climate justice
Africa’s military coups are climate coups
Abdoulie Ceesay, Gambian representative to COP28, argues that the West must take climate action – not militarization.Is it time more activists broke the law?
As he releases the documentary ‘Is It Time To Break The Law?’, activist and presenter Chris Packham talks to Graeme Green about activism and the ‘radical flank’ effect.
Taxcast: Who owns the climate crisis?
Naomi Fowler of the Tax Justice Network investigates how wealthy elites and transnational companies benefit from the climate crisis
The ultimate 2022 climate to-do list
What will be the definitive climate struggles of 2022? Danny Chivers shares global activists’ to do list.
Soil – the climate fix that COP forgot
Danny Chivers digs into a major Indian farming project that pulls carbon from the air – and increases yields for farmers.
Green jobs – puffery and promise
As the UN climate talks commence – where talk of a green and just transition for workers is on the agenda – Conrad Landin inspects the ground realities for oil workers in Scotland.
Carbon capture – still a pipe dream?
Danny Chivers weighs up the evidence on carbon-capture technologies and finds them wanting.
5 reasons why care and the climate are inseparable
Amy Hall on the underappreciated link between the twin crises of our times.
Can Amazon really deliver a low-carbon future?
Danny Chivers reveals the deep flaws of ‘net-zero’ targets.
A green recovery
Jake Woodier on the climate activists challenging corporate bailouts for the world’s polluters
Temperature check
Aruna Chandrasekhar on how climate activism has kept going in a time of isolation.
Temperature check
Danny Chivers is buoyed up by three decisive victories led by indigenous groups against fossil fuel interests in Australia, Brazil and Canada.
An unlikely coalition
Lucy EJ Woods heads to a mining town teaming up with Extinction Rebellion in northeast England.
Recording climate catastrophe
Louise Gray on sonic journalism, a novel way of recording the decline of the natural world.
When a ‘climate election’ goes wrong
All is not lost. Danny Chivers offers four movement-building strategies for the years ahead.
What if...cities became car-free?
Vanessa Baird on how to turn a toxic bane into a liberating blessing.
Negotiating a just retreat from rising seas
As cities begin planning for coastal erosion, relocating residents has paved the way for land grabs, forced evictions and a new wave of climate-driven gentrification. Jennifer Johnson reports.
How arts workers took on big oil
We are finally getting sponsorship out of the arts. Now let’s fix the grim working conditions. It’s all connected, argues Katherine Hearst.
Diary of a rebel
Charlotte Greene* shares a powerful and personal account of 24-hours with Extinction Rebellion’s October uprising in London.
Rebel with a tentacle
Exclusive: the inside story on Jeanne-Luc, Extinction Rebellion’s pink Octopus.
Voices from the global climate strike
The global climate strike is a crucial mobilization against ecological breakdown. Adam Weymouth speaks to those preparing to strike.
How do we get to zero-carbon emissions?
A graphic blueprint that models radical CO2 reductions to 2050. By Information is Beautiful.
From the frontlines of climate change resistance
Hoda Baraka on the climate action movements working to end fossil fuel extraction.
Climate justice from below for climate harms
The Bonn Climate Change Conference shows how top down processes will not bring about just solutions for the majority world, Harpreet Kaur Paul writes.
Why natural disasters are not natural
Storms do not discriminate, but societies do, argues Daniel Macmillen Voskoboynik.
The inextricable link between migration and sweatshops
The possibility of workers’ rights and climate justice movements responding together provides hope, writes Dalia Gebrial.