People's Climate Movement

Summary

The People's Climate Movement (PCM) was a climate change activist coalition in the United States. PCM organized the 2014 People's Climate March and 2017 People's Climate March.

People's Climate Movement
Founded2014
Dissolved2020
IdeologyClimate movement
Social justice
Political positionCenter-left
Website
https://peoplesclimate.org/
September 2014 People's Climate March

PCM included trade unions, social justice groups, and civil society, environmental, and religious organizations. PCM emphasized the inclusion of underrepresented groups, job creation and economic prosperity.

In 2020, PCM suspended organizing events or updating their social media, citing the COVID-19 pandemic.[1]

History edit

PCM started in 2014 to organize the People's Climate March in New York and the National Day of Action in 2015.[2] PCM attendees or supporters included the Sierra Club, Sunrise Movement, Alliance for Climate Education, Clean Water Action, Service Employees International Union, and Union of Concerned Scientists, among others.[3]

PCM organized the 2014 People's Climate March, 2015 National Day of Action, 2017 People's Climate March, 2017 "100 Days Mobilization", and 2018 "Rise for Climate, Jobs and Justice March".[2] The 2018 march in San Francisco had over 30,000 participants, while organizing several more events throughout the United States.[2]

Ideology edit

PCM's platform included the following demands: A "100% Clean and Renewable Future", "Economic Opportunity for Everyone", "Prioritizing a Just Resilience, Relief and Recovery", "Union Wages that Support a Family", "Pollution-Free Communities and Workplaces", and "Protection of Workers".[4]

PCM march organizers relied heavily on 2 approaches: "mass mobilization" and "movement alignment".[2] Mass mobilization is the ability to motivate large crowds to converge upon one location with one goal as a unified force. This indicates the importance of the movement and serves as a visual for media coverage of the movement.[5] Social media can enable movements to share information or organize a specific event.[6] Movement alignment can increase one's impact by unifying other groups or social movements that are formally unaffiliated but working towards an identical or similar goal.[7] Movement alignment differs from mass mobilization as it refers to a technique used to unify movements and organizations rather than individuals.

Criticism edit

PCM was criticized by ecosocialists as symbolic and too friendly to corporations. Chris Hedges argued that real change could come only from "those willing to breach police barricades".[8] The People's Climate Marches were criticized as merely symbolic, with no real plan to address the issues contributing to climate change.[9]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "A Note from Peoples Climate Movement". Peoples Climate Movement. Archived from the original on December 1, 2020.
  2. ^ a b c d "Our Movement". Peoples Climate Movement. Archived from the original on June 28, 2018.
  3. ^ "Partners". People's Climate Movement. Archived from the original on October 24, 2023. Retrieved April 9, 2017.
  4. ^ "Our Platform". Peoples Climate Movement. Archived from the original on August 4, 2023.
  5. ^ Nojumi, Neamatollah (2002). "The Theory of Mass Mobilization". In Nojumi, Neamatollah (ed.). The Rise of the Taliban in Afghanistan. Palgrave Macmillan US. pp. 11–27. doi:10.1007/978-0-312-29910-1_2. ISBN 9780312299101.
  6. ^ Lopes, Amandah (1 April 2014). "Journal of Political Research" (PDF).
  7. ^ Rojas, Fabio (June 2006). "Social Movement Tactics, Organizational Change and the Spread ofAfrican-American Studies" (PDF). Project Muse.
  8. ^ Smucker, Jonathan; Premo, Michael (2014-09-30). "What's Wrong With the Radical Critique of the People's Climate March". The Nation.
  9. ^ "The climate march cynics are wrong". Climate & Capitalism. 2014-09-25.