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      Environmental conflicts and defenders: A global overview

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          Highlights

          • Support of environmental defenders requires better understanding of environmental conflicts.

          • Environmental defenders employ largely non-violent protest forms.

          • Indigenous environmental defenders face significantly higher rates of violence.

          • Combining preventive mobilization, tactical diversity and litigation increases activists’ success.

          • Global grassroots environmentalism is a promising force for sustainability.

          Abstract

          Recent research and policies recognize the importance of environmental defenders for global sustainability and emphasize their need for protection against violence and repression. However, effective support may benefit from a more systematic understanding of the underlying environmental conflicts, as well as from better knowledge on the factors that enable environmental defenders to mobilize successfully. We have created the global Environmental Justice Atlas to address this knowledge gap. Here we present a large-n analysis of 2743 cases that sheds light on the characteristics of environmental conflicts and the environmental defenders involved, as well as on successful mobilization strategies. We find that bottom-up mobilizations for more sustainable and socially just uses of the environment occur worldwide across all income groups, testifying to the global existence of various forms of grassroots environmentalism as a promising force for sustainability. Environmental defenders are frequently members of vulnerable groups who employ largely non-violent protest forms. In 11% of cases globally, they contributed to halt environmentally destructive and socially conflictive projects, defending the environment and livelihoods. Combining strategies of preventive mobilization, protest diversification and litigation can increase this success rate significantly to up to 27%. However, defenders face globally also high rates of criminalization (20% of cases), physical violence (18%), and assassinations (13%), which significantly increase when Indigenous people are involved. Our results call for targeted actions to enhance the conditions enabling successful mobilizations, and for specific support for Indigenous environmental defenders.

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          Most cited references59

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          The mentality of crows: convergent evolution of intelligence in corvids and apes.

          Discussions of the evolution of intelligence have focused on monkeys and apes because of their close evolutionary relationship to humans. Other large-brained social animals, such as corvids, also understand their physical and social worlds. Here we review recent studies of tool manufacture, mental time travel, and social cognition in corvids, and suggest that complex cognition depends on a "tool kit" consisting of causal reasoning, flexibility, imagination, and prospection. Because corvids and apes share these cognitive tools, we argue that complex cognitive abilities evolved multiple times in distantly related species with vastly different brain structures in order to solve similar socioecological problems.
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            Cultural Violence

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              The Use of Newspaper Data in the Study of Collective Action

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Glob Environ Change
                Glob Environ Change
                Global Environmental Change
                Butterworth-Heinemann
                0959-3780
                0959-3780
                1 July 2020
                July 2020
                : 63
                : 102104
                Affiliations
                [a ]Institut de Ciència i Tecnologia Ambientals (ICTA-UAB), Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Spain
                [b ]College of Humanities and Development Studies, China Agricultural University, Beijing, China
                [c ]The Ataturk Institute for Modern Turkish History, Bogazici University, Istanbul, Turkey
                [d ]Department of Natural Resource Sciences, McGill University, Canada
                Author notes
                [* ]Corresponding author at: Institut de Ciència i Tecnologia Ambientals (ICTA-UAB), Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, 08193 Bellaterra (Cerdanyola del Vallès), Barcelona, Spain. juanlcau@ 123456gmail.com
                Article
                S0959-3780(20)30142-4 102104
                10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2020.102104
                7418451
                32801483
                6adc1dd2-45b4-4e92-8f16-d082ba1e1970
                © 2020 The Authors

                This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 30 January 2020
                : 1 April 2020
                : 5 May 2020
                Categories
                Article

                environmental justice,environmentalism of the poor,environmental conflicts,sustainability,statistical political ecology,ejatlas

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