All we can save Truth, courage, and solutions for the climate crisis

Book - 2020

"Two powerful phenomena are simultaneously unfolding on Earth: the rise of the climate movement and the rise of women and girls. The People's Climate March and the Women's March. School strikes for climate and the #MeToo movement. Rebellions against extinction and declarations that time's up. More than concurrent, the two trends are deeply connected. From sinking islands to drought-ridden savannas, the global warming crisis places an outsized burden on women, largely because of gender inequalities. In many parts of the world, women hold traditional roles as the primary caregivers in families and communities, and as the main providers of food and fuel, they are more vulnerable when flooding and drought occur; the U.N. est...imates 80% of those who have been displaced by climate change are women. Women are on the front line of the climate-change battle, and are uniquely situated to be agents of change--to find ways to mitigate the causes of global warming and adapt to its impacts on the ground. Today, across the world, from boardrooms and policy positions to local communities, from science to activism, women everywhere are using their voices to take leadership and call for action on climate change. This anthology is a collection and celebration of these diverse voices, asking critical questions and providing invaluable insight and solutions. Curated by two climate leaders, this book leads us away from the brink and toward the possibility of a life-giving future"--

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Subjects
Published
New York : One World [2020]
Language
English
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xxiv, 418 pages : color illustrations ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780593237069
  • Editors' Notes
  • Begin
  • 1. Root
  • Calling In
  • Reciprocity
  • The Big Picture
  • Indigenous Prophecy and Mother Earth
  • A Handful of Dust
  • November
  • What Is Emergent Strategy?
  • On Fire
  • 2. Advocate
  • Litigating in a Time of Crisis
  • To Be of Use
  • Beyond Coal
  • Collards Are Just as Good as Kale
  • For Those Who Would Govern
  • The Politics of Policy
  • A Green New Deal for All of Us
  • 3. Reframe
  • How to Talk About Climate Change
  • She Told Me the Earth Loves Us
  • Truth Be Told
  • Harnessing Cultural Power
  • Becoming a Climate Citizen
  • Dead Stars
  • Wakanda Doesn't Have Suburbs
  • 4. Reshape
  • Heaven or High Water
  • Man on the TV Say
  • A Tale of Three Cities
  • Buildings Designed for Life
  • The Straits
  • Catalytic Capital
  • Mending the Landscape
  • 5. Persist
  • We Are Sunrise
  • At the Intersections
  • Did It Ever Occur to You That Maybe You're Falling in Love?
  • Dear Fossil Fuel Executives
  • Sacred Resistance
  • On the Fifth Day
  • Public Service for Public Health
  • 6. Feel
  • Under the Weather
  • Mothering in an Age of Extinction
  • Anthropocene Pastoral
  • Loving a Vanishing World
  • Being Human
  • The Adaptive Mind
  • Home Is Always Worth It
  • 7. Nourish
  • Solutions Underfoot
  • Notes from a Climate Victory Garden
  • Solutions at Sea
  • Characteristics of Life
  • Black Gold
  • Ode to Dirt
  • Water Is a Verb
  • The Seed Underground
  • 8. Rise
  • A Letter to Adults
  • An Offering from the Bayou
  • Calling All Grand Mothers
  • A Field Guide for Transformation
  • Mornings at Blackwater
  • Like the Monarch
  • Community Is Our Best Chance
  • Onward
  • Gratitude
  • Climate Solutions
  • Referenced Organizations
  • Select Sources
  • Credits
  • Index
  • About the Essayists
  • About the Editors
Review by Library Journal Review

Published in the midst of a resurgence of young climate activists with strong voices such as Jamie Margolin and Greta Thunberg, who are fighting bold battles against systems they assert condone and perpetuate climate change, this work feels somewhat nostalgic for 1960s-style activism. Editors Johnson, a marine biologist, and author and teacher Wilkinson have highlighted statistics, included powerful quotations, and underlined the names of women who have played significant roles in the fight against climate change, making this work accessible to readers without much prior knowledge of women's climate-related work and a welcome text in college courses on environmentalism. Their introduction sets up key terminology and asks readers to contemplate ways in which environmentalism has been impacted by toxic masculinity while setting the stage for an examination that is intersectional in its attention to issues of race, class, and gender. While some contributions are stronger than others, the book overall provides space for women to explore the seriousness of climate change in essays, poems, and artwork, with a sense of urgency and beauty. VERDICT By grouping a range of women's voices, the editors have crafted a hopeful narrative, with many calls to action.--Emily Bowles, Univ. of Wisconsin, Madison

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A welcome anthology, in prose and verse, of women's writings on climate change. At the outset, marine biologist Johnson, founder of the Urban Ocean Lab, and teacher Wilkinson, vice president of Project Drawdown, write that the political and social constructs that oppress women are one and the same with those that are wreaking havoc on the global environment: "Supremacy, violence, extraction, egotism, greed, ruthless competition--these hallmarks of patriarchy fuel the climate crisis just as surely as they do misogyny, racism, and inequality." There's no such zero-sum game-playing here. The editors observe that women are well equipped to transcend ego and competition in order to create a politics of "heart-centered, not just head-centered, leadership." Many of the writings that follow celebrate Indigenous ways of knowing: Mexico-born Xiye Bastida, for example, invokes her Otomi-Toltec ancestors to advocate a "shift in culture and mindset." She argues vigorously for intersectional activism and eschews any form of exclusive politics that further marginalizes the disenfranchised. Penobscot writer Sherri Mitchell emphasizes the importance of recognizing that "we are all inextricably linked" while Joy Harjo, the first Native poet laureate, raises a number of provocative questions for would-be political leaders--e.g., "Do you have authority by the original keepers of the lands, those who obey natural law and are in the service of the lands on which you stand?" If not, the leader has no business in the job. Some writers--Naomi Klein, say--are more grounded in scientific and political approaches, and poet Emily Johnston delivers a needed caution: We can work diligently and still not solve the monumental problems we face, but that is no excuse not to do it: "There is too much we need to heal, and we have to change the path that we're on. We have beautiful work to do before we die." Other contributors include Ada Limón, Kendra Pierre-Louis, Varkini Prakash, and Mary Oliver. A well-curated collection with many ideas for ways large and small to save the planet. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Begin Ayana Elizabeth Johnson and Katharine K. Wilkinson Eunice Newton Foote rarely gets the credit she's due. In 1856 Foote theorized that changes in carbon dioxide in the atmosphere could affect the Earth's temperature. She was the first woman in climate science, but history overlooked her until just a few years ago. Foote arrived at her breakthrough idea through experimentation. With an air pump, two glass cylinders, and four thermometers, she tested the impact of "carbonic acid gas" (the term for carbon dioxide in her day) against "common air." When placed in the sun, she found the cylinder with carbon dioxide trapped more heat and stayed hot longer. From a simple experiment, she drew a profound conclusion: "An atmosphere of that gas would give to our earth a high temperature; and if as some suppose, at one period of its history the air had mixed with it a larger proportion than at present, an increased temperature . . . must have necessarily resulted." In other words, she connected the dots between carbon dioxide and planetary warming, and she did it more than 160 years ago. Foote's paper, "Circumstances Affecting the Heat of Sun's Rays," was presented in August 1856 at a meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and then published. For unknown reasons it was read aloud by Joseph Henry, secretary of the Smithsonian, rather than by Foote herself. That was three years before Irish physicist John Tyndall published his own more detailed work on heat-trapping gases--work typically credited as the foundation of climate science. Did Tyndall know about Foote's research? It's unclear--though he did have a paper on color blindness in the same 1856 issue of The American Journal of Science and Arts as hers. In any case, we have to wonder if Eunice Newton Foote ever found herself remarking, as so many women have: "I literally just said that, dude." Foote wasn't only a scientist. She was involved in the early movement for women's rights too. Her name appears on the list of signatories to the 1848 Seneca Falls "Declaration of Sentiments"--a manifesto created during the first women's rights convention in the United States--right below suffragist Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Foote's husband, Elisha, and abolitionist-philosopher Frederick Douglass also signed on, under "gentlemen." (Of note: John Tyndall opposed women's suffrage.) Foote, it seems, was a climate feminist. The same patriarchal power structure that oppresses and exploits girls, women, and nonbinary people (and constricts and contorts boys and men) also wreaks destruction on the natural world. Dominance, supremacy, violence, extraction, egotism, greed, ruthless competition--these hallmarks of patriarchy fuel the climate crisis just as surely as they do inequality, colluding with racism along the way. Patriarchy silences, breeds contempt, fuels destructive capitalism, and plays a zero-sum game. Its harms are chronic, cumulative, and fundamentally planetary. And these structures are being actively upended. The People's Climate March and the Women's March. School strikes for climate and the #MeToo movement. Rebellions against extinction and declarations that time's up. More than concurrent, these phenomena are connected by the systems they seek to transform and the values that guide them. The climate crisis is not gender neutral. Climate change is a powerful "threat multiplier," making existing vulnerabilities and injustices worse. Especially under conditions of poverty, women and girls face greater risk of displacement or death from extreme weather disasters. Early marriage and sex work--sometimes last-resort survival strategies--have been tied to droughts and floods. There is growing proof of the link between climate change and gender-based violence, including sexual assault, domestic abuse, and forced prostitution. Tasks core to survival, such as collecting water and wood or growing food, fall on female shoulders in many cultures. These are already challenging and time-consuming activities; climate change can deepen the burden, and with it struggles for health, education, and financial security. The list of harmful impacts caused by our rapidly changing climate goes long and it goes wide, especially for girls and women of color, those in the Global South, and those who are rural or Indigenous. In very real ways, the climate crisis thwarts the rights and opportunities of women and girls, as well as nonbinary people. These realities make gender-responsive strategies for climate resilience and adaptation critical. And they mean that bold climate action is critical to our aspirations for gender equality and justice. However, the story does not, and must not, end with the label "victim." When you're close to the problem, you're necessarily close to the solutions. All around the world, women and girls are making enormous contributions to climate action: conducting research, cultivating solutions, creating campaign strategy, curating art exhibitions, crafting policy, composing literary works, charging forth in collective action, and more. Look around and you will see on the rise climate leadership that is more characteristically feminine and more faithfully feminist, rooted in compassion, connection, creativity, and collaboration. There is a renaissance blooming in the climate movement, and it has a few important characteristics. First, there is a clear focus on making change rather than being in charge. We see women and girls moving beyond ego, competition, and control, which are rampant in the climate space (as elsewhere) and impede good work. We see joyful following where wise leadership appears, joining instead of duplicating, giving one another credit, sharing resources, passing the mic, and celebrating one another's successes. It is shine theory in practice. Second, there is a commitment to responding to the climate crisis in ways that heal systemic injustices rather than deepen them. We see women and girls centering justice, inclusion, and frontline communities, recognizing that we can address near-term needs and long-term aims at the same time, and more effectively. Equity is not secondary to survival, as some suggest; it is survival. Third, there is an appreciation for heart-centered, not just head-centered, leadership. We see women and girls bringing their whole selves to this movement--fear, grief, fiery courage, wracking uncertainty, all of it--and doing the inner work that often precedes effecting change. The climate crisis has inescapable psychological and spiritual dimensions. What's so powerful about integrating head and heart: It's where scientific rigor and moral clarity, analysis and empathy, strategy and imagination meet. It is what allows us to sustain bold aspirations and insist upon the action that's necessary rather than what's expedient or "practical." Fourth, and perhaps most important, there is a recognition that building community is a requisite foundation for building a better world. We see women and girls engaging in deeply relational, collaborative, and supportive ways--taking the necessary time, making the necessary space, investing in the weft and weave between us. It is clear that we are in this together, that our fates are intertwined. And in many ways, success requires building the largest, strongest team possible. While women and girls are undeniably vital voices and agents of change for this planet, we are too often missing or even barred from the proverbial table. Women remain underrepresented in government, business, engineering, and finance; in executive leadership of environmental organizations, United Nations climate negotiations, and media coverage of the crisis; and in the legal systems that create and uphold change. Girls and women leading on climate receive insufficient financial backing and too little credit. Again, unsurprisingly, this marginalization is especially true for women of the Global South, rural women, Indigenous women, and women of color. The dominant public voices and empowered "deciders" on the climate crisis continue to be White men. More than a problem of bias, suppressing the climate leadership and participation of women and girls--half the world's brainpower and change-making might--sets us up for failure. Research shows that women have an edge over men when it comes to the planet: caring about the environment and climate change and acting on that care; aversion to taking on outsized risk or imposing it on others (something data indicates White men are particularly inclined to do). This edge carries into politics and policy making. Female legislators more strongly support environmental laws--and stricter laws at that. When parliaments have greater representation of women, they are more likely to ratify environmental treaties. When women participate equally with men, climate policy interventions are more effective. At a national level, higher political and social status for women correlates with lower carbon emissions and greater creation of protected land areas. It's not about only women but about making sure women are included and leading at all levels. Excerpted from All We Can Save: Truth, Courage, and Solutions for the Climate Crisis All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.