Radical Kindness: young people's environmental activism
Radical Kindness: young people's environmental activism
The Radical Kindness project is an international study across the UK and France. Since 2018, the project has established one of the first empirical studies of the Fridays for Future or Youth Strike for Climate movement, as well as young people’s participation in Extinction Rebellion activism, including fieldwork in Manchester, Nottingham, London, Edinburgh and Paris.
The project is a collaboration between Dr Benjamin Bowman (MCYS), Prof Sarah Pickard (New Sorbonne University, Paris) and Dena Arya (Nottingham Trent University).
The Radical Kindness project crosses over with my other research on the climate strikes, climate change and young people’s visions for futures of climate justice in the Young Climate Imaginaries (YoCLI) project.
Radical Kindness is funded by a Research Accelerator Grant from the Research Centre for Applied Social Sciences (RCASS), Manchester Metropolitan University,
Publications:
Co-authored publications with young co-researchers
Coming soon!
By Benjamin Bowman (2020)
Youth-led movements like #FridaysforFuture and the school strikes for climate (henceforth referred to as the climate strikes) are leading calls for action on climate change worldwide. This paper reports on a thematic analysis of protest signs, and interviews with young climate strikers, at a climate strike in Manchester, UK, in 2019.
This paper explores the ways in which dominant, adult-centred frameworks for conceptualizing young people’s environmental activism tend to obscure the complexities of the climate strike movement. In contrast, this study examines the complex political activism of climate strikers as a ‘subaltern group’, who take political action in a wider context of intersecting categories of oppression and marginalization – including youth as a category of marginalization – and in the historical context of environmental racism, the enduring legacies of colonialism, and global inequality during contemporary capitalism.
The article develops a theoretical model for future research, based on a model of two constraining frames that limit analysis of the climate strikes in particular and young people’s environmental activism in general. This paper contributes to a step change in methods for the study of this remarkable movement in a global context
By Sarah Pickard, Benjamin Bowman and Dena Arya (2022)
Part of the Routledge Handbook of Environmental Movements.
The handbook provides readers with up-to-date knowledge on environmental movements and activism and is a reference point for international work in the field. It offers an assessment of environmental movements in different regions of the world, macrostructural conditions and processes underlying their mobilization, the microstructural and social-psychological dimensions of environmental movements and activism, and current trends, as well as prospects for environmental movements and social change.
By Benjamin Bowman and Sarah Pickard
In these times of crisis, young people are also bearing witness to a distinctive global wave of youth-led activism involving protest actions. Much of this activism can be deemed dissent because many young activists are calling for systemic change, including the radical disruption, reimagining and rebuilding of the social, economic and political status quo. In this interdisciplinary article, between politics and peace studies, we investigate how the concept of peace plays an important role in some young dissent, and specifically the dissent of young people taking action on climate change. We observed that these young environmental activists often describe their actions in careful terms of positive peace, non-violence, kindness and care, in order to express their dissent as what we interpret as positive civic behaviour. They also use concepts grounded in peace and justice to navigate their economic, political and social precarity.