Abstract

Much has been written about the challenges of tackling climate change in post-political times. However, times have changed significantly since the onset of the debate on post-politics in environmental scholarship. We have entered a politicised, even polarised world which, as this article argues, a number of voices within the climate movement paradoxically try to bring together again. This article scrutinises new climate movements in a changing world, focusing on the School Strikes for Climate in Belgium. It shows how the movement, through the establishment of an intergenerational conflict line and a strong politicisation of tactics, has succeeded in putting the topic at the heart of the public agenda for months on end. By claiming that we need mobilisation, not studying, the movement went straight against the hegemonic, technocratic understanding of climate politics at the time. However, by keeping its demands empty and establishing a homogenised fault line, the movement made itself vulnerable to forms of neutralisation and recuperation by forces which have an interest in restoring the post-political consensus around technocratic and market-oriented answers to climate change. This might also partly explain its gradual decline. Instead of recycling post-political discourses of the past, this article claims, the challenge is to seize the ‘populist moment’ and build a politicised movement around climate change. One way of doing that is by no longer projecting climate change into the future but reframing the ‘now’ as the moment of crisis which calls on us to build another future.

Highlights

  • While I am fully aware of the limits of the current analysis, it is my contention that looking at new climate movements from the perspective of ‘the political’ can help make sense of their successes and failures, as well as of the challenges, discussions, and tensions they face

  • Tactics and message converge in the idea that there is no point in attending school when confronted with climate change: In order to tackle climate change, we need political pressure, not studying or even more science

  • Whereas a depoliticised climate discourse thrived in a post-political atmosphere, the political context is different today

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Summary

Introduction

More than 3000 young people, primarily secondary school pupils, participate in this first Belgian climate strike. They all responded to a Facebook video call of two teenage girls, Anuna De Wever and Kyra Gantois, to skip school for the climate. On Sunday 27 January, the School Strikes for Climate feed into an earlier planned demonstration, leading to the biggest climate march ever in the country, attracting more than 70,000 participants. While I am fully aware of the limits of the current analysis, it is my contention that looking at new climate movements from the perspective of ‘the political’ can help make sense of their successes and failures, as well as of the challenges, discussions, and tensions they face. I end the article with some reflections on how to seize ‘the populist moment’ (Mouffe, 2018) instead of recycling the post-politics of the past

The End of the Post-Political
Politicisation of Tactics
The Future is Haunted by the Past
Empty Demands
Sign for My Future
Depoliticising Climate Change in a Polarising World
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
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