A Just
Transition Means Rejecting The Failed Electoralist Strategies Of Social
Democracy And Instead Building A Radical Movement Of Movements.
Climate change
affects everyone, but it does not affect everyone the same way. It hammers a
capitalist world rampant with inequality and exploitation. This is the case
because capitalism neither exploits nor develops evenly. Some nation-states are
centers for accumulating wealth and development. Some nation-states are
peripheries, and are underdeveloped.
Development and
underdevelopment are two sides of the same process: accumulation on a world
scale. Climate change, in turn, is a human-made process, a product and
accelerator of uneven accumulation. Because it is human-made, some states (as
well as some within those states) are more responsible than others.
And the very
poorest simply bear no culpability at all. Yet those least culpable –
Bangladesh, Yemen, Haiti – are those which will suffer most in a warming world.
Drought, typhoon, and flooding have and will burst across the South with far
more ferocity and frequency than across the North. Climate injustice is a thus
part of the story of uneven capitalist accumulation.
Climate change
is the child of fossil-fueled capitalist industrialization. While in principle
industrialization is a distinct process from capitalism and imperialism, in
history it has moved hand-in-hand with them – each whirl in a destructive
spiral. Industrialization, especially, provides the engines of war, and
contributes to making life easier for many, especially but not only in the
North, allowing it to freely devastate the ecologies and states of the South.
Where does that
leave us? We need global eco-socialism. Such a system would be marked by global
developmental convergence: just about everyone and in particular every state
would have roughly equivalent access to development (or, the good life). Such a
system would necessarily be modern, with complex exchanges of goods. It would
be industrial, but a controlled industrialization, because industrialization is
a tool. It is a means not an end.
And it would be
ecological: it would in general not produce waste beyond human-natural capacity
to remediate. And it would work towards the restoration of the ecology.
Where does that
leave us? Here is where accumulation on a world scale comes in. It reminds us
that different nations have distinct class structures, implying different
political burdens, differentiated responsibilities, and different paths towards
world developmental convergence.
Southern
countries need political space to carry out independent development, including
independent and sovereign industrialization — without northern interference —
based on their own balances and values, probably through regional economic
unions, and with a strong emphasis on the agrarian question. Such thinking has
taproots in figures and formations like Simón Bolívar, Hugo Chávez, strains of
pan-Africanism, and pan-Arab radical movements and parties.
National agrarian
systems need land-to-the-tiller agrarian reform, cooperativisation where
possible, and help from industry via the technical upgrading of agriculture.
Ecologically sustainable forms of pastoralism and integrated livestock on farms
would be important, too, as hundreds of millions if not billions of people rely
on them for securing some part of their needs. Agro-ecology, or the application
of scientific procedures to understand the logic of and attempt to assist
“traditional” agriculture, and more broadly, sustainable land management are
important too.
Through these
policies, the South could better protect its ecology, enhance biodiversity
outcomes through a sensitive blurring of hardened spatial boundaries between
human and non-human nature and the countryside, and mobilize a surplus from
agriculture for domestic industrialization and infrastructural investment.
Similar goals
are important for the North. There, some sectors, like industrialized petrochemical
farming and ranching and confined feeding operations, alongside the petroleum
industry, would need to be eliminated – or “degrow.” Other sectors, like
agro-ecological agriculture and processing of wood from sustainable forestry,
would need to grow.
And we need
massive investment, far above WWII levels, to shift US industrial plants to the
production of insulation, renewables for South and North, and infrastructure
like mass transit systems to replace the massive waste of private transport.
How We Get
There
We cannot think
about economic and technological architecture without thinking about politics:
internationalism in support of national self-determination and national
liberation for the South. Strong mobilization against sanctions on Iran and
Zimbabwe and Syria, and against the US war on Yemen, are inseparable from the
climate question. They are the precondition for its just resolution.
Reparations, on
terms dictated by the South and defended by Northern comrades, are part of this
process. “The financial mechanism must respect the sovereign control of each country
to determine the definition, design, implementation of policy and programmatic
approaches to climate change,” as stated in
the Cochabamba People’s Agreement working group. It must total six percent of
northern GNP per year — around $3.2 trillion.
And it must
work alongside a totally renovated notion of technology transfer based on
building up sovereign technological capacity, especially preventing
“intellectual property” from being used towards private or imperial state
profits.
How to get
there? Political strategies diverge wildly. A popular narrative has been that
electoral insurgencies, within or without the historical social-democratic or
slightly-more-working class parties, is capable of delivering the kind of
massive infrastructure spending capable of averting climate change. Bernie
Sanders, Jeremy Corbyn, SYRIZA – each has either been immolated by capital or
surrendered in its face. In their wake, the electoral route to eco-socialism
rests, supposedly, on a future Congressional majority pushing it through, by
the hands of US figures like Jamal Bowman and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.
In fact, this
is a recipe for disaster. No social movement or political party has ever
implemented its full program when in office, and the electoral route to social
democracy in the North seems plausible on a time span sometime after the planet
has turned to Venus and Yemen is a graveyard.
Moreover, the
1945-1970 “Golden Age” or labor-capital social pact occurred only against the
capitalist democracies’ fear of the domestic popularity of communism. The
capitalist parties gave bread and butter to some (though not Black people)
domestically and guns abroad, incinerating social democratic, radical
nationalist, or Communist parties in an arc of terror from southern Latin
America to the Arab region to Africa to Indonesia.
What is the
alternative? A radical movement of movements, what Paris Yeros has called a “New Bandung”,
capable of weaving together radicalized states, anti-capitalist social
movements, and independent anti-imperialist parties and movements in the North
within a new common front that can offer accountable, strength, succor, and
which can act as a mooring point for northern radicals seeking to break from
the gravity of imperialist social democracy. Whether this is indeed possible is
the question of our day.
Max Ajl is a postdoctoral fellow at Wageningen University’s Rural Sociology Group, and an associated researcher with the Tunisian Observatory for Food Sovereignty and the Environment. He is also an editor at Agrarian South and Journal of Labor and Society, and is on twitter @maxajl.
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