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Why young climate activists have captured the world’s attention

Author: Emma Marris

Global Climate Strike, London, UK - 24 May 2019

Young climate activists around the world are planning to protest on 20 September.Credit: James Veysey/Shutterstock

From Jakarta to New York City, children and teenagers are walking out of class and marching in the streets to demand action on climate change. And the world is taking notice. Communications experts say these young climate activists are using their moral authority as children, and their social-media savvy, to surf a rising tide of adult concern.

Jamie Margolin founded the protest group Zero Hour in Seattle, Washington, in 2017, when she was just 15. Half a world away, 15-year-old Greta Thunberg started skipping school in 2018 to strike for climate action outside the Swedish parliament in Stockholm. The movement quickly went global. An estimated 1.6 million kids in 125 countries hit the streets during a protest in mid-March. And a youth-led demonstration planned worldwide for 20 September could be the largest climate protest ever.

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Young people have been talking about climate change for decades. But the latest generation of protestors is louder and more coordinated than its predecessors, say Dana Fisher, a sociologist at the University of Maryland in College Park who studies activism. The movement’s visibility on social media and in the press has created a feedback loop. “Young people are getting so much attention that it draws more young people into the movement,” she says.

Thunberg, now 16, was inspired to start her weekly climate strikes by students in Parkland, Florida, who organized a national school walkout to fight for stricter gun laws after a mass shooting at their high school in 2018 left 17 people dead. Earlier this month she made headlines worldwide when she sailed to New York City in a solar-powered yacht to attend the upcoming United Nations climate summit. “It feels like we are at a breaking point,” she said.

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Thunberg and other young climate campaigners aren’t conventional, tree-hugging environmentalists, says Harriet Thew, an environmental social scientist at the University of Leeds, UK. Many see tackling climate change as a matter of global justice — a framing that Thew says is more effective than a purely environmental message.

“More and more, they are talking about the problems for people and really recognizing that human–environment connection,” she says. “They are not just concerned about the polar bear.” Their message isn’t about saving the rainforest or saving whales; it is about saving the most vulnerable people on Earth.

A movement comes of age

Oladosu Adenike, a 25-year-old protester in Abuja, Nigeria, says that she can already see the effects of global warming in her country. “Internally displaced peoples, farmer–herdsmen clashes, insecurity — all driven by climate change,” she says. “Also the increase in food price, floods sweeping away farmers′ land, droughts affecting the yield of crops, and excessive rainfall.”

Then there is 22-year-old Vanessa Nakate, who spends 66 hours a week selling solar batteries in her father’s shop in Kampala, Uganda. She worries about the effects of climate change on the rain-fed agriculture that supports most Ugandans. Although Nakate often protests alone, social media connects her to activists around the world and amplifies their common message. “The older generation messed things up,” she says. “We are doing the clean up.”

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Adults are listening. Media around the world covered Thunberg’s journey across the Atlantic. And UN Secretary General António Guterres has endorsed the school strikes, saying: “My generation has failed to respond properly to the dramatic challenge of climate change. This is deeply felt by young people. No wonder they are angry.”

Connie Roser-Renouf, a climate-communication researcher at George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia, says that data from a long-running survey of US adults conducted nearly every year since 2008 reveal an audience that has grown increasingly receptive to the strikers’ message. “The adult population has been getting increasingly concerned, and that has been trending since 2015,” she says.

Some of their concern is related to natural disasters thought to be exacerbated by climate change — such as the record-breaking forest fires in the western United States last year, and Hurricane Maria, which slammed into Puerto Rico in September 2017.

But Roser-Renouf says that about one-quarter of the adults in the 2018 survey thought that the most important reason to act on climate change was “to provide a better life for our children and grandchildren”. That response suggests that youth activists remind adults why they care about the environment in the first place, she says.

Caring for generations to come

Research has revealed a similar pattern in other countries, says Christopher Shaw, a communications specialist at Climate Outreach in Oxford, UK. “We find again and again that it is the impacts on children and grandchildren that are of great concern,” he says.

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A 2016 survey of 1,860 people in the United Kingdom1 found that 61% were willing to pay up to £20 (US$25) a month to prevent climate-change related deaths in 2050, 2080 and 2115. And participants in a 2017 study2 conducted in Lisbon and Adelaide, Australia, were willing to spend just as much money to prevent negative climate impacts on future generations as they were to protect themselves.

But adults don't just see teens and young adults as victims who need to be protected from climate change. Thew’s research on the role of youth participants (those aged 16 to 24 years) at UN climate negotiations has revealed that adults perceive these activists as having greater moral integrity than others attending the talks — “because they are not being paid to be there,” she says.

Because young climate protestors don’t represent someone else’s agenda, their message is strikingly direct and unvarnished. “They can say a lot of things that older activists can’t say,” says Matthew Nisbet, who studies environmental communication at Northeastern University in Boston, Massachusetts. “They don’t have careers yet. They don’t have filters that adults might have.”

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He points to videos online of teen climate protestors confronting members of the US Congress or otherwise taking adults to task for not facing up to climate-model predictions. “Maybe you are simply not mature enough to tell it like it is,” Thunberg says to the French National Assembly in Paris, in a video with 3.7 million views on Facebook. “Even that burden you leave to us children.”

“They are being viewed millions of times and then they end up being embedded in news stories,” says Nisbet. “It is drama, it is novelty, it is authenticity, and it is catastrophe.”

Still to be seen is whether the movement’s participants maintain their enthusiasm as they grow older and leave school. The demands of finding employment and building a stable life in a difficult global economy might leave less time for activism, Shaw says. Children and teens have more support and time to protest. “Your dinner is still on the table at home,” he says.

But when today’s youth leaders grow up, a new cohort of climate campaigners might be ready to rise. Some of today’s activists are as young as 11.

Nature 573, 471-472 (2019)

doi: 10.1038/d41586-019-02696-0

This article is part of Covering Climate Now, a global collaboration of more than 250 media outlets to highlight the issue of climate change.

DMU Timestamp: February 03, 2020 23:30





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