In our new report Working for Climate Justice', Ben Crawford and David Whyte argue that until now, the trade union movement has failed to make climate change a core concern of industrial campaigns.
Where do workers fit into the climate action agenda? On October 27, trade unionists from across the labor movement gathered in London to discuss a new workplace-oriented strategy for decarbonization: green collective bargaining...
Our new report Beyond Divestment reveals a process of ‘shareholder substitution’ that has allowed some big players to significantly increase their shareholding, and raises big questionas about the next steps for the divestment movement.
Valeria Vegh Weis on the 2,000 kilometer march of indigenous peoples in Argentina from the Juju region to Buenos Aires to demand that lithium mining projects in their territories are immediately halted.
Centre researcher Samira Homerang Saunders interviews Honolulu-based
Naima Temaile Fifita about the colonial past and present context for the fires in Maui.
As demands grow for yet another humanitarian intervention to “fix” Haiti’s problems, we need to recognise that previous interventions have kept Haiti in the throes of political, social, and ecological crisis for over a century. By Angela Sherwood
As the world burns, shareholders are getting record cash pay outs from their fossil fuel investments finds our new report written and researched in collaboration with Corporate Watch. By David Whyte
Since the colonial era, West Papuans have been engaged in a long struggle for their independence and freedom. By Samira Homerang Saunders
An interview with Richard Falk by Luigi Daniele.
Professor Richard A. Falk is Chair of Global Law and Co-Director of the Centre for Climate Crime and Climate Justice at Queen Mary University London.
Our waterways are in a horribly polluted state. So, who really owns our water? Who is responsible for this pollution? By Eleanor Godwin