ANU Reporter

From 2011 – 2012 I worked at the ANU Colleges of Science in their communications team. In this role I worked with scientists to translate their scientific and technical material to be readable by the general public. I produced a number of scientific materials, including media releases, publications, profile stories and booklets.

I also wrote a number of articles for the publication ANU Reporter. These stories can be found below.


 

Searching for Solutions

Collaborative research is helping to shed light on how to close the gap on Indigenous health disadvantage, writes SIMON COPLAND.

111220: ANU Reporter Magazine. Picture by Belinda Pratten
111220: ANU Reporter Magazine. Picture by Belinda Pratten

We hear a lot about ‘closing the gap’ between Indigenous and non-Indigenous health outcomes. With a 12-year difference in life expectancy between non-Indigenous and Indigenous males, and child mortality rates up to four times higher in Indigenous communities, Indigenous disadvantage is considered to be one of Australia’s biggest health problems.

But what we often don’t hear about is the gap between Indigenous people who live in rural areas and Indigenous people who live in urban areas.

Read the full article here.


 

“I always wanted to be a medical doctor,” Farrer says. “But I discovered from a young age that there was no way I could cut people open or work with disease. Instead, I became really fascinated by psychology. I’m interested in not only how people get ill psychologically, but also how some people stay well psychologically despite facing risk factors. It’s fascinating stuff.”
Read the full article here. 

Farming Futures

Farming techniques are often seen as outdated and out of touch with the Australian landscape. One farmer however is changing that view, writes SIMON COPLAND

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The story of the farmer is often seen as synonymous with the story of Australia. Australian history is dominated by farming heroes, from the tale of ‘The Man from Snowy River’ to the story of the 1891 sheep shearers’ strike. But today, the public view of farming is often of an industry dominated by outdated industrial techniques and thinking from the 1950s. The stereotypical farmer is conservative, backward and reluctant to change their ways to adapt to the realities of the 21st century.

But Charles Massy, author of the recently released book, ‘Breaking the Sheep’s Back’, which charts the collapse of the Australian wool industry, and a PhD student at the Fenner School of Environment & Society, says that farmers across Australia are challenging this view. For Massy, Australian farmers are at the forefront of using innovative techniques that are revolutionising the way they work.

Read the full article here.


Global Warning

Without immediate action to combat human-induced climate change, we’re not only risking the health of our planet, but also ourselves. SIMON COPLAND reports.

120927: ANU Reporter Magazine Portraits. PIcture by Belinda Pratten
120927: ANU Reporter Magazine Portraits. PIcture by Belinda Pratten

Professor Tony McMichael is issuing a warning: not only will the changing climate affect our planet – killing our coral reefs and melting polar ice – it will also have serious impacts on human health. If we don’t learn from our past, and take action immediately, the future consequences could be devastating.

“The effects of climate changes in the past are really just a small taste of what we could expect to happen in the coming century,” says McMichael, a researcher at the National Centre for Epidemiology and Population health, part of the ANU College of Medicine, Biology and Environment.

It’s safe to say that McMichael knows what he’s talking about. The world-leading epidemiologist was looking at the effects of climate change long before it was a hot topic.

Read the full article here.


 

 

 

ABARES 2013 Science and Innovation Awards

In 2013 I worked with the team at the Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics and Sciences (ABARES) to profile winners of the 2013 Science and Innovation Awards for Young People in Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry.

I profiled six scientists who had won the awards, with these stories being compiled into a booklet for the awards dinner. Three of these articles are copied below.

Dr Abdul Jabbar

The Australian cattle industry is facing a new and growing threat, the spread of the disease bovine theileriosis. In 2012 alone there were more than 70 outbreaks of bovine theileriosis in Victoria, and there have been more than 250 outbreaks in NSW over the past five years. Despite an increase in the outbreaks though, we still know very little about its spread.

This is something Dr. Abdul Jabbar is trying to address.

Abdul says the disease has a terrible impact on infected cattle. 

Cattle

“Theileriosis of cattle is like malaria of humans, although it is transmitted by ticks rather than mosquitoes,” Abdul explained. “The disease is characterised by fever, anaemia, anorexia, abortion and potentially death.”

Abdul says that despite the growing spread of the disease, detection and treatment options are limited.

“Despite recent outbreaks, no vaccines or treatments are available in Australia, and no accurate diagnostic tests are accessible to livestock producers. Urgent action is required to develop tests for the rapid and accurate diagnosis of the disease and to understand the reasons for its spread.”

It is this diagnostic test Abdul’s research is aiming to develop.

“My research is aiming to develop a rapid and cost-effective molecular tool for the diagnosis and surveillance of bovine theileriosis in Australia. The aim will be for diagnostic laboratories to be able to use this test to provide services to the dairy and beef cattle producers, so that farmers can identify and manage the disease in their cattle.”

Abdul said his research was essential to ensure the welfare of Australian cattle, and the profitability of the industry.

“The rapid development of accurate diagnostic and analytical tools is crucial for investigations into the theileriosis problem in Australia, and will underpin disease surveillance and control of the disease as it spreads.”


Kate Plush

The death of a pig before it can be sent to market is a major loss for any farmer. In many circumstances this is outside a farmer’s control. But, as Kate Plush from the University of Adelaide explains, piglet mortality is a major issue that can be addressed.

“Pre-weaning pig mortality is a major constraint to the profitability of the pig industry. Conservative reports of pre-weaning mortality state that between 10 – 20% of pigs are lost during this initial period,” Kate says.

“One of the major reasons is that sows give birth to large litter sizes, meaning that the last piglets to be born often experience some degree of oxygen deprivation. If the oxygen deprivation is severe enough, piglets may be born as stillbirths. Alternatively, some suffer a moderate amount of oxygen deprivation and may be slightly brain damaged.”

Kate says she is investigating a simple nutritional supplement for pigs to help solve this problem.

“In this project I am aiming to identify if providing sows with magnesium sulphate reduces the incidence of piglet mortality. Magnesium sulphate acts as a ‘neuro-protector’, meaning it protects the brain from damage that can occur during oxygen deprivation. My research is looking to see if it can do this during long births. If so, piglets that experience oxygen deprivation would be more viable”

Kate says that this would provide a lost cost, easy solution to a massive problem for the pig industry.

“Current methods of reducing pre-weaning mortality include increased supervision and the culling of older sows that are more likely to display higher stillbirth rates. These options both result in decreased profitability.

“If the dietary manipulation proves to be effective in protecting the piglets it would provide a low cost, easily implemented strategy for pig producers to improve reproductive output.”


Jesse Leland

‘Knowledge is power’. For Jesse Leland from Southern Cross University that statement applies particularly to fisheries management. Jesse’s research is aimed at increasing the ecological and economical sustainability of Australia’s crustacean fisheries.

“Knowledge of age, growth rates and lifespan is critical for understanding important events in a species life history such as reproductive maturity, entry into the fishery and natural mortality,” Jesse explains.

Until recently however, Jesse says that our ability to obtain this information has been extremely limited.

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“In the past, direct age determination for crustaceans was impossible, because it was presumed that growth by moulting excluded the possibility of a permanent growth record in their exoskeleton. Only indirect, and somewhat imprecise, methods for age estimation were available.”

However, Jesse says that his research has identified a way to address to this problem.

“In a previous study, I reported a novel approach to crustacean age determination. I used cross-sectional analysis of gastric ossicles (i.e. stomach bones) to identify clearly defined growth marks that are of value to ageing crustaceans. Last year another researcher validated this method, proving that direct determination of crustacean ages is now possible.”

Jesse said that his research will build on those earlier works, by applying this method to commercially important Australian crustaceans.

“This project will provide validated age and growth parameters for two crustacean species. Perhaps more importantly, it will develop ageing protocols that can be extended to other Australian crustaceans and overseas, especially long-lived and deep-water species for which even indirect ageing methods are impractical.”

“The knowledge obtained from this research will facilitate sustainable management of Australia’s crustacean fisheries – which is of utmost importance to the entire industry.”

How We Get To Next

How We Get To Next is a UK-based science and technology website that dedicates itself to finding inspiring stories about the people and places building our future. I’ve written a number of stories for How We Get To Next covering Government initiatives, technological developments and non-Government programs to help create a more sustainable future.

My collection of stories are below.


 

Could Seeds Planted by Fleets of Gardening Drones Repair the World’s Forests?

Published May 2015

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Over the weekend, 35,000 volunteers in Ecuador broke the Guinness World Record for mass tree-planting. As part of the Ecuadorian government’s revamped environment policy, volunteers planted 350,000 new trees in an effort to reforest the country’s degraded tropical ecosystems.

With global deforestation rates continuing to increase, reforestation is becoming more important than ever. Forests are essential both for the protection of global biodiversity, as well as in acting as an ally in combating global climate change. Yet, as the Ecuadorian experience shows, replanting at the necessary scale is a difficult and time-consuming task. Unfortunately, it’s not easy to break world records every day, or even every month.

But what if we could plant trees faster, and maybe even cheaper? That’s what a new company, BioCarbon Engineering, has set its eyes on. After featuring in a Drones for Good competition in the United Arab Emirates in February, it has boldly claimed it can plant one billion trees per year using drones.

Read the full article here.


The Global Race Is on to Replace Roads with More Sustainable Materials

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When you think of sustainability, you probably don’t think of roads — in fact, probably the opposite. Images of highways cutting through the countryside and congested streets are often used to highlight the unsustainable nature of modern industrialization.

The numbers tend to back up the images. The asphalt used in roads is responsible for 1.6 million tons of CO2 globally each year — around two percent of all road transport emissions. As Mark Harris writes in The Guardian: “Building and maintaining a single mile of freeway takes as much energy as 200 U.S. homes use in a year, consumes as much raw material as 1,000 households get through in 365 days, and generates more waste than 1,200 homes produce annually.”

Is there a way we can make the process more sustainable?

Read the full article here.


Food Sharing Apps May Reduce Billions of Pounds of Waste

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Earlier this month, supermarket giant Tesco announced it would begin donating leftover food from its supermarkets to charities across the United Kingdom. Coming just months after the company faced controversy when a couple was summoned to court for “stealing” food from bins outside one of its stores, this seems to be a major — and important — shift. In donating leftover products, Tesco is becoming part of a trend toward using simple technology to reduce food waste.

To implement its plans, Tesco has signed up with the food distribution charity FareShare. FareShare operates across the United Kingdom, distributing leftover food to some 2,000 charities. Its CEO, Lindsay Boswell, explained that FareShare has actually been working with Tesco for a number of years now, collecting food wasted at the supply end of the market chain. To tackle the issue of waste food at the retail end, however, the two had to come up with a unique, technological solution — an application called FoodCloud.

Read the full article here. 


France Mandates That Its Roofs Be Covered in Solar Panels and Gardens — Should We, Too?

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Last week, the French government passed legislation mandating that the roofs of all new commercial buildings be partially covered by solar panels or rooftop gardens. The legislation was scaled back from its original vision but has still been dubbed a trailblazing approach to urban sustainability.

The roofs of our buildings provide a potentially surprising option for building more environmentally friendly cities. Solar panels have obvious benefits; they offer a way to use the top of a building to generate renewable energy. Beyond solar, in New York the White Roof Project is drawing on the millennia-old Mediterranean and Middle Eastern concept of painting roofs white to keep buildings cool. London buses apply a similar idea.

Rooftop gardening can provide a host of benefits, as well.

Read the full article here. 


30 years of .uk

For the last 30 years, people have been using .co.uk, .org.uk, .me.uk and .uk domain names. In 2015 I worked with the team at Nominet to profile companies who have used these domain names to build their business.

The stories with original links are below.

A student turns scraps of found fabric into a British style brand

Very few University students finding themselves bored go on to use that time to set up a successful business — but that is exactly what happened to Alec Farmer and Trakke Bags.

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“I was studying graphic design and I was a bit bored so I started making stuff in my spare time,” Alec explained. “I didn’t really have any money so I used to go and hunt around the skips in Glasgow and find different materials that I could use to make bags. Eventually I gathered a bit of a following and decided to keep going it when I graduated.”

Alec says from day one he wanted to make a product that was specifically British.

Read the full article here.


Using the web to give football back to its fans

In May this year, four and a half thousand people packed out the new Broadhurst Park Stadium to watch their local team, FC United Manchester(FCUM) take on the Portuguese team S.L. Benfica.

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Their first match in a brand new stadium was a demonstration of how the internet and a .uk address can connect communities of fans to create something special. Football may now be the plaything of global billionaires, but FC United are a welcome reminder of why local roots are still at its heart.

“Seeing grown men and women cry just with the sheer joy and exhilaration of what has been achieved, it touches you,” Andy Walker, fundraising and press and communications officer at FCUM said. “You have to have a heart of stone not to be moved by that and there were many people moved that night, no question.”

Read the full article here. 


Britain’s radio stations have a new audience: the rest of the world

The rise of the Internet has spelled trouble for many in the media. Social media and free news and video services have resulted in newspapers and television stations’ profits plummeting as they lose access to the market.

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Yet for one medium — radio — the Internet has potentially been a godsend. Once limited to the reach of their FM or AM frequency, radio stations are now suddenly able to be heard by a global audience, all from a familiar .uk address.

“We just hit 400,000 downloads,” explains Peter Beeston, the founder and manager of Cornucopia Radio. That’s pretty impressive for one man who started a small community radio show only seven years ago.

Read the full article here.


Putting .uk cheese on the map

When you think about cheese you probably think of France, Belgium or Switzerland. Or maybe even Germany. But what about Britain? We spend £2.8bn on cheese every year in the UK1, and our taste in cheese is getting more sophisticated. We ate 252,000 tonnes of Cheddar last year, and over 50% of sales were for Mature — we seem to love the strong stuff.

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This change in our tastes is leading to a cheese revolution — small suppliers are finding more markets for their niche and heritage cheeses, not just in the UK but all over the world. Companies like Pong are putting British cheeses on the map. And their .uk website is leading the charge.

Pong was created by two friends in South England. Director, owner and founder of the business, Matt March Smith, said they saw a gap in the market that was not being met.

Read the full article here. 

France Mandates that its roofs be covered in solar panels and garden — should we too?

This article was published in How We Get to Next, 25 March, 2015

Last week, the French government passed legislation mandating that the roofs of all new commercial buildings be partially covered by solar panels or rooftop gardens. The legislation was scaled back from its original vision but has still been dubbed a trailblazing approach to urban sustainability.

The roofs of our buildings provide a potentially surprising option for building more environmentally friendly cities. Solar panels have obvious benefits; they offer a way to use the top of a building to generate renewable energy. Beyond solar, in New York the White Roof Project is drawing on the millennia-old Mediterranean and Middle Eastern concept of painting roofs white to keep buildings cool. London buses apply a similar idea.

Rooftop gardening can provide a host of benefits, as well. Gardens insulate buildings, reducing noise levels, retaining storm water (therefore reducing local flooding) and helping to lower levels of dust and smog. More important than that, rooftop gardens are a space for people to enjoy, offering a connection to nature fast disappearing. Gardens not only provide breeding grounds, homes and transport routes for local flora and fauna, they bring those spaces closer to city folk who are unlikely to experience them on a day-to-day basis.

Around the world cities are embracing green initiatives with open arms. Globally, we are seeing an increased interest in rooftop solar installations, with differing legislation leading to success in countries as far apart as Germany and Australia. Such programs have included tax incentives, rebates and feed in tariffs, all designed to encourage consumers to take up this new energy source. Grassroots crowdfunded projects have also helped build momentum.

Roof and urban gardens are seeing a similar push. After the success of New York’s Highline, which turned an unused train line into a new public park, London ran its own competition to do something similar. The prize was awarded to an unlikely project — the development of a garden in an unused tunnel — but the shortlist included several roof-based ideas, too. These ideas have even spread locally. The Urban Wild Project, for example, is building a series of interlinked gardens on the rooftops of a shopping strip in South London.

There is equal enthusiasm for similar initiatives in Japan. In a country short on space, the East Japan Railway Company recently began building community gardens on top of all of its railways stations. The gardens offer a piece of nature within Japan’s huge cities, yielding residents the opportunity to grow their own food and providing them a place to come and relax or picnic.

Sydney’s Central Park development provides a combination of the two. Its new skyscraper is the epitome of sustainable design, featuring hanging gardens, a tri-generation power plant and a water recycling system — hence the reason the building was named the best tall building in the world.

Yet despite progress, models like this are still unfortunately few and far between, which is why the French legislation is so important. While it won’t necessarily lead to buildings as impressive as these projects, the law will make sustainable urban design a concern for all new developments — whether developers like it or not. This is no longer about incentives or voluntary programs. It is about making sustainability core to the understanding of how we build and design cities.

In an increasingly urbanized world, and one facing significant environmental issues, this is becoming more crucial than ever. Let’s hope more countries take France’s lead.

The Sharing Economy – how another technological ‘saviour’ is failing us

This article was published in SBS News, 20 March 2015. 

It was going to be the new great hope.

The sharing economy was supposed to help people find much needed work, get out of poverty and in turnboost economic growth. It has been seen as the saviour to many of our economic woes.

The concept is simple. In the sharing economy communities share resources together for everyone’s gain. At the local level it can mean bike co-ops and urban farms, while at a larger scale it has led to the development of applications such as Uber, AirBNB and TaskRabbit. These apps capitalise on technological advancements to allow individuals to share goods and services — from renting a room for someone on holiday to providing a carpool to someone on their commute. It is these apps that have been heralded as the great hope for our economic woes.

It is not the first time we’ve heard about the way technology can solve our economic problems. In 1930, John Maynard Keynes made the bold prediction that by 2030 working weeks would be reduced to 15 hours. Technological advancement, he argued, would allow us to keep high prosperity levels without having to work long weeks. Jobs and wealth would be shared around, ensuring everyone has a secure and stable footing.

It was the same thing we heard about computers. The rise of computers and the internet would make work much more efficient, giving us more spare time to enjoy our lives outside the office.Time and time again we have been told that technology will be the saviour of the working class. Simply let this advancement run wild and we will all reap the benefits.

Stories that have time and time again been false. While for over a century people have turned towards these solutions, things seem to be getting worse. Australians are working longer hours in jobs that are significantly more insecure. We are more stressed and facing serious health impacts from this type of working life. And that’s the people who can get jobs. Over two million Australians are still unemployed or underemployed, struggling to find enough to make a living. The prospect of a 15 hour work week and prosperity shared by all seems more distant than ever before.

While the sharing economy is a great idea, it has unfortunately become part of this trend. Locally, the sharing economy can bring communities together, reduce environmental impact and create local economic security. Yet, like many of our technological advancements the idea has been coopted by larger corporations. Workers on the larger apps are finding themselves working below minimum wage, facing insecure work (with the potential of losing jobs at any minute) and having no safety net to back them up (companies who run the applications have few obligations to look after the employees). Employees are forced to pay for their own equipment and insurance and are unable to unionise.

We can see this best potentially with the example of the application TaskRabbit. TaskRabbit was initially designed as a bartering-type system, where consumers could pay individuals to complete particular tasks for them. Tasks could range from doing someone’s washing to constructing their IKEA furniture. The app however recently changed its parameters. It made it harder for consumers and workers to discuss the job before hand and importantly for workers to be able to negotiate with consumers over the price for a job (which was conducted through a bidding system). A new system that was designed to be more “efficient” simply became a tool to take away employee bargaining power. In doing so, employees who were making a stable income lost significant work, with equivalent drops in income and security.

The sharing economy has lost its edge as a liberator, instead perpetuating an economy that’s benefiting corporations over employees. It’s not that this is a bad idea. A sharing economy is an excellent idea. It is just that “sharing” has been appropriated to strip it of any real meaning. It has become another part of a system of corporations shifting full-time employees to casual workers, independent contractors, freelancers and consultants. It has become part of our insecure working culture.

It is not like we should be surprised. The stories of the great technological hopes have always ended up this way. The technology Maynard Keynes hoped would create the 15 hour work week has simply been used to replace workers with machines. Those who have lost jobs have then found there are fewer to go around. The computer and the Internet has shifted work into our everyday lives, with email and social media meaning we can no longer leave it in the office. They have made us 24-hour employees. Technology is just a tool. In our society where work is focused on productivity, efficiency and profits for corporations it is no wonder this tool is being used for corporate ends.

The reality is that the stories of technological advancements providing us with an economic saviour are just that. Stories. Technology has provided us countless benefits, but built in a system designed for corporate need that is always who it will be designed to benefit. The cooption of the sharing economy shows us we cannot rely on it to save our future.

This article was originally published on SBS News. Click here to view the original. © All rights reserved.

Mardi Gras is a celebration we need to be having, but it’s losing its political core

This article was originally published in Junkee.com, 7 March, 2015

I’ve been to Mardi Gras twice in my life; once when my parents took me as a child, and again a few years ago, when I marched in the parade. As someone heavily engaged in queer life and politics, it feels like it should be an annual event for me. Yet it isn’t, and I’m often left wondering why.

The Political History Of Mardi Gras

Sydney’s first Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras was held in 1978 as a festival and march held in commemoration of the Stonewall riots in the United States. On the event’s biggest day, about 2,000 protestors took to the streets, calling for an end to the discrimination of LGBTIQ people.

But in the march’s final stages, trouble began to brew. Police began harassing the lead float, eventually arresting the driver of the truck. This was followed by a full-on assault, with police blocking off streets and physically abusing marchers. Eventually, 53 people were arrested.

The violence launched protests around the country. More marches were held in Sydney and in other major cities, with many more arrested in the following months. Eventually, all those arrested at the original Mardi Gras had their charges dropped, and the next year the event was held again. A very important tradition had been born.

image: http://junkee.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/mardigras.jpg

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Politics has been present in the march ever since. In the 1980s, the HIV/AIDS crisis dominated the event, while the 1990s turned its attention to the conservative policies of the Howard government. The march my parents took me to featured prominent floats that attacked Pauline Hanson and Amanda Vanstone (who was Immigration Minister at the time). The early 2000s saw marchers take on the Iraq War, and in recent years marriage equality has come to dominate the parade.

Yet, while the politics is still there, the inclusive and more radical approach to the early festivals has increasingly been lost.

Mardi Gras Today: Have The Politics Disappeared?

A clever article from SBS’ satire branch The Backburner last week ran with the headline, ‘Fred Nile: Mardi Gras Isn’t As Good As It Used To Be’. In the piece, “Nile” was quoted to say, “Now [Mardi Gras is] just an excuse for straight people to come along and get smashed – the beauty and radicalism of the subculture is basically gone.”

Though in reality, Fred Nile’s thoughts are a little more scathing, the satire has some truth; Mardi Gras is often criticised for losing its political edge. As Dennis Altman explains in The Guardian, “a few nostalgic radicals claim it is no longer political, that it has become a captive of the commercialisation and respectability of gay life.” This is certainly the feeling I had when I went as an adult for the first time. I felt disappointed at what I perceived to be a focus on parties over political change. Yet on reflection, what I was feeling was not disappointment at a lack of politics, but rather at the type of politics which was being expressed.

Of course, the existence of the festival is political in and of itself. Mardi Gras still remains an important expression of pride by the LGBTIQ community, and one which gives many people a sense of community they may have never found before. Bringing marginalised people together in this way, whether to march in a parade or go to a big party, is deeply political. The problem is that the festival has moved in a similar direction to much of the mainstream gay and lesbian movement — to a politics that only works for particular members of the community.

Shifting away from its early liberationist roots, over the past couple of decades much of the lesbian and gay movement has become more mainstream, and in turn more conservative. It’s moved primarily onto campaigning for same sex marriage — an issue that dominates large non-government organisations and more socially progressive political parties (both the ALP and Greens). Unfortunately this focus has come at the expense of many other issues facing LGBTIQ people. Marriage equality campaigns consume large amounts of limited resources, and at times have actively shafted other issues in order to achieve results; even if it was short-lived, the same-sex marriage legislation in the ACT completely left out trans* people.

This shift has happened for one reason in particular: as the LGBTIQ movement has grown, it has become dominated by wealthier middle-class interests. Marriage equality is the most obvious issue for this group; while of course marriage is an enduring area of legal discrimination, same-sex marriage also largely benefits the middle class. Marriage equality’s main beneficiaries are those gays and lesbians who have the resources, support and stability to get married in the first place.

In recent years, marriage equality has dominated the message of Mardi Gras floats, and marriage campaign material has become a key focus of the festival make-up; the 2012 theme of ‘Universal and Infinite Love’ was practically a tagline for same-sex marriage.

But in its adoption of these middle class politics, Mardi Gras has lost some of its inclusive tone. In the past, the festival has even threatened to exclude polyamorous groups, and police are still invited to march despite continued examples of violence and discrimination.

Mardi Gras has moved to become more palatable to a broader community — focusing more on commercialisation, large and professionally-run parties, and politics that are safer for the mainstream.

The Need For A More Inclusive Message

Of course, these changes can be viewed in a positive light. The growth and spread of Mardi Gras highlights the progress LGBTIQ people have made. It is a show of celebration where we come together as a community, and a party we should be having. It is still extremely valuable.

But this celebration, like much of the mainstream lesbian and gay movement, often leaves out the reality of discrimination so many still face. Young queer people face mental health problems, trans people face ongoing violence, intersex people still undergo forced medical procedures, and religious groups are still legally allowed to discriminate against LGBTIQ students and employees.

These issues are of course not entirely ignored by Mardi Gras. This year’s First Nations float, for example, will challenge much of the queerphobia Indigenous people can often face in their communities. Last year many of the floats highlighted Russia’s anti-gay legislation — an important show of solidarity for the many queer people around the world who continue to face discrimination because of their sexuality. But these are often pushed to the sidelines to make way for more palatable issues and events.

Mardi Gras is the most important event on the Australian LGBTIQ calendar; an important celebration of where we have come from, and an important part of our continued struggle. To continue this great legacy we need to keep it inclusive, and keep it political.

Why is the ALP negotiating on the Renewable Energy Target?

Originally published in SBS News, 6 March, 2015

The ALP has the opportunity to save the RET. But are they serious about it, or full of hot air?

Last week Industry Minister Ian Macfarlane declared the Renewable Energy Target (RET) would remain “untouched” if a compromise deal on the policy could not be reached by the Government, industry and the ALP. Macfarlane’s comments come after a year-long process to cut the target, included repeated failed negotiations with the ALP. His statement opens the question, why is the ALP still negotiating at all?

Since it entered office, the Federal Government has been eagerly trying to cut the federal RET. The Government commissioned noted climate skeptic Dick Warburton to conduct a review of the policy, with Warburtonrecommending massive cuts to the target. The Government has refused some of Warburton’s more radical proposals, but has since been looking to reduce the large-scale component of the RET from its current target of having 41,000 GWh of installed renewable energy by 2020 to around 27,000 GWh. Research has found this would result in a loss of $8 billion dollars from the industry as well as thousands of jobs.

From a party of noted renewable energy skeptics these moves are somewhat unsurprising. What is odd though is why the ALP, who claim they want to ‘protect the RET’, have joined in on the party. In October last year the ALP formally entered negotiations with the Coalition, agreeing to allow a full exemption for the aluminium industry from the RET. In December the Opposition went even further, agreeing to a compromise position put forward by the Clean Energy Council which would cut the large-scale component of the RET to 35,000 GWh by 2020.

Opposition leader Bill Shorten last year said the party “agreed to engage in discussions on the basis that the government doesn’t try and wreck the renewable energy target.” Yet it seems like their very position is already having that impact. The uncertainty around the negotiations have lead to a significant slump in investment in renewable energy in Australia. 2014 saw a drop in investment of 70% based on 2013 levels, with renewable energy figures stating the sector was “paralysed” by the negotiations. By October last year only $238 million had been invested in renewable projects, putting Australian investment levels below countries such as Algeria, Myanmar, Thailand and Uruguay. Evidence presented at a Senate Estimates hearing last year said the negotiations had put back the industry by twelve years.

It is not as if the ALP’s policy will change much of this. A cut to 35,000GWh would have a huge impact. Analysis shows it could result in a loss of $4 billion in investment, as well as 4,000 job losses.

What Macfarlane’s recent comments show is this is all completely unnecessary. If the ALP were negotiating to avoid even deeper cuts implemented by the Coalition and members of the cross bench that would be one thing, but its clear that is not going to happen. Both the Greens and the Palmer United Party have stayed firm in their opposition to any cuts, making it near impossible for the Coalition to pass anything without the ALP. It is for that reason the Coalition are engaging almost solely with the Opposition. If they could have found cross bench support they would have likely already done so.

The ALP has the opportunity to save the RET. Macfarlane has already made it very clear. A collapse in negotiations will lead to the continuation of the current policy — a return to certainty for the sector and a high level of investment for years to come. The window is wide open. If the ALP wants to ‘protect the RET’ then all they need to do is back off.

This article was originally published on SBS News. Click here to view the original. © All rights reserved.

Beyond Marriage Equality

This piece was published at the Green Magazine as part of a debate with Joel Dignam, 5 March 2015.

JUST ONE STEP IN A LONG ROAD

By Simon Copland

Marriage equality campaigns have gained huge support, and while you’d be forgiven for thinking the issue is the ‘final frontier’ of legal discrimination against LGBTIQ people, the reality is that trans*, gay, lesbian, bi, intersex, asexual and queer people face a range of different and varied forms of discrimination every day that have nothing to do with whether they’re single, partnered, married or widowed.

LGBTIQ people continue to face discrimination in all aspects of life. For example, young queer people in particular face ongoing pressure and discrimination, with the group facing significant mental health problems. This is particularly true for trans* people, who face workplace discrimination (leading to higher unemployment rates than the rest of society), violence on the streets and in turn extremely high suicide rates. Meanwhile, a recent Senate Inquiry has exposed that intersex people still face unnecessary and forced medical treatments, with doctors pursuing treatments to ‘correct’ their gender. The advocacy group, Organisation Intersex International told the committee that every single one of its members had experienced some form of coerced medical intervention. Finally religious groups are able to discriminate against LGBTIQ people, denying people the rights to jobs and students the right to enter their schools. Recent experience has also found Government funded school chaplains preaching highly homophobic material at schools.

It seems rather obvious to me that the stories of the trans* person who is bashed on the street, or the intersex person who has faced forced sterilisation, or the young gay or lesbian person who is considering suicide are just as important as the stories of those lesbian and gay people who are able to form stable enough relationships in order for them to get married.

Yet these stories have taken a backseat as the marriage equality campaign appeals to mainstream society — and theoretically conservative politicians — in a way that ‘less palatable’ bodies and stories don’t. It’s been a frustrating situation for campaigners for teen mental health improvements and deeper awareness of non-traditional gender identities and relationship configurations.

It is true that marriage has become an extremely important symbol and its passage would be seen by many as a significant milestone in indicating the willingness of the state to treat gay and lesbian people equally. Yet, unfortunately it is little more than a symbol. In Australia marriage equality actually has few practical impacts. State-based de-facto legislation gives same-sex couples practically all of the same rights as their married straight counterparts.

So you’d have to hope that when marriage is passed, we could turn together as a movement to creating real life changes for LGBTIQ people.

Unfortunately evidence suggests achieving this symbolic gain does not automatically mean progress in other areas. In the United States for example same-sex couples can now marry in 37 states, with national equality due any time soon. Despite this, discrimination against LGBTIQ people is still rampant. Trans* people still face discrimination and violence, queer kids are still committing suicide, and conservative Governments are still moving to discriminate in any way they can. The same can be found all around the world.

How do we avoid the same challenges? We know that the only thing that will result in real progress for LGBTIQ people are concerted campaigns on these issues — ones that open up a more progressive debate about gender and sexuality rather than trying to confine us to being “normal”.

For one thing, we need to shift a chunk of our energy and resources into these issues — committing strategy and planning now and ensuring we work heavily on these campaigns if and when marriage equality passes. Queer people continue to die on our streets and we simply cannot ignore that any longer.

There are areas where the marriage equality campaign can provide the important momentum we need for these issues. Marriage equality campaigns have built a lot of goodwill in recent years and we need to capitalise on that for future success. Yet at the same time we need to look at our messaging around marriage to see how it impacts the broader LGTBIQ community. Campaigners have unfortunately been accused at times of pushing other issues under the bus in order to succeed on this one front. Short-term success is sometimes put ahead of long-term gain. This needs to change, with us in particular looking at marriage as part of a broader campaign for LGBTIQ rights — one that requires a strong progressive debate about sexuality and gender identification.

Marriage has become an extremely important issue for LGBTIQ people. Yet it is just one step on a very very very long road. We should be thinking a lot more about the other issues facing our community — issues that cannot be ignored any longer.

 

What does it mean to “change everything”?

Originally published in the Green Agenda, 4 March, 2015

Examining green values in the context of Naomi Klein’s call to action

It is the issue that will define a generation. Climate change has been at the forefront of green politics for decades and has over recent years dominated political discourse — making international headlines, toppling world leaders and consuming billions of dollars and huge political capital.

Despite all of this however it can feel as if we are getting nowhere. Despite recent international announcements, and shifts in the coal and renewable energy industries, keeping global warming to a safe(r) level seems to becoming increasingly difficult. Our political and business leaders continue to tinker around the edges while the planet burns.

Is capitalism the problem?

Climate change is often presented as either a scientific or technological issue. The debate has tended to focus around whether the science of the issue is real or not, or alternatively, once we have accepted it to be real, what technological solutions are required. In This Changes Everything, 1 Naomi Klein shifts away from this approach, arguing that climate change is actually a social and economic problem, placing the blame directly on capitalism. She states:

“Our economy is at war with many forms of life on earth, including human life. What the climate needs to avoid collapse is a contraction in humanity’s use of resources; what our economic model demands to avoid collapse is unfettered expansion. Only one of these sets of rules can be changed, and it’s not the laws of nature.”2

Environmental critiques of the growth imperative at the heart of the capitalist economy have been a part of green thinking for decades. The 1972 Limits to Growth report to the Club of Rome explored the limits of economic growth in our society. The report’s central thesis was that in an Earth with finite resources, the ongoing quest for unlimited growth in the economy would eventually lead to an environmental crash. If business continues as usual, the authors argued, there would be a complete collapse of our environment by 2070.

Our capitalist system of never-ending economic growth demands a culture of production, materialism and consumerism. This requires not just the exploitation of workers and their labour for profit but also the exploitation of our environment. To maintain the system as it currently stands requires the exploitation of natural resources at an unprecedented scale, including the burning of fossil fuels contributing the global warming.

To maintain the system as it currently stands requires the exploitation of natural resources at an unprecedented scale, including the burning of fossil fuels contributing the global warming.

Klein explores this issue of exploitation through challenging the idea that humans have the right to dominate nature. Likely originating from biblical teachings these views began to dominate economic thought following the writings of Francis Bacon, who argued the environment was something which we had the capacity to own, dominate and control. About 150 years later this idea was met with a physical reality. The development of the coal powered steam engine by James Watt provided an energy source that gave the “promise of freedom from the physical world — a freedom that unleashed industrial capitalists full force to dominate both workers and other cultures”.3

Hence what Klein called the birth of the “extractive capitalism”. In order to create never ending profits, capitalists require never ending resources. To produce wealth we need to dig things up, chop things down and pave things over. And in capitalism, particularly in a global world, this process is never-ending. Economic growth therefore becomes what Vandana Shiva describes as “anti-life” — a system that exploits resources that should be owned and shared by all, but in reality are for the benefit of the few.

Yet, the exploitative nature of capitalism cannot answer the entire question of why, as a society, we have not been able to solve climate change. Yes, the extractive nature of our society has been the root cause of the problem, but why, when grappling with an issue so great as climate change, has our society been unable to challenge it? Klein argues it is partly a case of ‘bad timing’. At the very time we needed to come together to solve climate change, neoliberalism, a belief system based in the ideals of individualism, became the dominant social and economic philosophy.

Like the story of exploitation, the story of individualism takes us back to the Enlightenment. At the heart of individualism is the belief that each person’s main goal is to further their own interests and that in itself will provide for society as a whole. This expresses itself economically, through promoting ideals that we are all economic competitors seeking to look for our own gain, as well as politically, through the development of liberalism, a political system focused on individualism, liberty and the securing of private property. Klein argues this belief system has become predominant with the rise of neoliberalism, which shifted our focus away from Keynesian economics and the willingness of Governments to intervene to deal with major issues to one that focuses on market mechanisms, deregulation, privatisation, and lower taxation.

Money not the right kind of green.

But our current economic system does not promise unlimited growth and profits for all, only a few. Hence the growing inequality we have witnessed over the last 30 years. This is a particularly important insight in relation to tackling climate change. For example, many in the environment movement are often confused at conservative opposition to renewable energy. As an energy system it has the capacity to be extremely profitable and to share those profits around to large swathes of the community. But that is precisely the problem. If implemented well, renewable energy challenges the power of the owning class — a class that has profited greatly from a heavily centralised energy system dominated by coal, gas and oil. Any challenge to that is naturally going to opposed. Capitalism is a system of exploitation by a particular class over another, and any challenge to that — even if it is highly profitable or even improves life and liberty for all, is going to come with opposition.

Herein lies the problem as Klein sees it. Climate change, a global, unifying, and inherently social and cultural issue, gained prominence at the exact same time as our society moved more heavily towards individualism, deregulation and corporatisation. Climate change became an issue as the shift in power swung even more greatly towards the 1% and away from the majority of people. We can see this best in the way in which governments around the world were willing to intervene during the 2008 Financial Crisis to save our big banks, insurance and automobile companies. Government responses seem readily available to protect the economic interests of the 1%, or to respond to immediate economic crisis but not so much when it comes to the broader interests of our society. Our society, or more pointedly our governments, have lost a willingness to use the tools we needed to solve the problem. Climate change is an issue that requires a collective response, one that is just for all. Our individualistic, neoliberal, society is proving a barrier.

Challenging the barriers

Where does this leave us? In an important and clever observation, Klein argues this highlights an inconvenient truth: the right is right. For decades conservatives have been railing against climate action, arguing it is a mass plot to redistribute wealth and challenge capitalism. Here, Klein argues, they are exactly on the money. In fact, climate changes gives the left a key opportunity to deal with many of issues we’ve been fighting over for centuries — the exploitation of workers, growing economic and social inequality, the struggles of indigenous peoples for sovereignty, and the destruction of our environment. It gives us the opportunity to create a “movement of movements”. As she argues:

“if there is a reason for social movement to exist, it is not to accept dominant values as fixed and unchangeable but to offer other ways to live – to wage, and win, a battle of cultural worldviews…….[a vision] that we are not apart from nature but of it. That acting collectively for a greater good is not suspect, and that such common projects of mutual aid are responsible for our species’ greatest accomplishments. That greed must be disciplined and tempered by both rule and example. That poverty amidst plenty is unconscionable………And most of all, it means continually drawing connections among these seemingly disparate struggles – asserting for instance, that the logic that would cut pensions, food stamps, and health care before increasing taxes on the rich is the same logic that would blast the bedrock of the earth to get the last vapours of gas and the last drops of oil before making the shift to renewable energy”.4

This is our challenge. Yet it is one many in the environment movement often seem unwilling to take.

As climate change has become a dominant issue, many environmentalists seem to have run in the opposite direction — presenting it as a problem that requires only small shifts in the way our society and economy operates. Academic and green activist Clive Hamilton argues this is connected with a deep denialism within the movement. Unable to cope with the challenge many have refused to acknowledge and deal with the realities of what climate change means. In doing so the mainstream environment movement has narrowed its focus on incremental and achievable wins, getting caught in campaign cycles instead of focusing on the larger picture.

In doing so key parts of the movement have become wholly consumed by the system that it is supposed to be fighting against. Klein looks, for example, at donations provided to large environmental organisations in the United States as examples of a corrupting influence hindering more ambitious and challenging approaches. In Australia, mainstream environmental organisations have become trapped within a political system that imposed its limitations on them. With the election of the Rudd Labor Government for example, big green organisations developed the Southern Cross Climate Coalition(comprising the Australian Conservation Foundation, WWF Australia, The Climate Institute, the ACTU and ACOSS) to support the passage of the Carbon Pollution Reduction Scheme (CPRS), which was opposed by many smaller organisations as well as the Greens as it would not reduce carbon emissions. With the re-election of the Gillard Government groups developed the “Say Yes Campaign”, which supported undefined action on climate change.

Both of these groupings focused heavily on insider politics, working the halls of Parliament instead of the streets as a way to achieve change. This has been a noted shift within much of the environment movement, where people have moved away from organising local communities towards working within politics and business to define what is “achievable”.

In doing so the mainstream of the movement has become trapped within neoliberal capitalist ideals. The focus of a political movement should be to expand the range of options available for our society and build power to demand solutions that will not only work, but will also build alternatives to the systems that are causing our problems.

The focus of a political movement should be to expand the range of options available for our society and build power to demand solutions that will not only work, but will also build alternatives to the systems that are causing our problems.

Instead much of our movement, operating within the constraints of our system, has become caught within the minimal solutions it can provide. This is best found in the Say Yes Campaign. This campaign, which put plainly consisted of little more than a rally, was launched by mainstream environmental organisations as a way to support clean energy legislation being negotiated by the Australian Labor Party, Greens and Independents. Yet the campaign launched before any legislation had been released,pre-emptively supporting the bills before the details had even been known. Constrained by the internal political debate at the time, mainstream organisations went for what they considered to be “achievable” rather than what was “desirable”. In doing so they inherently limited the scope of the debate, sending a signal to the Australian Labor Party in particular that they would support the legislation no matter the details. This made ambition in the package more difficult as nobody was pushing from the outside for it to occur.

This is a key problem the environment movement is facing. In being caught up in insider politics it has limited the scope of potential action — a scope defined by a neoliberal capitalist elite, which, as noted cannot provide us the answers we require to solve climate change. Climate change requires us to think out of the box — to challenge our neoliberal capitalist system in favour of a new set of values. Many within the environment and climate movements are failing to do this, so how can we shift towards a movement that heads in this direction?

A green climate agenda

With attempts at “green capitalism” failing our climate, it is important to look towards other options. It is here that green philosophy can play a key role.

There are many different definitions or ways of conceiving of green philosophy or green values, but here I will consider the four key pillars of the international green political movement as the basis. These pillars are: ecological sustainability, social and economic justice, peace and non-violence and participatory democracy.

The first, and most obvious way, in which green thinking provides a way forward on climate change is through the primacy it gives to environmental values. Green values are based in recognising inherent value in the environment and in turn opposing its unnecessary exploitation. Green philosophy does this in a very simple way — it acknowledges the environment is essential to human life and that without it we cannot have a functioning society, or economy.

It is a deceptively simple idea, but as noted above, capitalism is not based on this premise and our governments rarely act from it. Even within green circles the idea of “triple bottom line accounting”, which places the environment at the same level as our economy, has become dominant practice. Green values directly challenge this idea by stating that without an environment a functioning society and economy are simply not possible.

What does this look like practically?

First, this must mean the absolute rejection of our dominant growth and profit mantras. It is simply impossible to continue unlimited growth in an infinite world. With that “green capitalism”, alongside ideas of “green growth” must go out the door, to be replaced with a system that places the environment and our society at the forefront. This doesn’t mean we need to hope for a mass economic recession. Rather we can develop planned and meaningful de-growth and redistribution strategies (yes, we do want to redistribute wealth!) that limits impacts on those who are most vulnerable in our society.

While this seems like a massive shift, in reality it represents more of an emphasis on values that already exist within our society. A recent study for example challenged pre-determined ideas that we need to use economic benefits to convince people to make changes to their personal habits. The research, conducted at the University of California, looked at people’s energy usage after they were provided particular campaign information. Those provided with economic arguments (i.e. that cutting energy use would save them money) did not cut their energy use at all, while those who were provided with environmental and health based arguments cut their energy usage by 8%. This number increased to 19% for participants with children.

This demonstrates that, when emphasised, values that place our environment, health and community at the centre can play a dominant role in our society. We have seen this all around Australia with the growth in movements to halt new fossil fuel projects. Led from members of the community with support from Lock the Gate, 350.org Australia, Greenpeace and numerous other local organisations, people around the country have risen to oppose the growing expansion of Australia’s fossil fuel industry. In her book Naomi Klein describes this as “Blockadia” and we are seeing this grow in Australia. In recent years over 300 people have been arrested at the blockade of the Maules Creek Coal Mine, people have mobilised up and down the coast to stop new port developments along the Great Barrier Reef, indigenous and white Australians have come together to stop the James Price Point LNG Project and local communities have successfully blocked coal seam gas developments in Victoria, Bentley andGloucester.

There have been two important things about all of these campaigns. First, they have been heavily localised — placing a particular focus on grass roots democracy as outlined within the four pillars. Each campaign, while emphasising climate impacts, has also focused on local communities and the values of the area where these developments have been proposed. Secondly, these campaigns have focused heavily on environmental and social values. While questions of the economic viability of these developments have been raised, campaigns against them have focused on the destruction of environmental and social values. The campaign against the Maules Creek Coal Mine for example has focused on the destruction of the Leard State Forest and adjoining farmland, while in Queensland campaigners have focused on the environmental values of the Great Barrier Reef. When given the opportunity, communities around the country can and do often place these sorts of values above immediate economic concerns.

Adelaide, Divestment

Another area where we can see this campaigning is in thedivestment movement. Divestment is based on the simple idea that “if it’s wrong to wreck the planet then it’s wrong to profit from that wreckage”. The campaign calls on universities, churches, councils, Governments, banks, super funds and individuals to remove their investments from fossil fuel companies. Again these campaigns have focused on the social and moral reasons for doing so, emphasising that the protection of the environment should come ahead of short term profits. And they have had significant success. In Australia we’ve seen divestment announcements from the Fremantle, Moreland, Marrickville and Goomalling Councils, a number of large and small churches, Local Government Super and from theAustralian National University and University of Sydney. This adds to global divestment from the likes of the Rockefeller Foundation, the cities of Seattle and San Francisco and the University of Glasgow and Stanford University.

While discussing economic and environmental values it is worth providing a cautionary tale regarding the renewable energy industry. With shifts in pricing many are now predicting the coming years will see renewable energy begin to replace fossil fuels. In doing so it has been seen by many that the market is solving the problem for us. It must be noted the market does not work as easily as this. Even as the coal industry has begun to struggle for example, fossil fuel companies and their friends in Government continue to push the growth of the industry. On the other side of the ledger we have seen renewable energy struggle. Uncertainty around the Renewable Energy Target for example has seen investment in the industry within Australia collapse. This highlights that the market cannot be relied upon to solve the problems for us. The capitalist class and Government continue to be willing to interfere to save the fossil fuel industry, essentially weighting the scales so the renewable industry struggles to compete and flourish.

Even if the market boosted renewable energy to the point where it could overtake fossil fuels that still is not necessarily a complete victory for our environment. Of course renewable energy is essential to halting greenhouse gas emissions. But the energy sector is just one part of climate change and climate change is one part of the environmental crisis we are facing. Economic growth fuelled by renewable energy sources still provides huge problems for our environment and society and therefore cannot be relied upon as the only solution.

The second way green values provide solutions to climate change is through a particular focus on people. This is outlined primarily through the lens of ‘social justice’ in the four pillars, but can essentially be boiled down to the idea of placing human and social needs above economic indicators. This may sound in contradiction to earlier exploration of the focus we place on the environment, but the two go hand in hand. Australian Greens Leader Christine Milne stated it best when at the National Press Club she outlined that “we live in a society, not an economy.” In the speech, Milne highlighted the pressures people are facing in everyday life:

“People I speak to right across the country tell me about the pressures in their lives, the sense that the world is becoming a harsher place, a less caring place. Different to the analysis of the major parties though, the Greens understand that these pressures are not just about money, but about time and a sense of losing connection to community and the environment. Not just about finding work but about finding work-life balance. Not about building more roads, but about spending less time on the roads. Not just about how to benefit from the boom but asking, is there a future after the boom.”

Milne is providing the human face that is often missing from our economic mantra. When we look at that human face we find it is often not doing as well as our politicians may want us to believe. Research questions whether economic growth is always synonymous with improved wellbeing, and in fact an obsessive individualist growth culture has been shown to have serious impacts on mental health and social wellbeing. Green philosophy challenges our growth mantra therefore not just because of its environmental impacts but because of the social impacts as well.

But issues that are often more ‘human focused’ also have a major impact on climate change. Reducing the working week is the perfect example. Australians work the longest hours of anywhere in the world — a massive 43.2 hours per week. Longer and more insecure working hours are in part a result of the growth agenda at the heart of our economic system. These long working hours are having a huge negative impact. Research shows that “long work hours increase risk of dying from cardiovascular heart disease, risk to family functioning, injury at work, smoking intensity, anxiety, digestive problems, and alcohol abuse”. Campaigns to reduce working hours therefore have a double impact. First reduced working hours for those working long hours provide the social benefits of reducing stress and mental health issues that arise due to the impacts of long working hours. And in turn more reasonable hours of work could also reduce carbon emissions. A trial of a 4-day working week in Utah for example saw a drop of emissions by 14% as employees drove less and offices used less energy. The struggle to provide a society with reasonable working hours confronts the same barriers as trying to lower carbon emissions – an economic system focused on exploitation and never-ending growth.

Another proposal of interest is the notion of a guaranteed basic income. Promoted by Green partiesaround the world, this policy would replace current unemployment benefits to instead provide a basic guaranteed income for all people. Such a scheme provides security and certainty for those who are either jobless or have low paying jobs, but also allows for greater debate about the value of particular work in our society. A guaranteed minimum income for example allows workers to reject dirty energy jobs (Klein pg. 461), instead being able to seek work which is more beneficial to themselves and broader society. On top of that a basic guaranteed income provides security for workers as we go through the important process of de-growth, ensuring the working class do not suffer due to shifts in our economic system.

Transforming our economic system will also require a shift in our democracy. Over the past decades it has become clearer than ever who our political class represents. We saw this in particular around the passage of the proposed mining tax in Australia. A policy that was popular with the Australian population from day one, the tax caused huge headaches for the Labor Government. Influence from the mining industry helped topple the then Prime Minister Kevin Rudd, with influence and lobbying then shifting to new Prime Minister Julia Gillard to implement a tax that was a toothless tiger. Australian Greens leader Senator Christine Milne looked at this issue in an essay she wrote for Island Magazine,Things Are Crook in Tallarook. Milne tackles the influence of the “plutocrats’ in our political system, in particular blaming the influence of mining interests for the failure of climate-based legislation. This influence is not a new development — as noted above it is the basis of capitalist government. Our system works to the benefit of the few, with politicians representing the 1% above the rest of the population.

Tackling climate change therefore requires that we tackle problems in our democracy. Many campaigns in this area direct their energy into changing the current system of Government — introducing proportional representation, greater controls on lobbying, and creating restrictions on donations to political parties. These are all important renovations. Yet, as long as politics continues to represent the establishment, it is only through breaking the foundation of the system that we can really see any change.

Yet, as long as politics continues to represent the establishment, it is only through breaking the foundation of the system that we can really see any change.

Although it may not look like it, this process is already underway. Australia, along with the rest of the world, is currently undergoing what some call a “crisis in politics”. As neoliberalism grew our major parties saw the decimation of the social bases that formed their authority. Politicians have lost the trust of broader society and lurch from crisis to crisis in an aim to regain this authority. In doing so governments have seemingly lost the capacity to engage in any real, meaningful reform. While politicians are willing to intervene to save banks or automobile companies or to ensure continued economic growth (as the Australian government did during the Global Financial Crisis), as Naomi Klein describes the old political parties no longer have the capacity or authority to implement the mass social changes they used to be able to do before neoliberalism emerged.

Yet this crisis in politics provides us with an opportunity unlike no other. More than anything it has highlighted who our politicians truly represent. We can see this clearly in Australia, whether it is the industry influence over the mining tax or the ongoing corruption allegations of the Independent Commission Against Corruption in New South Wales. Our politics has become a system of influence and corruption that is rotten to the core. It is in facing and understanding the core problems that we are able to challenge them. It is clear people are turning away from the values of the major parties and it is time to present an alternative. Green political parties are often at the forefront of this debate. As noted, Greens Leader Senator Christine Milne has taken on the influence of the 1% in our political system. In the United Kingdom the UK Greens have recently seen a huge surge through representing both anti-establishment politics and radical politics. In Spain the political party Podemos has gained huge support railing against establishment politics and running against austerity measures, while Greek party Syriza just took what many have called the “first Green Government” on a similar platform.

What is key to all of these movements is they have tapped directly into an anti-establishment political framework. Each of these parties has challenged the mainstream political dogma, particularly around the precedence of capitalist economics over the needs of the environment and society. And in doing so they have tapped into dormant feelings about our political system and gained significant success. While this may not be directly about climate change, these movements are extremely important to combatting global warming. If we want to see political action of any real measure it is these sort of movements we must be supporting — otherwise we will continue to be stuck with weak attempts that focus more heavily on continued growth and private property rights over the needs of our environment and society.

This changes everything. And we can do it.

Climate change changes everything. It requires a complete overhaul of how we treat our environment, our economy and our society. And in doing so, as Naomi Klein describes, it requires a “movement of movements”; one that sees and engages with the vast array of shifts we require in our society — shifts to end inequality and the exploitation of workers and our environment.

While it may seem overwhelming, it is in facing the challenge head on that we will be able to overcome it. Many people are doing this work already — creating shifts in the way in which we value our environment, society and economy in order to rethink our capitalist culture. And this is working. What it requires is all of our effort. All our energy. And with that we could very well win.