fbpx
Wikipedia

Green politics

Green politics, or ecopolitics, is a political ideology that aims to foster an ecologically sustainable society often, but not always, rooted in environmentalism, nonviolence, social justice and grassroots democracy.[1][2] It began taking shape in the western world in the 1970s; since then Green parties have developed and established themselves in many countries around the globe and have achieved some electoral success.

The political term green was used initially in relation to die Grünen (German for "the Greens"),[3][4] a green party formed in the late 1970s.[5] The term political ecology is sometimes used in academic circles, but it has come to represent an interdisciplinary field of study as the academic discipline offers wide-ranging studies integrating ecological social sciences with political economy in topics such as degradation and marginalization, environmental conflict, conservation and control and environmental identities and social movements.[6][7]

Supporters of green politics share many ideas with the conservation, environmental, feminist and peace movements. In addition to democracy and ecological issues, green politics is concerned with civil liberties, social justice, nonviolence, sometimes variants of localism and tends to support social progressivism.[8] Green party platforms are largely considered left in the political spectrum. The green ideology has connections with various other ecocentric political ideologies, including ecofeminism, eco-socialism and green anarchism, but to what extent these can be seen as forms of green politics is a matter of debate.[9] As the left-wing green political philosophy developed, there also came into separate existence opposite movements on the right-wing that include ecological components such as eco-capitalism and green conservatism.

History

Influences

 
Henry David Thoreau, influential early green anarchist who wrote Walden

Adherents to green politics tend to consider it to be part of a higher worldview and not simply a political ideology. Green politics draws its ethical stance from a variety of sources, from the values of indigenous peoples, to the ethics of Mahatma Gandhi, Baruch Spinoza, and Jakob von Uexküll.[citation needed] These people influenced green thought in their advocacy of long-term seventh generation foresight, and on the personal responsibility of every individual to make moral choices.

Unease about adverse consequences of human actions on nature predates the modern concept of environmentalism. Social commentators as far apart as ancient Rome and China complained of air, water and noise pollution.[10]

The philosophical roots of environmentalism can be traced back to enlightenment thinkers such as Rousseau in France, and later the author and naturalist Thoreau in America.[11] Organised environmentalism began in late 19th Century Europe and the United States as a reaction to the Industrial Revolution with its emphasis on unbridled economic expansion.[12]

"Green politics" first began as conservation and preservation movements, such as the Sierra Club, founded in San Francisco in 1892.

Left-green platforms of the form that make up the green parties today draw terminology from the science of ecology, and policy from environmentalism, deep ecology, feminism, pacifism, anarchism, libertarian socialism, libertarian possibilism,[13] social democracy, eco-socialism, and/or social ecology or green libertarianism. In the 1970s, as these movements grew in influence, green politics arose as a new philosophy which synthesized their goals. The Green Party political movement is not to be confused with the unrelated fact that in some far-right and fascist parties, nationalism has on occasion been tied into a sort of green politics which promotes environmentalism as a form of pride in the "motherland" according to a minority of authors.[14][15][16]

Early development

 
German Green Party co-founder Petra Kelly, first leader and theorist of green politics
 
Marina Silva, influential Brazilian green politician

In June 1970, a Dutch group called Kabouters won 5 of the 45 seats on the Amsterdam Gemeenteraad (City Council), as well as two seats each on councils in The Hague and Leeuwarden and one seat apiece in Arnhem, Alkmaar and Leiden. The Kabouters were an outgrowth of Provo's environmental White Plans and they proposed "Groene Plannen" ("Green Plans").[17]

The first political party to be created with its basis in environmental issues was the United Tasmania Group, founded in Australia in March 1972 to fight against deforestation and the creation of a dam that would damage Lake Pedder; whilst it only gained three percent in state elections, it had, according to Derek Wall, "inspired the creation of Green parties all over the world."[18] In May 1972, a meeting at Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand, launched the Values Party, the world's first countrywide green party to contest Parliamentary seats nationally.[19] In November 1972, Europe's first green party, PEOPLE in the UK came into existence.[20]

The German Green Party was not the first Green Party in Europe to have members elected nationally but the impression was created that they had been, because they attracted the most media attention: The German Greens, contended in their first national election in the 1980 federal election. They started as a provisional coalition of civic groups and political campaigns which, together, felt their interests were not expressed by the conventional parties. After contesting the 1979 European elections they held a conference which identified Four Pillars of the Green Party which all groups in the original alliance could agree as the basis of a common Party platform: welding these groups together as a single Party. This statement of principles has since been utilised by many Green Parties around the world. It was this party that first coined the term "Green" ("Grün" in German) and adopted the sunflower symbol. The term "Green" was coined by one of the founders of the German Green Party, Petra Kelly, after she visited Australia and saw the actions of the Builders Labourers Federation and their green ban actions.[21] In the 1983 federal election, the Greens won 27 seats in the Bundestag.

Further developments

The first Canadian foray into green politics took place in the Maritimes when 11 independent candidates (including one in Montreal and one in Toronto) ran in the 1980 federal election under the banner of the Small Party. Inspired by Schumacher's Small is Beautiful, the Small Party candidates ran for the expressed purpose of putting forward an anti-nuclear platform in that election. It was not registered as an official party, but some participants in that effort went on to form the Green Party of Canada in 1983 (the Ontario Greens and British Columbia Greens were also formed that year). Former Green Party of Canada leader Elizabeth May was the instigator and one of the candidates of the Small Party and she was eventually elected as a member of the Green Party in 2011 Canadian federal election.[22]

In Finland, the Green League became the first European Green Party to form part of a state-level Cabinet in 1995. The German Greens followed, forming a government with the Social Democratic Party of Germany (the "Red-Green Alliance") from 1998 to 2005. In 2001, they reached an agreement to end reliance on nuclear power in Germany, and agreed to remain in coalition and support the German government of Chancellor Gerhard Schröder in the 2001 Afghan War. This put them at odds with many Greens worldwide, but demonstrated that they were capable of difficult political tradeoffs.

In Latvia, Indulis Emsis, leader of the Green Party and part of the Union of Greens and Farmers, an alliance of a Nordic agrarian party and the Green Party, was Prime Minister of Latvia for ten months in 2004, making him the first Green politician to lead a country in the history of the world. In 2015, Emsis' party colleague, Raimonds Vējonis, was elected President of Latvia by the Latvian parliament. Vējonis became the first green head of state worldwide.

In the German state of Baden-Württenburg, the Green Party became the leader of the coalition with the Social Democrats after finishing second in the 2011 Baden-Württemberg state election. In the following state election, 2016, the Green Party became the strongest party for the first time in a German Landtag.

In 2016, the former leader of the Austrian Greens (1997 to 2008), Alexander Van der Bellen, officially running as an independent, won the 2016 Austrian presidential election, making him the second green head of state worldwide and the first directly elected by popular vote. Van der Bellen placed second in the election's first round with 21.3% of the vote, the best result for the Austrian Greens in their history. He won the second-round run-off against the far-right Freedom Party's Norbert Hofer with 53.8% of the votes, making him the first President of Austria who was not backed by either the People's Party or the Social Democratic Party.

Core tenets

 
The four green pillars

According to Derek Wall, a prominent British green proponent, there are four pillars that define green politics:[1]

In 1984, the Green Committees of Correspondence in the United States expanded the Four Pillars into Ten Key Values,[23] which further included:

 
The six guiding principles

In 2001, the Global Greens were organized as an international green movement. The Global Greens Charter identified six guiding principles:

Ecology

Economics

Green economics focuses on the importance of the health of the biosphere to human well-being. Consequently, most Greens distrust conventional capitalism, as it tends to emphasize economic growth while ignoring ecological health; the "full cost" of economic growth often includes damage to the biosphere, which is unacceptable according to green politics. Green economics considers such growth to be "uneconomic growth"— material increase that nonetheless lowers the overall quality of life. Green economics inherently takes a longer-term perspective than conventional economics, because such a loss in quality of life is often delayed. According to green economics, the present generation should not borrow from future generations, but rather attempt to achieve what Tim Jackson calls "prosperity without growth".

Some Greens refer to productivism, consumerism and scientism[citation needed] as "grey", as contrasted with "green", economic views. "Grey" approaches focus on behavioral changes.[24]

Therefore, adherents to green politics advocate economic policies designed to safeguard the environment. Greens want governments to stop subsidizing companies that waste resources or pollute the natural world, subsidies that Greens refer to as "dirty subsidies". Some currents of green politics place automobile and agribusiness subsidies in this category, as they may harm human health. On the contrary, Greens look to a green tax shift that are seen to encourage both producers and consumers to make ecologically friendly choices.

Many aspects of green economics could be considered anti-globalist. According to many left-wing greens, economic globalization is considered a threat to well-being, which will replace natural environments and local cultures with a single trade economy, termed the global economic monoculture.[citation needed] This is not a universal policy of greens, as green liberals and green conservatives support a regulated free market economy with additional measures to advance sustainable development.

Since green economics emphasizes biospheric health and biodiversity, an issue outside the traditional left-right spectrum, different currents within green politics incorporate ideas from socialism and capitalism. Greens on the Left are often identified as eco-socialists, who merge ecology and environmentalism with socialism and Marxism and blame the capitalist system for environmental degradation, social injustice, inequality and conflict. eco-capitalists, on the other hand, believe that the free market system, with some modification, is capable of addressing ecological problems. This belief is documented in the business experiences of eco-capitalists in the book, The Gort Cloud that describes the gort cloud as the green community that supports eco-friendly businesses.

Participatory democracy

 
Saskia Sassen, theorist of international Human migration and urban sociology.

Since the beginning, green politics has emphasized local, grassroots-level political activity and decision-making. According to its adherents, it is crucial that citizens play a direct role in the decisions that influence their lives and their environment. Therefore, green politics seeks to increase the role of deliberative democracy,[25] based on direct citizen involvement and consensus decision making, wherever it is feasible.

Green politics also encourages political action on the individual level, such as ethical consumerism, or buying things that are made according to environmentally ethical standards. Indeed, many green parties emphasize individual and grassroots action at the local and regional levels over electoral politics. Historically, green parties have grown at the local level, gradually gaining influence and spreading to regional or provincial politics, only entering the national arena when there is a strong network of local support.

In addition, many greens believe that governments should not levy taxes against strictly local production and trade. Some Greens advocate new ways of organizing authority to increase local control, including urban secession, bioregional democracy, and co-operative/local stakeholder ownership.

Other issues

 
Anti-Nuclear Power Plant Rally on 19 September 2011 at Meiji Shrine complex in Tokyo in which sixty thousand people marched chanting "Sayonara nuclear power" and waving banners to call on Japan's government to abandon nuclear power following the Fukushima disaster[26][27]

Although Greens in the United States "call for an end to the 'War on Drugs'" and "for the decriminalization of victimless crimes", they also call for developing "a firm approach to law enforcement that directly addresses violent crime, including trafficking in hard drugs".[28]

In Europe, some green parties have tended to support the creation of a democratic federal Europe, while others have opposed European integration.[citation needed]

In the spirit of nonviolence, green politics oppose the war on terrorism and the curtailment of civil rights, focusing instead on nurturing deliberative democracy in war-torn regions and the construction of a civil society with an increased role for women.

In keeping with their commitment to the preservation of diversity, greens are often committed to the maintenance and protection of indigenous communities, languages, and traditions. An example of this is the Irish Green Party's commitment to the preservation of the Irish Language.[29] Some of the green movement has focused on divesting in fossil fuels. Academics Stand Against Poverty states "it is paradoxical for universities to remain invested in fossil fuel companies". Thomas Pogge says that the fossil fuel divestment movement can increase political pressure at events like the international climate change conference (COP).[30] Alex Epstein of Forbes notes that it is hypocritical to ask for divestment without a boycott and that a boycott would be more effective.[31] Some institutions that are leading by example in the academic area are Stanford University, Syracuse University, Sterling College and over 20 more. A number of cities, counties and religious institutions have also joined the movement to divest.[32][33]

Green politics mostly opposes nuclear fission power and the buildup of persistent organic pollutants, supporting adherence to the precautionary principle, by which technologies are rejected unless they can be proven to not cause significant harm to the health of living things or the biosphere.

Green platforms generally favor tariffs on fossil fuels, restricting genetically modified organisms, and protections for ecoregions or communities.

The Green Party supports phasing out of nuclear power, coal, and incineration of waste.[34] However, the Green Party in Finland has come out against its previous anti-nuclear stance and has stated that addressing global warming in the next 20 years is impossible without expanding nuclear power.[35] These officials have proposed using nuclear-generated heat to heat buildings by replacing the use of coal and biomass to reach zero-emission outputs by 2040.

Organization

Local movements

 
The sunflower is recognized internationally as a symbol of green politics[36]

Green ideology emphasizes participatory democracy and the principle of "thinking globally, acting locally." As such, the ideal Green Party is thought to grow from the bottom up, from neighborhood to municipal to (eco-)regional to national levels. The goal is to rule by a consensus decision making process.

Strong local coalitions are considered a prerequisite to higher-level electoral breakthroughs. Historically, the growth of Green parties has been sparked by a single issue where Greens can appeal to ordinary citizens' concerns. In Germany, for example, the Greens' early opposition to nuclear power won them their first successes in the federal elections.[37]

Global organization

There is a growing level of global cooperation between Green parties. Global gatherings of Green Parties now happen. The first Planetary Meeting of Greens was held 30–31 May 1992, in Rio de Janeiro, immediately preceding the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development held there. More than 200 Greens from 28 nations attended. The first formal Global Greens Gathering took place in Canberra, in 2001, with more than 800 Greens from 72 countries in attendance. The second Global Green Congress was held in São Paulo, Brazil, in May 2008, when 75 parties were represented.

Global Green networking dates back to 1990. Following the Planetary Meeting of Greens in Rio de Janeiro, a Global Green Steering Committee was created, consisting of two seats for each continent. In 1993 this Global Steering Committee met in Mexico City and authorized the creation of a Global Green Network including a Global Green Calendar, Global Green Bulletin, and Global Green Directory. The Directory was issued in several editions in the next years. In 1996, 69 Green Parties from around the world signed a common declaration opposing French nuclear testing in the South Pacific, the first statement of global greens on a current issue. A second statement was issued in December 1997, concerning the Kyoto climate change treaty.[38]

At the 2001 Canberra Global Gathering delegates for Green Parties from 72 countries decided upon a Global Greens Charter which proposes six key principles. Over time, each Green Party can discuss this and organize itself to approve it, some by using it in the local press, some by translating it for their web site, some by incorporating it into their manifesto, some by incorporating it into their constitution.[39] This process is taking place gradually, with online dialogue enabling parties to say where they are up to with this process.[40]

 
Federation of Young European Greens demonstration in Copenhagen during the Climate Summit 2009

The Gatherings also agree on organizational matters. The first Gathering voted unanimously to set up the Global Green Network (GGN). The GGN is composed of three representatives from each Green Party. A companion organization was set up by the same resolution: Global Green Coordination (GGC). This is composed of three representatives from each Federation (Africa, Europe, The Americas, Asia/Pacific, see below). Discussion of the planned organization took place in several Green Parties prior to the Canberra meeting.[41] The GGC communicates chiefly by email. Any agreement by it has to be by unanimity of its members. It may identify possible global campaigns to propose to Green Parties worldwide. The GGC may endorse statements by individual Green Parties. For example, it endorsed a statement by the US Green Party on the Israel-Palestine conflict.[42]

Thirdly, Global Green Gatherings are an opportunity for informal networking, from which joint campaigning may arise. For example, a campaign to protect the New Caledonian coral reef, by getting it nominated for World Heritage Status: a joint campaign by the New Caledonia Green Party, New Caledonian indigenous leaders, the French Green Party, and the Australian Greens.[43] Another example concerns Ingrid Betancourt, the leader of the Green Party in Colombia, the Green Oxygen Party (Partido Verde Oxigeno). Ingrid Betancourt and the party's Campaign Manager, Claire Rojas, were kidnapped by a hard-line faction of FARC on 7 March 2002, while travelling in FARC-controlled territory. Betancourt had spoken at the Canberra Gathering, making many friends. As a result, Green Parties all over the world have organized, pressing their governments to bring pressure to bear. For example, Green Parties in African countries, Austria, Canada, Brazil, Peru, Mexico, France, Scotland, Sweden and other countries have launched campaigns calling for Betancourt's release. Bob Brown, the leader of the Australian Greens, went to Colombia, as did an envoy from the European Federation, Alain Lipietz, who issued a report.[44] The four Federations of Green Parties issued a message to FARC.[45] Ingrid Betancourt was rescued by the Colombian military in Operation Jaque in 2008.

Global Green meetings

Separately from the Global Green Gatherings, Global Green Meetings take place. For instance, one took place on the fringe of the World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg. Green Parties attended from Australia, Taiwan, Korea, South Africa, Mauritius, Uganda, Cameroon, Republic of Cyprus, Italy, France, Belgium, Germany, Finland, Sweden, Norway, the US, Mexico and Chile.

The Global Green Meeting discussed the situation of Green Parties on the African continent; heard a report from Mike Feinstein, former Mayor of Santa Monica, about setting up a web site of the GGN; discussed procedures for the better working of the GGC; and decided two topics on which the Global Greens could issue statements in the near future: Iraq and the 2003 WTO meeting in Cancun.

Green federations

 
Bob Brown at a climate change rally in Melbourne, 5 July 2008

Affiliated members in Asia, Pacific and Oceania form the Asia-Pacific Green Network. The member parties of the Global Greens are organised into four continental federations:

The European Federation of Green Parties formed itself as the European Green Party on 22 February 2004, in the run-up to European Parliament elections in June 2004, a further step in trans-national integration.

Green political parties

Green movements are calling for social change to reduce the misuse of natural resources. These include grassroots non-governmental organizations like Greenpeace and green parties:

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b Wall 2010. p. 12-13.
  2. ^ Peter Reed; David Rothenberg (1993). Wisdom in the Open Air: The Norwegian Roots of Deep Ecology. University of Minnesota Press. p. 84. ISBN 978-0-8166-2182-8.
  3. ^ Derek Wall (2010). The No-nonsense Guide to Green Politics. New Internationalist. p. 12. ISBN 978-1-906523-39-8.
  4. ^ Jon Burchell (2002). The Evolution of Green Politics: Development and Change Within European Green Parties. Earthscan. p. 52. ISBN 978-1-85383-751-7.
  5. ^ Playing by the Rules: The Impact of Electoral Systems on Emerging Green Parties. 2007. p. 79. ISBN 978-0-549-13249-3.
  6. ^ Robbins, Paul (2012). Political Ecology: A Critical Introduction. Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 9780470657324.
  7. ^ Peet, Richard; Watts, Michael (2004). Liberation Ecologies: Environment, Development, Social Movements. Routledge. p. 6. ISBN 9780415312363.
  8. ^ Dustin Mulvaney (2011). Green Politics, An A-to-Z Guide. SAGE publications. p. 394. ISBN 9781412996792.
  9. ^ Wall 2010. p. 47-66.
  10. ^ Keys, David (December 2003). "How Rome polluted the world". Geographical. Vol. 75, no. 12.
  11. ^ LaFreniere, Gilbert F. (1990). "Rousseau and the European Roots of Environmentalism". Environmental History Review. 14 (4): 41–72. doi:10.2307/3984813. ISSN 1053-4180. JSTOR 3984813. S2CID 157682006.
  12. ^ McCormick, John (1995). The Global Environmental Movement. London: John Wiley. ISBN 9780471949404.
  13. ^ "A Politics for the 21st Century". 26 August 1998.
  14. ^ Uekötter, Frank (2006). The green and the brown: a history of conservation in Nazi Germany. Cambridge University Press. p. 202. ISBN 9780521612777.
  15. ^ Staudenmaier, Peter. . Archived from the original on 13 March 2008. Retrieved 24 March 2008.
  16. ^ Biehl, Janet; Staudenmaier, Peter (1995). "'Ecology' and the Modernization of Fascism in the German Ultra-Right". Ecofascism: Lessons from the German Experience. AK Press. ISBN 978-1873176733.
  17. ^ Kempton, Richard (10 May 2003). "The Provos: Amsterdam's Anarchist Revolt" (PDF). madgorilla.org.
  18. ^ Wall 2010. p. 14.
  19. ^ . Greens.org.nz. Archived from the original on 10 October 2008. Retrieved 16 March 2015.
  20. ^ . Green-History.uk. 28 August 2017. Archived from the original on 11 September 2017. Retrieved 10 September 2017.
  21. ^ Humphries, David (31 March 2012). "Newsmaker: Green bans". Sydney Morning Herald.
  22. ^ "The Green Movement". Green Party of Canada. Retrieved 12 February 2015.
  23. ^ Switzer, Jacqueline Vaughn (2003). Environmental Activism: A Reference Handbook. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO, Inc. pp. 184–185. ISBN 1-57607-901-5. Retrieved 1 June 2020.
  24. ^ Giuseppe Ferrari (2008) Green and grey in Dutch environmentalism: Debates and Philosophical Implications, Environmental Sciences, 5:3, 191-204, DOI: 10.1080/15693430802299114 https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/15693430802299114
  25. ^ Kronsell, Annica; Bäckstrand, Karin; Lövbrand; Khan, Jamil (30 June 2010). Environmental politics and deliberative democracy: Examining the promise of new modes of governance. ISBN 978-1-84844-954-1.
  26. ^ "Thousands march against nuclear power in Tokyo". USA Today. September 2011.
  27. ^ David H. Slater (9 November 2011). "Fukushima women against nuclear power: finding a voice from Tohoku". The Asia-Pacific Journal.
  28. ^ . Green Party. 2004. Archived from the original on 4 September 2008. Retrieved 12 February 2015.
  29. ^ (PDF). the Green Party of Ireland. 2014. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 July 2014.
  30. ^ Howard, Emma (7 April 2015). "Top academics ask world's universities to divest from fossil fuels". The Guardian. Retrieved 7 April 2015.
  31. ^ Epstein, Alex. "The Moral Case For Investing, Not Divesting, In Fossil Fuels". Forbes. Retrieved 7 April 2015.
  32. ^ "Divestment Commitments". FossilFree.org. Retrieved 7 April 2015.
  33. ^ "Syracuse University to divest fossil fuel investments". April 2015. Retrieved 7 April 2015.
  34. ^ "Energy". policy.greenparty.org.uk. Retrieved 12 December 2020.
  35. ^ Conca, James. "Finland's Green Party And Nuclear Power -- Really?". Forbes. Retrieved 12 December 2020.
  36. ^ Roussopoulos, Dimitrios (1993). Political ecology: beyond environmentalism. Montreal: Black Rose Books. p. 114. ISBN 1-895431-80-8. Not surprisingly the colours green and yellow are used widely in the symbols of ecologists, the former evoking vegetation and the latter the sun. The sunflower, a popular symbol, embodies both colours, and turns towards the sun, the source of renewable energy. The bicycle is another important icon as bicycle transportation is regarded as one of the means to re-humanise society.
  37. ^ "The history behind Germany's nuclear phase-out". Clean Energy Wire. 25 September 2014. Retrieved 20 March 2020.
  38. ^ John Rensenbrink (August 2003). "Global Greens Network - a brief history up to 2003". Global Greens.
  39. ^ . green party of canada. Archived from the original on 18 February 2004.
  40. ^ . Greenparties.hpg.ig.com.br. 17 September 2013. Archived from the original on 2 April 2003. Retrieved 16 March 2015.
  41. ^ . Australian Greens. Archived from the original on 1 March 2003.
  42. ^ . Green Party US. Archived from the original on 18 February 2003.
  43. ^ "Spinifex 4, Newsletter of the 2001 Global Greens Congress" (PDF). Consensus Productions.
  44. ^ . Providence College: Tony Affigne: Green parties of the world declare: "Free Ingrid Betancourt and Clara Rojas!" (in French). Archived from the original on 16 February 2004.
  45. ^ . Green Parties world wide. Archived from the original on 20 November 2008.

References

  • Wall, Derek (2010). The No-Nonsense Guide to Green Politics. Oxford: New Internationalist Publications. ISBN 978-1-906523-39-8.

Further reading

  • Dobson, Andrew (2007). Green Political Thought. 4. Edition (1. Edition 1980), London/ New York: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-40351-0 (Hardcover)
  • Gilk, Paul (2009). . The Lutterworth Press. Archived from the original on 17 June 2019. Retrieved 13 October 2010.
  • Spretnak, Charlene (1986). The Spiritual Dimension of Green Politics. Santa Fe, N.M.: Bear & Co. 95 p. ISBN 0-939680-29-7

External links

  • Global Greens Charter, Canberra 2001 14 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  • Ecology and Society – book on politics and sociology of environmentalism

green, politics, green, movement, redirects, here, iranian, political, movement, iranian, green, movement, other, uses, green, movement, disambiguation, ecopolitics, political, ideology, that, aims, foster, ecologically, sustainable, society, often, always, ro. Green movement redirects here For the Iranian political movement see Iranian Green Movement For other uses see Green Movement disambiguation Green politics or ecopolitics is a political ideology that aims to foster an ecologically sustainable society often but not always rooted in environmentalism nonviolence social justice and grassroots democracy 1 2 It began taking shape in the western world in the 1970s since then Green parties have developed and established themselves in many countries around the globe and have achieved some electoral success The political term green was used initially in relation to die Grunen German for the Greens 3 4 a green party formed in the late 1970s 5 The term political ecology is sometimes used in academic circles but it has come to represent an interdisciplinary field of study as the academic discipline offers wide ranging studies integrating ecological social sciences with political economy in topics such as degradation and marginalization environmental conflict conservation and control and environmental identities and social movements 6 7 Supporters of green politics share many ideas with the conservation environmental feminist and peace movements In addition to democracy and ecological issues green politics is concerned with civil liberties social justice nonviolence sometimes variants of localism and tends to support social progressivism 8 Green party platforms are largely considered left in the political spectrum The green ideology has connections with various other ecocentric political ideologies including ecofeminism eco socialism and green anarchism but to what extent these can be seen as forms of green politics is a matter of debate 9 As the left wing green political philosophy developed there also came into separate existence opposite movements on the right wing that include ecological components such as eco capitalism and green conservatism Contents 1 History 1 1 Influences 1 1 1 Early development 1 1 2 Further developments 2 Core tenets 2 1 Ecology 2 2 Economics 2 3 Participatory democracy 2 4 Other issues 3 Organization 3 1 Local movements 3 2 Global organization 3 2 1 Global Green meetings 3 3 Green federations 3 4 Green political parties 4 See also 5 Notes 5 1 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory EditInfluences Edit Mahatma Gandhi Henry David Thoreau influential early green anarchist who wrote Walden Adherents to green politics tend to consider it to be part of a higher worldview and not simply a political ideology Green politics draws its ethical stance from a variety of sources from the values of indigenous peoples to the ethics of Mahatma Gandhi Baruch Spinoza and Jakob von Uexkull citation needed These people influenced green thought in their advocacy of long term seventh generation foresight and on the personal responsibility of every individual to make moral choices Unease about adverse consequences of human actions on nature predates the modern concept of environmentalism Social commentators as far apart as ancient Rome and China complained of air water and noise pollution 10 The philosophical roots of environmentalism can be traced back to enlightenment thinkers such as Rousseau in France and later the author and naturalist Thoreau in America 11 Organised environmentalism began in late 19th Century Europe and the United States as a reaction to the Industrial Revolution with its emphasis on unbridled economic expansion 12 Green politics first began as conservation and preservation movements such as the Sierra Club founded in San Francisco in 1892 Left green platforms of the form that make up the green parties today draw terminology from the science of ecology and policy from environmentalism deep ecology feminism pacifism anarchism libertarian socialism libertarian possibilism 13 social democracy eco socialism and or social ecology or green libertarianism In the 1970s as these movements grew in influence green politics arose as a new philosophy which synthesized their goals The Green Party political movement is not to be confused with the unrelated fact that in some far right and fascist parties nationalism has on occasion been tied into a sort of green politics which promotes environmentalism as a form of pride in the motherland according to a minority of authors 14 15 16 Early development Edit German Green Party co founder Petra Kelly first leader and theorist of green politics Marina Silva influential Brazilian green politician Daniel Cohn Bendit contracultural leader of May 1968 events in France In June 1970 a Dutch group called Kabouters won 5 of the 45 seats on the Amsterdam Gemeenteraad City Council as well as two seats each on councils in The Hague and Leeuwarden and one seat apiece in Arnhem Alkmaar and Leiden The Kabouters were an outgrowth of Provo s environmental White Plans and they proposed Groene Plannen Green Plans 17 The first political party to be created with its basis in environmental issues was the United Tasmania Group founded in Australia in March 1972 to fight against deforestation and the creation of a dam that would damage Lake Pedder whilst it only gained three percent in state elections it had according to Derek Wall inspired the creation of Green parties all over the world 18 In May 1972 a meeting at Victoria University of Wellington New Zealand launched the Values Party the world s first countrywide green party to contest Parliamentary seats nationally 19 In November 1972 Europe s first green party PEOPLE in the UK came into existence 20 The German Green Party was not the first Green Party in Europe to have members elected nationally but the impression was created that they had been because they attracted the most media attention The German Greens contended in their first national election in the 1980 federal election They started as a provisional coalition of civic groups and political campaigns which together felt their interests were not expressed by the conventional parties After contesting the 1979 European elections they held a conference which identified Four Pillars of the Green Party which all groups in the original alliance could agree as the basis of a common Party platform welding these groups together as a single Party This statement of principles has since been utilised by many Green Parties around the world It was this party that first coined the term Green Grun in German and adopted the sunflower symbol The term Green was coined by one of the founders of the German Green Party Petra Kelly after she visited Australia and saw the actions of the Builders Labourers Federation and their green ban actions 21 In the 1983 federal election the Greens won 27 seats in the Bundestag Further developments Edit The first Canadian foray into green politics took place in the Maritimes when 11 independent candidates including one in Montreal and one in Toronto ran in the 1980 federal election under the banner of the Small Party Inspired by Schumacher s Small is Beautiful the Small Party candidates ran for the expressed purpose of putting forward an anti nuclear platform in that election It was not registered as an official party but some participants in that effort went on to form the Green Party of Canada in 1983 the Ontario Greens and British Columbia Greens were also formed that year Former Green Party of Canada leader Elizabeth May was the instigator and one of the candidates of the Small Party and she was eventually elected as a member of the Green Party in 2011 Canadian federal election 22 In Finland the Green League became the first European Green Party to form part of a state level Cabinet in 1995 The German Greens followed forming a government with the Social Democratic Party of Germany the Red Green Alliance from 1998 to 2005 In 2001 they reached an agreement to end reliance on nuclear power in Germany and agreed to remain in coalition and support the German government of Chancellor Gerhard Schroder in the 2001 Afghan War This put them at odds with many Greens worldwide but demonstrated that they were capable of difficult political tradeoffs Sergio Fajardo ex mayor of Medellin Claudia Lopez Hernandez mayor of Bogota Joschka Fischer ex Vice Chancellor of Germany and Femke Halsema mayor of Amsterdam In Latvia Indulis Emsis leader of the Green Party and part of the Union of Greens and Farmers an alliance of a Nordic agrarian party and the Green Party was Prime Minister of Latvia for ten months in 2004 making him the first Green politician to lead a country in the history of the world In 2015 Emsis party colleague Raimonds Vejonis was elected President of Latvia by the Latvian parliament Vejonis became the first green head of state worldwide In the German state of Baden Wurttenburg the Green Party became the leader of the coalition with the Social Democrats after finishing second in the 2011 Baden Wurttemberg state election In the following state election 2016 the Green Party became the strongest party for the first time in a German Landtag In 2016 the former leader of the Austrian Greens 1997 to 2008 Alexander Van der Bellen officially running as an independent won the 2016 Austrian presidential election making him the second green head of state worldwide and the first directly elected by popular vote Van der Bellen placed second in the election s first round with 21 3 of the vote the best result for the Austrian Greens in their history He won the second round run off against the far right Freedom Party s Norbert Hofer with 53 8 of the votes making him the first President of Austria who was not backed by either the People s Party or the Social Democratic Party Core tenets Edit The four green pillars According to Derek Wall a prominent British green proponent there are four pillars that define green politics 1 Ecological wisdom Social justice Grassroots democracy NonviolenceIn 1984 the Green Committees of Correspondence in the United States expanded the Four Pillars into Ten Key Values 23 which further included Decentralization Community based economics Post patriarchal values later translated to ecofeminism and Ethics of care Respect for diversity Global responsibility Future focus The six guiding principles In 2001 the Global Greens were organized as an international green movement The Global Greens Charter identified six guiding principles Ecological wisdom Social justice Participatory democracy Nonviolence Sustainability Respect for diversityEcology Edit Economics Edit Main articles Communalism Bookchin Green economics Participatory economics Post capitalism Postgrowth and Common good economics Green economics focuses on the importance of the health of the biosphere to human well being Consequently most Greens distrust conventional capitalism as it tends to emphasize economic growth while ignoring ecological health the full cost of economic growth often includes damage to the biosphere which is unacceptable according to green politics Green economics considers such growth to be uneconomic growth material increase that nonetheless lowers the overall quality of life Green economics inherently takes a longer term perspective than conventional economics because such a loss in quality of life is often delayed According to green economics the present generation should not borrow from future generations but rather attempt to achieve what Tim Jackson calls prosperity without growth Susan George political scientist theorist of social justice and international development Some Greens refer to productivism consumerism and scientism citation needed as grey as contrasted with green economic views Grey approaches focus on behavioral changes 24 Therefore adherents to green politics advocate economic policies designed to safeguard the environment Greens want governments to stop subsidizing companies that waste resources or pollute the natural world subsidies that Greens refer to as dirty subsidies Some currents of green politics place automobile and agribusiness subsidies in this category as they may harm human health On the contrary Greens look to a green tax shift that are seen to encourage both producers and consumers to make ecologically friendly choices Many aspects of green economics could be considered anti globalist According to many left wing greens economic globalization is considered a threat to well being which will replace natural environments and local cultures with a single trade economy termed the global economic monoculture citation needed This is not a universal policy of greens as green liberals and green conservatives support a regulated free market economy with additional measures to advance sustainable development Since green economics emphasizes biospheric health and biodiversity an issue outside the traditional left right spectrum different currents within green politics incorporate ideas from socialism and capitalism Greens on the Left are often identified as eco socialists who merge ecology and environmentalism with socialism and Marxism and blame the capitalist system for environmental degradation social injustice inequality and conflict eco capitalists on the other hand believe that the free market system with some modification is capable of addressing ecological problems This belief is documented in the business experiences of eco capitalists in the book The Gort Cloud that describes the gort cloud as the green community that supports eco friendly businesses Tim Jackson author of Prosperity Without Growth Francois Bausch member of ATTAC theorist of the Tobin Tax Paul Mason theorist of post capitalism and universal basic income Serge Latouche theorist of degrowthParticipatory democracy Edit Saskia Sassen theorist of international Human migration and urban sociology Since the beginning green politics has emphasized local grassroots level political activity and decision making According to its adherents it is crucial that citizens play a direct role in the decisions that influence their lives and their environment Therefore green politics seeks to increase the role of deliberative democracy 25 based on direct citizen involvement and consensus decision making wherever it is feasible Green politics also encourages political action on the individual level such as ethical consumerism or buying things that are made according to environmentally ethical standards Indeed many green parties emphasize individual and grassroots action at the local and regional levels over electoral politics Historically green parties have grown at the local level gradually gaining influence and spreading to regional or provincial politics only entering the national arena when there is a strong network of local support In addition many greens believe that governments should not levy taxes against strictly local production and trade Some Greens advocate new ways of organizing authority to increase local control including urban secession bioregional democracy and co operative local stakeholder ownership Michael Albert theorist of participatory economics participism Cesar Rendueles theorist of Common good economics and open content and net neutrality Antonio Negri theorist of Post fordism and immaterial labourOther issues Edit Anti Nuclear Power Plant Rally on 19 September 2011 at Meiji Shrine complex in Tokyo in which sixty thousand people marched chanting Sayonara nuclear power and waving banners to call on Japan s government to abandon nuclear power following the Fukushima disaster 26 27 Although Greens in the United States call for an end to the War on Drugs and for the decriminalization of victimless crimes they also call for developing a firm approach to law enforcement that directly addresses violent crime including trafficking in hard drugs 28 In Europe some green parties have tended to support the creation of a democratic federal Europe while others have opposed European integration citation needed In the spirit of nonviolence green politics oppose the war on terrorism and the curtailment of civil rights focusing instead on nurturing deliberative democracy in war torn regions and the construction of a civil society with an increased role for women In keeping with their commitment to the preservation of diversity greens are often committed to the maintenance and protection of indigenous communities languages and traditions An example of this is the Irish Green Party s commitment to the preservation of the Irish Language 29 Some of the green movement has focused on divesting in fossil fuels Academics Stand Against Poverty states it is paradoxical for universities to remain invested in fossil fuel companies Thomas Pogge says that the fossil fuel divestment movement can increase political pressure at events like the international climate change conference COP 30 Alex Epstein of Forbes notes that it is hypocritical to ask for divestment without a boycott and that a boycott would be more effective 31 Some institutions that are leading by example in the academic area are Stanford University Syracuse University Sterling College and over 20 more A number of cities counties and religious institutions have also joined the movement to divest 32 33 Green politics mostly opposes nuclear fission power and the buildup of persistent organic pollutants supporting adherence to the precautionary principle by which technologies are rejected unless they can be proven to not cause significant harm to the health of living things or the biosphere Green platforms generally favor tariffs on fossil fuels restricting genetically modified organisms and protections for ecoregions or communities The Green Party supports phasing out of nuclear power coal and incineration of waste 34 However the Green Party in Finland has come out against its previous anti nuclear stance and has stated that addressing global warming in the next 20 years is impossible without expanding nuclear power 35 These officials have proposed using nuclear generated heat to heat buildings by replacing the use of coal and biomass to reach zero emission outputs by 2040 Naomi Klein has written about capitalism and climate Martha Nussbaum Professor of Law and Ethics at the University of Chicago is a proponent of the capabilities approach to animal rights Anna Grodzka Polish green LGBTQIA advocateOrganization EditLocal movements Edit The sunflower is recognized internationally as a symbol of green politics 36 Green ideology emphasizes participatory democracy and the principle of thinking globally acting locally As such the ideal Green Party is thought to grow from the bottom up from neighborhood to municipal to eco regional to national levels The goal is to rule by a consensus decision making process Strong local coalitions are considered a prerequisite to higher level electoral breakthroughs Historically the growth of Green parties has been sparked by a single issue where Greens can appeal to ordinary citizens concerns In Germany for example the Greens early opposition to nuclear power won them their first successes in the federal elections 37 Global organization Edit Ashok Khosla was president of the International Union for Conservation of Nature and also worked for the United Nations Environment Programme There is a growing level of global cooperation between Green parties Global gatherings of Green Parties now happen The first Planetary Meeting of Greens was held 30 31 May 1992 in Rio de Janeiro immediately preceding the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development held there More than 200 Greens from 28 nations attended The first formal Global Greens Gathering took place in Canberra in 2001 with more than 800 Greens from 72 countries in attendance The second Global Green Congress was held in Sao Paulo Brazil in May 2008 when 75 parties were represented Global Green networking dates back to 1990 Following the Planetary Meeting of Greens in Rio de Janeiro a Global Green Steering Committee was created consisting of two seats for each continent In 1993 this Global Steering Committee met in Mexico City and authorized the creation of a Global Green Network including a Global Green Calendar Global Green Bulletin and Global Green Directory The Directory was issued in several editions in the next years In 1996 69 Green Parties from around the world signed a common declaration opposing French nuclear testing in the South Pacific the first statement of global greens on a current issue A second statement was issued in December 1997 concerning the Kyoto climate change treaty 38 At the 2001 Canberra Global Gathering delegates for Green Parties from 72 countries decided upon a Global Greens Charter which proposes six key principles Over time each Green Party can discuss this and organize itself to approve it some by using it in the local press some by translating it for their web site some by incorporating it into their manifesto some by incorporating it into their constitution 39 This process is taking place gradually with online dialogue enabling parties to say where they are up to with this process 40 Federation of Young European Greens demonstration in Copenhagen during the Climate Summit 2009 The Gatherings also agree on organizational matters The first Gathering voted unanimously to set up the Global Green Network GGN The GGN is composed of three representatives from each Green Party A companion organization was set up by the same resolution Global Green Coordination GGC This is composed of three representatives from each Federation Africa Europe The Americas Asia Pacific see below Discussion of the planned organization took place in several Green Parties prior to the Canberra meeting 41 The GGC communicates chiefly by email Any agreement by it has to be by unanimity of its members It may identify possible global campaigns to propose to Green Parties worldwide The GGC may endorse statements by individual Green Parties For example it endorsed a statement by the US Green Party on the Israel Palestine conflict 42 Thirdly Global Green Gatherings are an opportunity for informal networking from which joint campaigning may arise For example a campaign to protect the New Caledonian coral reef by getting it nominated for World Heritage Status a joint campaign by the New Caledonia Green Party New Caledonian indigenous leaders the French Green Party and the Australian Greens 43 Another example concerns Ingrid Betancourt the leader of the Green Party in Colombia the Green Oxygen Party Partido Verde Oxigeno Ingrid Betancourt and the party s Campaign Manager Claire Rojas were kidnapped by a hard line faction of FARC on 7 March 2002 while travelling in FARC controlled territory Betancourt had spoken at the Canberra Gathering making many friends As a result Green Parties all over the world have organized pressing their governments to bring pressure to bear For example Green Parties in African countries Austria Canada Brazil Peru Mexico France Scotland Sweden and other countries have launched campaigns calling for Betancourt s release Bob Brown the leader of the Australian Greens went to Colombia as did an envoy from the European Federation Alain Lipietz who issued a report 44 The four Federations of Green Parties issued a message to FARC 45 Ingrid Betancourt was rescued by the Colombian military in Operation Jaque in 2008 Global Green meetings Edit source source source source source source source source source source Vandana Shiva in Cologne Germany 2007 Separately from the Global Green Gatherings Global Green Meetings take place For instance one took place on the fringe of the World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg Green Parties attended from Australia Taiwan Korea South Africa Mauritius Uganda Cameroon Republic of Cyprus Italy France Belgium Germany Finland Sweden Norway the US Mexico and Chile The Global Green Meeting discussed the situation of Green Parties on the African continent heard a report from Mike Feinstein former Mayor of Santa Monica about setting up a web site of the GGN discussed procedures for the better working of the GGC and decided two topics on which the Global Greens could issue statements in the near future Iraq and the 2003 WTO meeting in Cancun Green federations Edit Bob Brown at a climate change rally in Melbourne 5 July 2008 Affiliated members in Asia Pacific and Oceania form the Asia Pacific Green Network The member parties of the Global Greens are organised into four continental federations Federation of Green Parties of Africa Federation of the Green Parties of the Americas Federacion de los Partidos Verdes de las Americas Asia Pacific Green Network European Green PartyThe European Federation of Green Parties formed itself as the European Green Party on 22 February 2004 in the run up to European Parliament elections in June 2004 a further step in trans national integration Green political parties Edit Green movements are calling for social change to reduce the misuse of natural resources These include grassroots non governmental organizations like Greenpeace and green parties Alliance 90 The Greens Australian Greens Austrian Green Party Belarusian Green Party Democratic Renewal of Macedonia Dialogue for Hungary LMP Hungary s Green Party Ecologist Greens Europe Ecology The Greens France Federation of the Greens Green League Finland Greens of Andorra Green Party of Aotearoa New Zealand Green Party of Armenia Green Party Brazil Green Party of Canada Green Party Czech Republic Green Party of England and Wales Green Party Ireland Green Party Israel Green Party of Lebanon Green Party Norway Green Party Sweden Green Party Romania Green Party of Taiwan Green Party Turkey Green Party of the United States Groen Ecolo GroenLinks Hariyali Nepal Party Latvian Green Party Left Green Movement Meretz Israel Red Green Alliance Denmark Scottish Green Party Socialist People s Party Denmark The Alternative Denmark See also Edit Climate change portal Earth sciences portal Ecology portal Environment portal Politics portal Renewable energy portalOutline of green politics list of related articles organized for easy browsing Notes Edit a b Wall 2010 p 12 13 Peter Reed David Rothenberg 1993 Wisdom in the Open Air The Norwegian Roots of Deep Ecology University of Minnesota Press p 84 ISBN 978 0 8166 2182 8 Derek Wall 2010 The No nonsense Guide to Green Politics New Internationalist p 12 ISBN 978 1 906523 39 8 Jon Burchell 2002 The Evolution of Green Politics Development and Change Within European Green Parties Earthscan p 52 ISBN 978 1 85383 751 7 Playing by the Rules The Impact of Electoral Systems on Emerging Green Parties 2007 p 79 ISBN 978 0 549 13249 3 Robbins Paul 2012 Political Ecology A Critical Introduction Wiley Blackwell ISBN 9780470657324 Peet Richard Watts Michael 2004 Liberation Ecologies Environment Development Social Movements Routledge p 6 ISBN 9780415312363 Dustin Mulvaney 2011 Green Politics An A to Z Guide SAGE publications p 394 ISBN 9781412996792 Wall 2010 p 47 66 Keys David December 2003 How Rome polluted the world Geographical Vol 75 no 12 LaFreniere Gilbert F 1990 Rousseau and the European Roots of Environmentalism Environmental History Review 14 4 41 72 doi 10 2307 3984813 ISSN 1053 4180 JSTOR 3984813 S2CID 157682006 McCormick John 1995 The Global Environmental Movement London John Wiley ISBN 9780471949404 A Politics for the 21st Century 26 August 1998 Uekotter Frank 2006 The green and the brown a history of conservation in Nazi Germany Cambridge University Press p 202 ISBN 9780521612777 Staudenmaier Peter Fascist Ecology The Green Wing of the Nazi Party and its Historical Antecedents Archived from the original on 13 March 2008 Retrieved 24 March 2008 Biehl Janet Staudenmaier Peter 1995 Ecology and the Modernization of Fascism in the German Ultra Right Ecofascism Lessons from the German Experience AK Press ISBN 978 1873176733 Kempton Richard 10 May 2003 The Provos Amsterdam s Anarchist Revolt PDF madgorilla org Wall 2010 p 14 The History of The Green Party Greens org nz Archived from the original on 10 October 2008 Retrieved 16 March 2015 Green History UK Who Was First Green History uk 28 August 2017 Archived from the original on 11 September 2017 Retrieved 10 September 2017 Humphries David 31 March 2012 Newsmaker Green bans Sydney Morning Herald The Green Movement Green Party of Canada Retrieved 12 February 2015 Switzer Jacqueline Vaughn 2003 Environmental Activism A Reference Handbook Santa Barbara CA ABC CLIO Inc pp 184 185 ISBN 1 57607 901 5 Retrieved 1 June 2020 Giuseppe Ferrari 2008 Green and grey in Dutch environmentalism Debates and Philosophical Implications Environmental Sciences 5 3 191 204 DOI 10 1080 15693430802299114 https www tandfonline com doi full 10 1080 15693430802299114 Kronsell Annica Backstrand Karin Lovbrand Khan Jamil 30 June 2010 Environmental politics and deliberative democracy Examining the promise of new modes of governance ISBN 978 1 84844 954 1 Thousands march against nuclear power in Tokyo USA Today September 2011 David H Slater 9 November 2011 Fukushima women against nuclear power finding a voice from Tohoku The Asia Pacific Journal Green Party of the United States platform Criminal Justice Green Party 2004 Archived from the original on 4 September 2008 Retrieved 12 February 2015 Green Party Irish Language Policy PDF the Green Party of Ireland 2014 Archived from the original PDF on 2 July 2014 Howard Emma 7 April 2015 Top academics ask world s universities to divest from fossil fuels The Guardian Retrieved 7 April 2015 Epstein Alex The Moral Case For Investing Not Divesting In Fossil Fuels Forbes Retrieved 7 April 2015 Divestment Commitments FossilFree org Retrieved 7 April 2015 Syracuse University to divest fossil fuel investments April 2015 Retrieved 7 April 2015 Energy policy greenparty org uk Retrieved 12 December 2020 Conca James Finland s Green Party And Nuclear Power Really Forbes Retrieved 12 December 2020 Roussopoulos Dimitrios 1993 Political ecology beyond environmentalism Montreal Black Rose Books p 114 ISBN 1 895431 80 8 Not surprisingly the colours green and yellow are used widely in the symbols of ecologists the former evoking vegetation and the latter the sun The sunflower a popular symbol embodies both colours and turns towards the sun the source of renewable energy The bicycle is another important icon as bicycle transportation is regarded as one of the means to re humanise society The history behind Germany s nuclear phase out Clean Energy Wire 25 September 2014 Retrieved 20 March 2020 John Rensenbrink August 2003 Global Greens Network a brief history up to 2003 Global Greens Canadian Greens Green Party of Canada Constitution green party of canada Archived from the original on 18 February 2004 iG Noticias Videos Famosos Esportes Bate Papo Infograficos Greenparties hpg ig com br 17 September 2013 Archived from the original on 2 April 2003 Retrieved 16 March 2015 Global Network of Green Parties Australian Greens Archived from the original on 1 March 2003 Statement of the Global Green Coordination on the Israeli Palestinian Conflict Green Party US Archived from the original on 18 February 2003 Spinifex 4 Newsletter of the 2001 Global Greens Congress PDF Consensus Productions Alain LIPIETZ a BOGOTA du 3 au 5 mars 2002 Providence College Tony Affigne Green parties of the world declare Free Ingrid Betancourt and Clara Rojas in French Archived from the original on 16 February 2004 Green Parties of the World Call for Ingrid Betancout s Freedom Green Parties world wide Archived from the original on 20 November 2008 References Edit Wall Derek 2010 The No Nonsense Guide to Green Politics Oxford New Internationalist Publications ISBN 978 1 906523 39 8 Further reading EditDobson Andrew 2007 Green Political Thought 4 Edition 1 Edition 1980 London New York Routledge ISBN 0 415 40351 0 Hardcover Gilk Paul 2009 Green Politics is Eutopian The Lutterworth Press Archived from the original on 17 June 2019 Retrieved 13 October 2010 Spretnak Charlene 1986 The Spiritual Dimension of Green Politics Santa Fe N M Bear amp Co 95 p ISBN 0 939680 29 7External links EditGlobal Greens Charter Canberra 2001 Archived 14 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine Ecology and Society book on politics and sociology of environmentalism Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Green politics amp oldid 1119775758, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.