On Friday April 9th through Sunday 11th there will be a three-day Global Just Recovery Gathering ( Recharge. Rebuild. Reconnect.) of climate activists from around the world. Featured speakers include Dr. Vandana Shiva, India, Naomi Klein, Canada, Greta Thunberg, Sweden, and Bill McKibben, United States. The conference is organized by 350.org. Registration is free. You can see the conference program at this link.
The conference is based in the United Kingdom and is scheduled for their time zone so my workshop, Student Climate Activism as Civics Education, will be Friday morning at 3 AM New York time. I haven’t decided yet if I will stay up late or get up early. Co-presenters include Adeola Tella-Williams of Uniondale High School, Pablo Muriel of Alfred E. Smith High School (Bronx), Dennis Morales of Taft High School Campus (Bronx), and Sadia Weiner, a student at Millennium High School in Brooklyn.
Conference organizers are distributing an open letter that lays out its principles. The COVID-19 pandemic demands swift and unprecedented action from national governments and the international community. Choices being made right now will shape our society for years, if not decades to come. As decision-makers take steps to ensure immediate relief and long-term recovery, it is imperative that they consider the interrelated crises of wealth inequality, racism, and ecological decline – notably the climate crisis, which were in place long before COVID-19, and now risk being intensified. This is a time to be decisive in saving lives, and bold in charting a path to a genuinely healthier and more equitable future through a Just Recovery. We, the undersigned organisations, call for a global response to COVID-19 to contribute to a just recovery. Responses at every level must uphold these five principles:
1. Put people’s health first, no exceptions. Resource health services everywhere; ensure access for all.
2. Provide economic relief directly to the people. Focus on people and workers – particularly those marginalised in existing systems – our short-term needs and long-term conditions.
3. Help workers and communities, not corporate executives. Assistance directed at specific industries must be channeled to communities and workers, not shareholders or corporate executives, and never to corporations that don’t commit to tackling the climate crisis.
4. Create resilience for future crises. We must create millions of decent jobs that will help power a just recovery and transition for workers and communities to the zero-carbon future we need.
5. Build solidarity and community across borders – don’t empower authoritarians. Transfer technology and finance to lower-income countries and communities to allow them to respond using these principles and share solutions across borders and communities. Do not use the crisis as an excuse to trample on human rights, civil liberties, and democracy.
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