Environmental movement
The environmental movement or ecology movement (colloquially also eco-movement ) is a social movement for nature - or environmental protection .
Action alliances for the environmental movement
Environmental movements can condense into one or more collective actions in order to “solve” a problem they perceive as such within the framework of certain conflicts between humans and the environment. The individual actions are not necessarily organized by just one environmental protection organization, although organizations are an important part of the movement. Actors in the environmental movement are non-governmental organizations such as BUND , Green League , NABU , Greenpeace , citizens' initiatives , action alliances and many others. The goal of the environmental movement is sometimes a fundamental change in the relationship between humans and the environment. Action alliances play an important role in the organization of demonstrations , star marches and bicycle rides - such as the annual demonstrations against factory farming and for an agricultural turnaround under the motto We're sick of it! or for gentle mobility .
Environmental movements can be differentiated on the basis of their specific (thematic) objective, their degree of organization, their size, the strategies they have chosen, etc. Ideally, they go through several phases, which run from the first confrontation with the problem, the thematization (mostly above all rejection of developing environmentally harmful practices) to the organization of structures that solve these problems. Environmental movements that require major social upheavals, such as the energy or agricultural turnaround , run in waves over a long period of time. Not infrequently, however, individual ecological initiatives of these movements are also limited in terms of topic and time. They end when their goal, such as preventing a large slaughterhouse or a road project, has been achieved. Another type of limitation can be found in the annual “ Mobil ohne Auto ” campaign, for which there are preparatory groups.
History of the environmental movements
The historian Joachim Radkau dates the beginning of the environmental movement in today's sense to the debate about the wood shortage around 1800. The fears of the wood shortage, a supply crisis for the raw material wood, arose parallel to the "natural cult" of the forest romanticism at the time of the Enlightenment . In the wake of the German-speaking countries to pioneer were afforestation and Japan to pioneer a sustainable forestry . Historians argued in the 1980s whether the wood shortage was an actual or just feared resource crisis .
Radkau himself assumes that the environmental movement has a certain blindness to history and a pronounced lack of interest in the roots and predecessors in their own cultural area. For today's European environmental scene, the American nature conservation movement, which goes back well into the nineteenth century, is the actual forerunner. The idea of considering special natural landscapes as worthy of protection came up with William Wordsworth and George Catlin as early as 1810 and 1832, respectively. In 1864, at the instigation of John Muir, the first sanctuary was defined - in what is now Yosemite National Park in California .
The European Year of Nature Conservation 1970, the first Europe-wide environmental campaign with over 200,000 actions, is considered to be the birth year of the modern environmental movement.
1971 z. B. an international alliance of environmental protection organizations was founded by four organizations from France, Sweden, the USA and England , the Friends of the Earth : 2011 with over two million members and supporters in 76 countries.
Germany
1899 in Stuttgart by Lina Hähnle the Association for Protection of Birds (BFV) as a precursor of today's Naturschutzbund Germany e. V. (NABU) founded: NABU is today as a non-governmental organization ( NGO, Non Government Organization ) with the BUND, founded in 1975, one of the largest recognized nature conservation associations in Germany (with association - right of action in nature and environmental protection).
In Germany , a distinction must be made between a first environmental movement (which emerged around the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries) and a second environmental movement (around the 1970s to 1980s). The first environmental movement has its roots in romanticism , the homeland security movement , the life reform movement and in the biodynamic agriculture that emerged from anthroposophy (1924). The conservation in Nazi was characterized by ideology overprinting with a völkischen home -term and the blood and soil .
The second environmental movement is one of the so-called new social movements . It originated in both West and East Germany ( GDR ), albeit differently. The second environmental movement was significantly shaped by the change in values and the spread of post-materialistic value orientations.
West Germany
As early as the 1950s and 1960s, there were high-circulation non-fiction books that predicted environmental crises or combined doom prophecies with popular scientific accounts. Authors of such books were among others Erich Hornsmann , Reinhard Demoll , Günther Schwab and Bodo Manstein .
One of the oldest West German environmental initiatives was the Citizens 'Action Environmental Protection Central Upper Rhine Region (BUZO) , founded in 1971 by Hans-Helmut Wüstenhagen, who later chaired the " Federal Association of Citizens' Initiatives Environmental Protection " (BBU) as a result of resistance to the expansion plans of the oil refineries in Karlsruhe-Knielingen .
In Tübingen is "survival in the nuclear age" by Professor founded immediately after the held on November 26, 1970 Lecture Harald Stumpf from the Institute for Theoretical Physics , the Committee for Environmental Protection , in addition to the shortly afterwards that of Hartmut Gründler founded Lega Ambiente established.
The Badisch-Alsatian citizens' initiatives, consisting of 21 groups, were also important for the growing second environmental movement . They formed in 1972 in the dispute against a bleaching chemical plant near Marckolsheim in Alsace , were ultimately victorious in the non-violent struggle against the Wyhl nuclear power plant in Kaiserstuhl in southern Baden and are considered the first larger base of the BBU, which later comprised 600 citizens' initiatives. In the 1970s and 1980s, the anti-nuclear movement was an integral part of the environmental movement in the public eye.
GDR
In West Germany, the anti-nuclear movement in particular gave rise to the first non-governmental organizations of the environmental movement at the end of the 1970s. Such independent organizations were forbidden in the political system of the GDR. In the GDR stood next to the protest z. B. against forest damage in the Ore Mountains or air pollution in Bitterfeld / Wolfen always the rebellion against the non-information policy of the government. There were crystallization points in the oppositional environmental movement : the church research home in Lutherstadt Wittenberg , the ecological working group of the Dresden church districts or the environmental library at the Berlin Zionskirche and finally, from 1988, the green-ecological network Arche .
With the turning point in 1989, an increasing resistance formed. In January 1990, the citizens' initiative “Stop Cospuden 90” was founded, which organized a star march to the Cospuden opencast mine in the spring of that year . Over 10,000 people took part. The protest was successful. On April 20, 1990, the preliminary cut of the mine was stopped, and on October 7, 1992 the last coal train left the mine.
United States
The Sierra Club is the oldest and largest conservation organization in the United States : It was founded on May 28, 1892 in San Francisco ( California ) by the conservationist John Muir and several professors from the University of California, Berkeley and Stanford University .
The American biologist and ecologist Barry Commoner (* 1917; † 2012), author of several influential non-fiction books on environmental protection , is considered to be one of the leading early exponents of the modern (North) American environmental movement.
Political ecology
In West Germany, the following political consideration of the second environmental movement was ultimately very effective: not only the working people, but also nature was seen as threatened by the industrial economy. This idea of the alternative movement received entry into the first from the resistance to the nuclear energy resulting ecology movement of the 1980s that a negligent waste as themed and incineration as the former industry-friendly chemicals policy , the deforestation and the tropical forest destruction , the threat to the earth's atmosphere ( ozone hole ) , environmentally harmful forms of animal fattening , etc. Other topics were gradually integrated into the environmental movement: "After a new group of people came to nature conservation through environmental thought , a relationship with the peace movement , with emancipatory women's groups, developed ." (Stölb 114).
For the GDR environmental movement, the political consisted in criticism of socialism. GDR socialism was unable to remedy the “remnants of capitalism ” (as it liked to call environmental problems); and he made "ecology" a taboo subject. In this respect, simply taking up the issue of criticism was "hostile-negative" for the Stasi.
The "leading science" of this movement was ecology or political ecology . But when the word “ecology” found its way into everyday language, its meaning changed. The initially neutral ecological science was given a positive impression, so that "ecological" became synonymous with "environmentally friendly, clean, considerate, biodegradable, harmless" etc.
Cultural forms
In its origins and heyday, the second environmental movement developed characteristic subcultural forms in the 1970s and 1980s , which continue to have an impact today. As a rule, their supporters (often also called " eco ") pursued reform goals that went beyond environmental protection and were reflected in an "alternative lifestyle". In the early years, the “ecos” were mostly part of a left - wing youth culture spectrum that became increasingly differentiated in the late 1970s. Particularly evident was the demarcation for simultaneous disco scene and the poppers . The eco-scene developed a characteristic aesthetic that developed from the hippie aesthetic and was characterized by natural materials as well as exotic patterns and batik . The style of clothing was decidedly casual, hair was often worn long and open.
The GDR environmental movement, as far as it was independent, started in part from the Protestant churches. In part, the lifestyle of its members was similar to that of the western eco-scene. But there were different colors: from more anarchistic (such as the East Berlin “ Environmental Library ”) to more bourgeois (e.g. the Dresden Ecological Working Group).
For the traditional churches and their members, the motives and forms of expression of the environmental movement in both parts of Germany often remained incomprehensible and incomprehensible. In West Germany, the Protestant student communities were significantly involved.
Persecution and murder of environmental activists
In many countries, especially in developing and emerging environmental activists are not only in authoritarian written , but also democratic states (such. As Brazil ) harassment , for example, paramilitaries , the army or police and criminal gangs and rebels, as well as by farmers and Representatives of for-profit corporations exposed, harassed and threatened with arrest , or at risk of torture or murder . According to a report by the non-governmental organization Global Witness , z. For example, 185 environmental activists were murdered worldwide in 2015. At least 212 environmental activists were killed worldwide in 2019. In 2020, at least 227 people worldwide were murdered for their environmental activism, more than a hundred of them in Latin America alone. Most of the cases are related to forestry projects, according to Global Witness. In second place followed water and dam construction projects. Violent crimes also occur in connection with processes in agriculture. The NGO assumes that the actual number of environmentalists killed is significantly higher.
Climate protection
A central and media-widespread field of activity of the environmental movement is climate protection , whereby climate change is viewed as part of the global environmental problem that is also related to the extinction of species . The well-known climate protection activist Greta Thunberg warned in April 2021 that only three percent of all ecosystems were intact. Deforestation , species extinction and climate change are linked.
politicization
Some nature conservation associations are institutionalized remnants of the first environmental movement, the second environmental movement in West Germany found its institutional expression, among others. in the establishment of an environment ministry , the Federal Environment Agency and the establishment of the Green Action Future (GAZ) in 1978. In 1980, " The Greens " were founded as the first federal party, from which the ÖDP split off in 1982 . In the GDR, political institutionalization began as ecclesiastical: between 1987 and 1989 representatives of peace, environmental and justice groups as well as representatives of all Christian churches met for “ ecumenical assemblies”. This achieved a new quality and commitment for all three subject areas. In 1989/1990 the East German environmental movement split over the question of whether there should be an ecological party. The supporters founded the Green Party in the GDR , the opponents of founding a party united in the Green League network . What was striking about the programs of all GDR parties founded in 1989 and 1990 was the strong ecological component. The New Forum , the Peace and Human Rights Initiative (IFM) and Democracy Now formed Alliance 90 , which merged with the West German Greens in 1993. The Green Party in the GDR had already taken this step in 1990.
With increasing acceptance of the environmental movement, attempts by the modern right-wing extremists and the New Right increased in the 1980s and 1990s to re-associate environmental and nature protection with ethnic, racist and anti-Semitic content and to reconnect with the ideological traditions of nature conservation, in particular homeland protection , to tie in, which also appeared to the National Socialists to be compatible. With Baldur Springmann, for example, Oliver Geden saw an attempt to combine right-wing extremism , ecology and spirituality . The right-wing extremist homeland - loyal German youth referred to the National Socialist concept of home and nature .
Well-known environmental activists
The following list of environmental activists cannot, of course, be exhaustive; other environmental activists can also be found in the category: Person (environmental and nature protection) .
- John Muir , pioneer of the environmental movement in North America, co-founder of the concept of national parks and co-founder of the Sierra Club
- Julia Butterfly Hill , forest conservationist in collaboration with members of the environmental protection organization Earth First! of which she was not a member.
- Rachel Carson , biologist and author of the book Silent Spring (1961)
- Al Gore , former US Vice President and 2007 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
- Yann Arthus-Bertrand is an internationally known photo journalist , founder of the ecological society GoodPlanet and the Action carbone for the reduction of greenhouse gases .
- Monika Griefahn , former organizer of the Greenpeace campaign against chemical pollution of the North Sea, later Minister for the Environment of Lower Saxony
- Herbert Gruhl , author of the book A Planet is plundered - The horror of our politics and conservative politicians (CDU, Green Action Future, The Greens, ÖDP)
- Alwin Seifert , conservationists, pioneer and key figure of organic farming in the era of National Socialism , BN chairman 1958-1963
- Hartmut Gründler , founder of the Tübingen Association for Environmental Protection 1971 and the AK Lebensschutz 1972, self-immolation in 1977 in protest against the government official "lies", especially about Asse II
- David McTaggart , long-time director of Greenpeace international
- Wangari Muta Maathai , recipient of the 1984 Right Livelihood Award , the 2004 Nobel Peace Prize and founder of the Green Belt Movement reforestation project
- Abi Kusno Nachran , an Indonesian rainforest protection activist
- José Lutzenberger , Brazilian activist, later also a politician, recipient of the Right Livelihood Award 1988
- Paul Watson , founder of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society
- Kumi Naidoo , South African human rights and environmental activist, director of Greenpeace International since autumn 2009
- Miroslav Patrik , Czech environmental activist who uncovered illegal practices around the construction of the section of the D8 motorway ( Czech section of European route 55), which runs through the nature reserve of the Central Bohemian Uplands , chairman of Detě Země , a Czech environmental protection organization
- Horst Stern , journalist and book author, founder of the magazine Natur
- Wilhelm Bode , the "Heidepastor", campaigned for the preservation of the Lüneburg Heath . Co-founder of the Lüneburg Heath nature reserve.
- Alfred Toepfer , initiator of the nature parks in Germany, fighter for the preservation of the Lüneburg Heath
- Bernhard Grzimek , fighter for zoological species protection and the preservation of the Serengeti, animal filmmaker, director of the Frankfurt Zoo
- Heinz Sielmann , animal filmmaker, television presenter, foundation curator, campaigner for the preservation of the Green Belt
- Hubert Weinzierl , co-founder of the Bund Naturschutz Bayern (BN) and the Bund Umwelt- und Naturschutz Deutschland (BUND)
- Felix Finkbeiner , founder of the international children and youth initiative Plant-for-the-Planet
- Greta Thunberg , Swedish climate protection activist and initiator of the Schulsteiks for the climate
- Luisa Neubauer , German climate justice activist and co-initiator of Fridays for Future
- Sunita Narain , Indian environmental activist and publicist
- Naomi Klein , author of The Decision: Capitalism vs. Climate
- Robert Marc Lehmann , German marine biologist and nature photographer, author of the book "Mission Erde"
See also
- Anti-nuclear , anti-coal power movement
- Environmental Defense Fund
- End of story, nothing to add
- Climate protection
- LOHAS
- Ecofeminism
- Environmental awareness , justice and racism
literature
German
- Michael Beleites : The independent environmental movement in the GDR . In: Hermann Behrens and Jens Hoffmann (ed.): Environmental protection in the GDR. Analyzes and eyewitness reports. Vol. 3, pp. 179-224. Munich 2007.
- Franz-Josef Brüggemeier , Jens Ivo Engels (ed.): Nature and environmental protection after 1945 . Frankfurt a. M./New York 2005.
- Jens Ivo Engels: Natural politics in the Federal Republic: world of ideas and political behavioral styles in nature conservation and environmental movement 1950–1980 , Paderborn: Verlag Ferdinand Schöningh , 2006, ISBN 978-3-506-72978-1 . ( Review )
- John Robert McNeill : Blue Planet. The history of the environment in the 20th century . Camus, Frankfurt am Main 2003. ISBN 978-3-593-37320-1 .
- Patrik von zur Mühlen: New beginnings and upheavals in the GDR. Citizens' movements, critical public opinion and the decline of SED rule . Bonn 2000.
- Joachim Radkau : The era of ecology: a world history, Beck, Munich 2011, ISBN 978-3-406-61372-2 .
- Joachim Radkau , Frank Uekötter (Ed.): Nature Conservation and National Socialism , Camus, Frankfurt am Main / New York, NY 2003, ISBN 978-3-593-37354-6 .
English
- Robert Gottlieb: Forcing the spring: the transformation of the American environmental movement , revised new edition, Washington, DC [u. a.]: Island Press , 2005.
- Carolyn Merchant: Radical ecology: The Search for a Livable World , Routledge, 2nd Edition 2005, ISBN 0-415-93578-4 .
- Philip Shabecoff: A Fierce Green Fire. The American Environmental Movement (Paperback), Island Press, 2003 Revised Edition, ISBN 1-55963-437-5 .
- Frank Uekötter : The Greenest Nation? A New History of German Environmentalism. MIT, Cambridge 2014, ISBN 978-0-262-02732-8 .
French
- Yves Frémion : Histoire de la révolution écologiste , Paris 2007
Web links
- Environmental movement in the GDR Didactic materials, photos, videos, documents and interviews with contemporary witnesses on jugendopposition.de ( Federal Agency for Civic Education / Robert Havemann Society eV)
- Quo vadis, environmental movement? - Interviews with thought leaders of the environmental movement
- History of the GREEN LEAGUE
- Damir Skenderovic: Ecological Movement. In: Historical Lexicon of Switzerland .
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b c Joachim Radkau: The era of ecology . In: FAZ , March 17, 2011, Joachim Müller-Jung : From the woods to the peaks. Always non-violent, but with very disparate goals: the historian Joachim Radkau has presented an impressive world history of environmental movements. ( Review )
- ↑ Jochen Bölsche: The ecological movement . In: Der Spiegel . No. 10 , 1999, p. 166 ( online - March 8, 1999 , part 2 of the series Mirrors of the 20th Century ).
- ↑ foei.org ( Memento of May 2, 2011 in the Internet Archive ) (January 19, 2011)
- ↑ Jens Ivo Engels: Nature Policy in the Federal Republic. World of ideas and political behavioral styles in nature conservation and the environmental movement 1950-1980 , Paderborn 2006, page 78.
- ↑ Frank Buchmeier: Atomic Protest - The apparent failure. In: stuttgarter-zeitung.de . April 12, 2011, accessed January 4, 2020 .
- ^ Badisch-Elsässische Bürgerinitiativen ASSOCIATIONS ANTINUCLEAIRES DE BADE ET D'ALSACE badisch-elsaessische.net, accessed on May 9, 2019.
- ^ Susanne Langsdorf, Elena Hofmann: The environmental movement in the GDR and environmental policy advice in the new federal states. Ecologic Institute, July 2014, accessed September 12, 2020 .
- ^ Anne Käfer: Environmental protection as an opposition of churches and groups in the late GDR. In: Germany archive. Federal Agency for Civic Education , November 24, 2017, accessed on January 2, 2019 .
- ↑ History of the Ökolöwe ( Memento from July 26, 2014 in the Internet Archive )
- ↑ Texts and materials from the research center of the Evangelical Study Community, Heidelberg 1977 ff.
- ↑ Christiane Ignaczak: Environmental activists demand their rights. In: badische-zeitung.de . March 18, 2017, accessed January 4, 2021 .
- ↑ a b Global Witness: 227 environmental activists were murdered in the past year. In: Der Spiegel. Retrieved September 13, 2021 .
- ↑ Elena Erdmann, Maria Mast: Save the earth, now for real! May 9, 2019, accessed June 17, 2021 .
- ↑ Greta Thunberg warns: Only three percent of all ecosystems are intact. In: Day24. April 15, 2021, accessed June 17, 2021 .
- ↑ Oliver Geden: Rechts Ökologie , Berlin 1999, p. 243.
- ↑ see e.g. B. the documentary Home
- ↑ founder and President Yann Arthus-Bertrand ( Memento of 8 April 2015, Internet Archive )
- ^ Imposing world history of the green movement , book review in Andruck on March 28, 2011, Deutschlandfunk