At the Bottom of the Barrel: A Response to the Recent World Scientists’ Warnings

COVID-19 has taught us that it is possible to make sudden social changes that result in radical reductions of greenhouse emissions, changes that decades of climate change activism have failed to achieve. At the core of this failure are three main problems: firstly, climate change discourse is simp...

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Main Author: Simon Estok
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cappadocia University 2020-06-01
Series:Ecocene: Cappadocia Journal of Environmental Humanities
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ecocene.kapadokya.edu.tr/Makaleler/1887992212_Ecocene-1.1.11%20Estok.pdf
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spelling doaj-45c7806196a647859777a146ad9db4a42020-11-25T04:01:24ZengCappadocia UniversityEcocene: Cappadocia Journal of Environmental Humanities2717-89432020-06-011110010710.46863/ecocene.2020.11At the Bottom of the Barrel: A Response to the Recent World Scientists’ WarningsSimon Estok0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9763-3087Sungkyunkwan University, South KoreaCOVID-19 has taught us that it is possible to make sudden social changes that result in radical reductions of greenhouse emissions, changes that decades of climate change activism have failed to achieve. At the core of this failure are three main problems: firstly, climate change discourse is simply more abstract than the easily digestible realities of COVID-19, with its daily infection, death, and recovery counts; secondly, there are some deeply engrained, counter-productive ideologies lurking in the very discourses we use calling for action on climate change; and thirdly, because there are no immediate tangible rewards for committing to broad changes, motivating people through climate change discourse presents challenges that COVID-19 simply does not face. Moving forward will mean facing these three problems, but it will also mean facing the reality that slow-downs or shut-downs disproportionately affect poor people and nations. The people barely surviving from the pittances they receive in the sweatshops—the places that sustain the electronics and garment industries, that are the supply chains and processing centers, and that form the blood and guts of industrial capitalism—are the people who suffer most. There are many lessons in COVID-19 for climate change activism, and we do well to take heed of them.http://ecocene.kapadokya.edu.tr/Makaleler/1887992212_Ecocene-1.1.11%20Estok.pdfclimate change activismcovid-19 environmental effectsecomediapandemic lockdowns
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Simon Estok
spellingShingle Simon Estok
At the Bottom of the Barrel: A Response to the Recent World Scientists’ Warnings
Ecocene: Cappadocia Journal of Environmental Humanities
climate change activism
covid-19 environmental effects
ecomedia
pandemic lockdowns
author_facet Simon Estok
author_sort Simon Estok
title At the Bottom of the Barrel: A Response to the Recent World Scientists’ Warnings
title_short At the Bottom of the Barrel: A Response to the Recent World Scientists’ Warnings
title_full At the Bottom of the Barrel: A Response to the Recent World Scientists’ Warnings
title_fullStr At the Bottom of the Barrel: A Response to the Recent World Scientists’ Warnings
title_full_unstemmed At the Bottom of the Barrel: A Response to the Recent World Scientists’ Warnings
title_sort at the bottom of the barrel: a response to the recent world scientists’ warnings
publisher Cappadocia University
series Ecocene: Cappadocia Journal of Environmental Humanities
issn 2717-8943
publishDate 2020-06-01
description COVID-19 has taught us that it is possible to make sudden social changes that result in radical reductions of greenhouse emissions, changes that decades of climate change activism have failed to achieve. At the core of this failure are three main problems: firstly, climate change discourse is simply more abstract than the easily digestible realities of COVID-19, with its daily infection, death, and recovery counts; secondly, there are some deeply engrained, counter-productive ideologies lurking in the very discourses we use calling for action on climate change; and thirdly, because there are no immediate tangible rewards for committing to broad changes, motivating people through climate change discourse presents challenges that COVID-19 simply does not face. Moving forward will mean facing these three problems, but it will also mean facing the reality that slow-downs or shut-downs disproportionately affect poor people and nations. The people barely surviving from the pittances they receive in the sweatshops—the places that sustain the electronics and garment industries, that are the supply chains and processing centers, and that form the blood and guts of industrial capitalism—are the people who suffer most. There are many lessons in COVID-19 for climate change activism, and we do well to take heed of them.
topic climate change activism
covid-19 environmental effects
ecomedia
pandemic lockdowns
url http://ecocene.kapadokya.edu.tr/Makaleler/1887992212_Ecocene-1.1.11%20Estok.pdf
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