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The environment


Say no to Heathrow Expansion

The environment
31 May 2008 - 12:00pm
31 May 2008 - 4:00pm

Location: 

Hatton Cross tube station (Piccadilly line)


Description: 

Demonstration against Heathrow expansion - www.make-a-noise.org


Why socialists should oppose airport expansion

The environment
Author: 
Paul Vernadsky

If new runways at Heathrow, Stansted, Edinburgh and Birmingham airports are built, they will generate more greenhouse gas emissions, which will further contribute to global warming. We should oppose the expansion of Heathrow and other UK airports as part of our working class socialist strategy for preventing dangerous climate change.


Nuclear energy and metabolic rifts

Nuclear weapons
Author: 
Stuart Jordan

Solidarity’s current debate about the future of the nuclear industry appears to be an argument at cross purposes. Martin Thomas, Les Hearn and others have argued that nuclear is not as dangerous or as lethal as some other energy sources like coal. If only we had a planned economy under workers’ control without a £70 billion Trident replacement project in the pipeline, then nuclear would be a good idea.


"Fossil Fools Day" organised by Rising Tide

The environment
1 Apr 2008 - 12:00am
1 Apr 2008 - 11:59pm

Location: 

All across the country


25) The significance of Morris’ socialist ecology

The environment

The opinions of William Morris on what we now call ecology are important in any assessment of him as a political thinker in his own time.


24) Morris on lifestyle politics

The environment

Morris was a political activist, and although his personal life was informed by his socialist politics, he did not see lifestyle or consumer behaviour as a substitute for political action.


23) Morris on housing and living conditions

The environment

Morris was more coherent when commenting more concretely on housing under socialism. In The Housing of the Poor, an article published in Justice, (19 July 1884), he wrote:


22) Morris on town and country

The environment

Morris apparently disliked urban living before he became a socialist, and he appears to have carried over this attitude into his socialist activity. In an early article in Justice, entitled Why Not?


21) Morris on transport

The environment

On transport, Morris was even more a prisoner of his time.


20) Morris on energy

The environment

Morris had less to say of contemporary relevance on energy, which is hardly surprising since renewables were barely even dreamt of when he was politically active.


19) Morris on machinery and workplace safety

The environment

One of the great myths about Morris is that he was hostile to technology.


18) Morris on work under socialism

The environment

Another of Morris’ contributions to Marxism was his positive conception of work under socialism. Not for Morris - as for his contemporary Paul Lafargue – the right to be lazy.


17) Morris on the working class as the agent of socialist ecology

The environment

Perhaps Morris’ most significant breakthrough was to identify working class action and the socialist movement more generally as the essential social agents in protecting the environment.


16) Morris on the causes of ecological degradation

The environment

Morris held to a materialist appreciation of the connection between human productive activity and the ruination of the environment.


15) Morris on the nature – society nexus

The environment

Morris had read Marx’s Capital in French by 1884 – an authorised English edition was still to be properly translated at this time.


14) Morris infused his socialism with ecology

The environment

Sometime in 1882, William Morris decided he was no longer a radical and began to associate himself explicitly with socialism.


13) Morris on poetry, art and nature

The environment

Morris made his name as an artist and as a poet, and his commitment to conservation was expressed through his work.


12) Morris – from conservationism to socialist ecology

The environment

William Morris was one of the outstanding Marxists in the period after Marx’s death.


Climate change, middle class activism and the media

Plane Stupid
Author: 
Louise Gold

Louise Gold spoke to Graham Thompson from Plane Stupid, whose recent action on the rooftop of the Houses of Parliament was widely reported.


Letter: Nuclear -a blind alley on climate change

The environment
Author: 
Paul Hampton

I welcome Les Hearn’s participation in our nuclear debate, particularly as I remember reading about climate change in his science column in Socialist Organiser as long ago as 1988-89. However he completely evades the central problems with nuclear (Solidarity 3/127, 21 February 2008).


Model trade-union motion on climate change

The environment
Author: 
Paul Hampton

This is drafted as a motion for national union conferences, but can be adapted for local union branches and Trades Councils.


Climate change: document for AWL conference 2008

The environment
Author: 
Paul Hampton

§1. Climate change is a fact of life on earth in the early 21st century and in all likelihood will remain a significant ecological and social question for the foreseeable future. It has substantial consequences for working class politics. The AWL has a significant role to play in drawing out the political implications of dangerous climate change and taking part in the fight to prevent it.


Good turnout for union climate conference

The environment
Author: 
Paul Vernadsky

Around 300 trade unionists and environmental activists attended the Campaign against Climate Change (CCC) trade union conference on 9 February.


Letters: Honest accounting on nuclear

Nuclear weapons
Author: 
Les Hearn

Is this Solidarity or Green World that I’m reading? According to Stuart Jordan (24 Jan), whatever the answer to climate change is, it’s not nuclear power! Nuclear plants are always late and over budget, unlike anything else.
Apparently, uranium would run out in 10 years, a fact that had escaped the companies that are keen to build and run new power stations. So why is Gordon Brown keen on nuclear? Because his brother is a “lobbyist” for EDF!

Of course!


Short report from Climate Change Campaign Trade Union conference, 9 February

The environment
Author: 
Sacha Ismail

250-300 people; mostly unaffiliated but hard leftish trade unionists; mostly older.


Workers' Climate Action Network

The environment

On 13 January 2007 the Workers’ Climate Action network had its first meeting. The initiative is about working for national unity between the labour movement and activists from the environmental milieu, to change current trade union policy, and create just transition plans for a future of sustainable industry.


Climate camp update

The environment
Author: 
Robin Sivapalan

About 70 activists from around the country met at the Common Place social centre in Leeds on 26/27 January to discuss a range of proposals after last summer’s Heathrow Camp against Climate Change.


A workers' programme against climate change

Global warming
Author: 
Paul Vernadsky

Climate change will remain a significant ecological and political question for the foreseeable future. Marxists like the AWL believe that the working class is the essential social agent in that struggle. We hope the Campaign against Climate Change trade union conference on 9 February will help the drive to win the labour movement to action on the issue.


Report on Campaign against Climate Change meeting in Tower Hamlets, 7 February

The environment
Author: 
Sacha Ismail

About 60 people of many different ages, backgrounds and politics attended a Campaign against Climate Change meeting in Bethnal Green in East London on 7 February.


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