Social Movement to Address Climate Change: Local Steps for Global Action
Powered By Xquantum

Social Movement to Address Climate Change: Local Steps for Global ...

Read
image Next

Subject Index

1Sky campaign, 230–233

agnostic pluralism, 258–259, 261, 266

ACNag, 283

activism

building relationships with natural scientists, 380–381

natural science vs, 378–379

and pathways to natural science, 380–381

The Alamo, 41–44

Austin, Texas

Austin Green Art, 66–69

Cup City, 70–71

identity and myth in, 29–34

NPG art installation, 65–69

Austin Climate Protection Plan, 31, 33

Bali Principles of Climate Justice, 180, 194, 197

Baltimoreans United in Leadership Development, 87

body rhetoric, 101

Boston Common rally, 82–106

boundary work, 218

citizenship practices, in movement building, 8–9, 11–12

civil rights movement, 31, 82, 86, 99, 105, 109, 198, 201, 269, 348, 414

Clean Air Act, 26

climate change as coalitions

environmental justice defined, 181

mainstream environmental movement defined, 181

as moral issue, 224–225, 233–234

coalitions, possibility of

movement fusion, 183

strategic, 183

The Colbert Report, 2

collaboration, challenges to

extending social capital, 191–192

green consumerism, 193–197

Internet and, 187–190, 192–193

leveraging local networks, 190–191

collaboration, possibilities for, 197–200

and faith-based groups, 198–200

collective body politic, 137

collective political action, 125–137, 406–408

as organized effort, 220–221

collective resistance

constraints, 165

SIU as a, 161–162

transformative view of, 160–161

community art

as activist, 55–56

climate change and, 53–76

as direct political action, 56

as green, 55

as indirect political action, 56

as political, 55

complex whole, 398–399