribute their actions to activist pressure, the passing of the climate-focused Inflation Reduction Act in a gridlocked U.S. Congress in 2022 and declarations of a climate emergency across the globe suggest climate activists’ concerns are getting through.

When looking at climate activism, pundits should be cautioned in their criticism of what they see as a “disjointed movement.” The perceived madness is indeed method.

Originally published by The Conversation, 02.02.2024, under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution/No derivatives license.

From Soup on Paintings to Lawsuits: Climate Activism Strategy and Where It's Headed Next - Brewminate: A Bold Blend of News and Ideas (2024)

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