Environmental groups
6.5 The repertoire of environmental protest
Environmental protests can involve a wide
range of unconventional and indirect actions to
influence policymakers:
- Thelogic of numbers:to demonstrate the
sheer size of support to the government and
the wider public – around 20 million
Americans celebrated the first Earth Day in
1970, a critical event in persuading policy
elites that the public wanted legislation to
protect the environment. - Thelogic of damage:to inflict material
losses on business or government.
Includes:
(i)economic sanctions – the
Greenpeace-orchestrated consumer
boycott of Shell petrol stations during
the Brent Spar campaign (Box6.3);
(ii) economic disruption – the anti-roads
protests hoped the huge security costs
of policing road-building sites would
dissuade construction companies and
the government from future develop-
ments;
(iii)violence against property – Earth First!
‘ecotage’; computer-hacking offers a
new means of inflicting huge material
damage on corporations and
government.
- Thelogic of bearing witness:to
‘demonstrate a strong commitment to an
objective deemed vital for humanity’s future’
(della Porta and Diani 2006 : 176). It
reinforces the moral message by showing
that activists are willing to take personal
risks because of the strength of their
convictions:
in 1995 Greenpeace vessels sailed into
the exclusion zone around Mururoa in the
Pacific where the French were about to
carry out nuclear tests.
ecological activists take up residence in
treehouses or a maze of tunnels.
Source: della Porta and Diani ( 2006 : 170–8).
(see Box6.5). The typology (Table6.3)reveals a dynamic movement in which
the convergence amongst the major environmental groups in most coun-
tries towards the institutionalised ‘public interest’ model should, in many
countries, be set against a thriving grassroots sector made up of both ‘partic-
ipatory pressure’ groups of local citizens opposing specific LULUs and ‘par-
ticipatory protest’ ecological social movements. Yet, contrary to the doubts
of Bosso ( 1999 ), there does seem to be sufficient common ground to talk
in terms of one broad environmental movement. Apart from the obvious
points of similarity, such as a shared concern about environmental destruc-
tion, two particular manifestations of this unity are significant.
First, there seems to be a creative tension between the different wings
of the movement. Certainly, the vitality of the grassroots sector is partly
aresultofthewidespread negative perceptions of the mainstream move-
ment amongst concerned citizens, with many grassroots groups springing
directly from a deep-seated frustration at the perceived impotence of the
environmental lobby, notably for their neglect of local campaigning. For
their part, established groups, particularly those with radical roots, have
tried to respond to the challenge from below. FoE (UK), for example, stung by
criticisms that it has neglected its participatory principles, has used regional