A new booklet has recently been published, entitled "Space for Movement? Reflections from Bolivia on climate justice, social movements and the state". Collectively written from an anti-capitalist and anti-authoritarian position, it will hopefully add to our understandings of the struggle for climate justice and the conflict this will create with capitalism and the state.
"In the wake of the failed COP-15 in Copenhagen last December, Bolivia’s
 first indigenous president called for a World People’s Conference on 
Climate Change and the Rights of Mother Earth (CMPCC). Was this the 
necessary space for social movements to respond where governments and 
the UN have failed? Was it an attempt to co-opt radical demands? 
Following the event in Cochabamba, April 2010, this booklet reflects on 
the lessons from Bolivia and the role of movements in the fight for 
climate justice". 
You can download the booklet for free, or 
order a hard copy for yourself, or your local infoshop or alternative 
library, from the website:
http://spaceformovement.wordpress.com/
As
 individuals we are involved with various autonomous political groups 
and networks including Rising Tide, No Borders, Climate Justice Action, 
Camp for Climate Action, Carbon Trade Watch, Somos Sur, Trapese Popular 
Education Collective, and EYFA.
The project started with an 'open
 letter' addressed to participants of the Cochabamba event, intended to 
provoke discussion around serious questions of capitalism, the state and
 climate justice. The letter ended with four key questions:
1- Do you think that the UNFCC and the COP process can be effectively used to bring about climate justice? If so, how?
2- Is climate justice possible without moving beyond capitalist relations?
3- What are the possibilities and dangers of social movements cooperating with governments and the state?
4-
 What does solidarity mean, and how can we work together more 
effectively to build the transnational struggle for climate justice? 
What are your views on the ‘global south’ and ‘global north’ and their 
relationships to struggle?
The responses to the letter received 
by those in the collective who attended the event are documented and 
discussed in the booklet, bringing a broader, global grassroots 
perspective to 'climate' struggles, which for many people are real 
existing immediate struggles to defend their land and resources against 
an ever-expanding capitalism that is protected and perpetuated by the 
state.
Download the book or order a hard-copy at: http://spaceformovement.wordpress.com
Contact us at: buildingclimatejustice@riseup.net

