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What We’re Fighting for Now Is Each Other: Dispatches from the Front Lines of Climate Justice

By: Wen Stephenson

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An urgent, on-the-ground look at some of the โ€œnew American radicalsโ€ who have laid everything on the line to build a stronger climate justice movement

The science is catastrophic climate change, by any humane definition, is upon us. At the same time, the fossil-fuel industry has doubled down, economically and politically, on business as usual. We face an unprecedented situationโ€”a radical situation. As an individual of conscience, how will you respond?

In 2010, journalist Wen Stephenson woke up to the true scale and urgency of the catastrophe bearing down on humanity, starting with the poorest and most vulnerable everywhere, and confronted what he calls โ€œthe spiritual crisis at the heart of the climate crisis.โ€ Inspired by others who refused to retreat into various forms of denial and fatalism, he walked away from his career in mainstream media and became an activist, joining those working to build a transformative movement for climate justice in America.

In What Weโ€™re Fighting for Now Is Each Other , Stephenson tells his own story and offers an up-close, on-the-ground look at some of the remarkable and courageous peopleโ€”those he calls โ€œnew American radicalsโ€โ€”who have laid everything on the line to build and inspire this fast-growing old-school environmentalists and young climate-justice organizers, frontline community leaders and Texas tar-sands blockaders, Quakers and college students, evangelicals and Occupiers. Most important, Stephenson pushes beyond easy labels to understand who these people really are, what drives them, and what theyโ€™re ultimately fighting for. He argues that the movement is less like environmentalism as we know it and more like the great human-rights and social-justice struggles of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, from abolitionism to civil rights. Itโ€™s a movement for human solidarity.

This is a fiercely urgent and profoundly spiritual journey into the climate-justice movement at a critical momentโ€”in search of what climate justice, at this late hour, might yet mean. 
 ISBN:9780807088401

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Weight 550 g
Dimensions 235 × 158 × 23 mm
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ISBN 9780807088401