At a time when governments around the world are rolling out climate change policies, activists and experts from North American and global climate and environmental justice groups are explaining why real climate solutions must go beyond the greening of business as usual and require an entirely different framework for addressing the climate crisis.
These groups have come together to publish a third edition of Hoodwinked in the Hothouse: Resist False Solutions to Climate Change to highlight the need for real solutions that go beyond the profit motive.
Download the report at www.climatefalsesolutions.org.
Using sharp wit and original artwork, the authors argue that this is a decade of no turning back in order to address the crisis. Hoodwinked is an easy to read, concise yet comprehensive compendium of false corporate promises designed to hoodwink elected officials and the public, leading us down risky pathways poised to waste billions of public dollars on a host of corporate snake-oil schemes and market-based mechanisms.
Written by veteran grassroots organizers, movement strategists and thought leaders from across climate, Indigenous, peasant and environmental justice movements, the authors draw on expert data as well as on-the-ground knowledge and experience to show that corporate and market focused false solutions distract from real solutions that could serve our most urgent needst
As a pop-ed toolbox, Hoodwinked promises to be instructive for activists, impacted communities, social movements, educators and students, and anyone who seeks to engage in a deeper discussion about climate solutions. It also offers elected officials with a critical lens to examine a complex, technocratic field of climate change policy strategies, from local to national and international arenas.
The second version of Hoodwinked in the Hothouse was released in 2009 as a popular education zine collaboratively produced by Rising Tide North America, Carbon Trade Watch and a number of allied environmental justice, Indigenous and climate action organizers leading up to the 2009 United Nations climate conference in Copenhagen (COP 15). During that mobilization and in years since, Hoodwinked has played a major role in raising awareness across climate movements around the world—both helping organizers in their fights against dirty energy proposals and shifting policy positions of many non-governmental organizations.
With the proliferation of false solutions in the Paris Climate Agreement, as well as national and subnational climate plans, including many emerging from the Biden Administration, the new and updated third edition of Hoodwinked in the Hothouse aims to provide a resource that dismantles the barriers to building a just transition and a livable future. It points to a plethora of ways forward that do not rely on false solutions and are based on Indigenous traditional knowledge, community health, deepening democracy, and respecting the territorial integrity of Mother Earth.
Authors and organizations are:
Tom BK Goldtooth, Indigenous Environmental Network; Jose Bravo, Executive Director, Just Transition Alliance; La Via Campesina; Anne Petermann, Global Justice Ecology Project; Eriel Tchekwie Deranger, Indigenous Climate Action; Tamra Gilbertson, Indigenous Environmental Network; Rachel Smolker, Biofuelwatch; Mary Wildfire, Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition; Ananda Lee Tan, Just Transition Alliance; Tim Judson, NIRS; Meg Sheehan and Annie Wilson, North American Megadam Resistance Alliance; Cynthia Mellon, Climate Justice Alliance.