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and to understand and respect how it all fits together. I find it helpful to break the jobs down into the long-, medium- and short-term. Campaigning for long-term change What is our vision for the kind of world we want four decades from now? In my view, the environment movement has never been very good at this when compared to the competition. Take the neo-liberals, for example, who set out a vision in the 1960s and 1970s of a world of ‘free markets’, ‘deregulation’, ‘small-government’, and ‘economic growth’, and adopted this common and beguiling vocabulary to communicate their vision, consistently and relentlessly. They were so successful, that neo-liberalism remains a dominant political ideology despite failing spectacularly its own terms, as evidenced by the financial crisis (caused largely by deregulation). Now is precisely the right time to be developing and promoting an alternative vision to neo-liberalism, and for the environment movement to work out what a sustainable world might really look like and what the big changes are that will actually get us there. case, we need – as a movement – to get really good at it, and not confuse access with influence. It has been well documented how those leading the campaign for a living wage worked very effectively behind the scenes when Labour was in opposition during the 1990s to develop the detailed policy proposals to enact the minimum wage. As a result, they were pretty much ready to introduce to parliament the moment Labour got into power. Similarly, much has been written about the clever policy work undertaken by the anti-smoking movement ahead of securing the ban on smoking in public places. So we need a group of us to be focusing on campaigning for change in the medium term, thinking carefully about the policy developments that might be winnable three to ten years from now, and engaging the right people in the right discussions ahead of time. Campaigning for hearts and minds, right now The reason some people yearn for the good old days of environmental campaigning in the 1970s is because it was so good at winning over hearts and minds. My sense is that the reason those campaigns were so effective in capturing the public’s imagination and shifting the zeitgeist is that campaigners back then were totally focused on messaging that worked for mainstream audiences. They weren’t being invited to policy roundtables or expected to submit evidence to yet another government consultation or planning inquiry – at least not nearly as frequently as today’s generation of campaigners are. For too long we’ve talked about ‘sustainable development’ as an academic concept rather than what it could and should be: a practical reality. For too long we’ve debated sustainability in a conceptual sense, as if we’ve got all the time in the world, when we know that time is actually our most scarce resource. And for too long we’ve allowed our critics to frame environmentalism as a step backwards, when we know it to be a critical step forward for humanity. It’s curious, for example, that there are very few dedicated environmental think tanks. A campaign has to consist of several activities So it’s time for some of us to focus on campaigning for the long term, and to learn how to do this well. Part of the movement needs to work on our route map to a more sustainable world in 2050, and to set out the big changes and milestones that need to happen, decade on decade, to get us there – in a joined-up and holistic way. But if we’re going to do this well, we need to see it as a separate job from campaigning on specific issues in the short or medium term. Campaigning for change in the medium term Long-term visions and route maps serve an important purpose, but they don’t directly result in the development of new, well-thought-out policy measures. At one time the environment movement didn’t have much influence in policy circles and preferred to shout loud from outside the tent and hope that sooner or later someone on the inside would respond. But thanks to the success of the previous generation of campaigners, today’s generation can sometimes have a direct impact on shaping policy. Given that this is the And as a result they continued winning the hearts and minds of the public with slogans such as “Save the Whale”, rather than “Support IWC moratorium on killing of whales for commercial purposes” – even if this was the main policy win that resulted from this campaign. So in this decade we need a group of us in the environment movement to focus on campaigning to win the hearts and minds of the public once again. Our campaigns need to deliver the zeitgeist shifts that will be necessary to win big policy changes in the medium term, and transformational change in the longer term. But they mustn’t be required to refer to these in a literal or deterministic sense, or they will fail to engage the audiences we need to win. If the environment movement is to avoid being overwhelmed by the opportunities available to it in the years ahead, we need to get better at identifying the different jobs that need to be done, and to get really good at them. Only then will we bring about the scale of change we really want. Craig Bennett has been instrumental in restructuring the Friends of the Earth Policy and Campaigns Department. 56 Resurgence & Ecologist November/December 2012

and to understand and respect how it all fits together.

I find it helpful to break the jobs down into the long-, medium- and short-term. Campaigning for long-term change What is our vision for the kind of world we want four decades from now?

In my view, the environment movement has never been very good at this when compared to the competition. Take the neo-liberals, for example, who set out a vision in the 1960s and 1970s of a world of ‘free markets’, ‘deregulation’, ‘small-government’, and ‘economic growth’, and adopted this common and beguiling vocabulary to communicate their vision, consistently and relentlessly. They were so successful, that neo-liberalism remains a dominant political ideology despite failing spectacularly its own terms, as evidenced by the financial crisis (caused largely by deregulation).

Now is precisely the right time to be developing and promoting an alternative vision to neo-liberalism, and for the environment movement to work out what a sustainable world might really look like and what the big changes are that will actually get us there.

case, we need – as a movement – to get really good at it, and not confuse access with influence.

It has been well documented how those leading the campaign for a living wage worked very effectively behind the scenes when Labour was in opposition during the 1990s to develop the detailed policy proposals to enact the minimum wage. As a result, they were pretty much ready to introduce to parliament the moment Labour got into power. Similarly, much has been written about the clever policy work undertaken by the anti-smoking movement ahead of securing the ban on smoking in public places.

So we need a group of us to be focusing on campaigning for change in the medium term, thinking carefully about the policy developments that might be winnable three to ten years from now, and engaging the right people in the right discussions ahead of time. Campaigning for hearts and minds, right now The reason some people yearn for the good old days of environmental campaigning in the 1970s is because it was so good at winning over hearts and minds. My sense is that the reason those campaigns were so effective in capturing the public’s imagination and shifting the zeitgeist is that campaigners back then were totally focused on messaging that worked for mainstream audiences. They weren’t being invited to policy roundtables or expected to submit evidence to yet another government consultation or planning inquiry – at least not nearly as frequently as today’s generation of campaigners are.

For too long we’ve talked about ‘sustainable development’ as an academic concept rather than what it could and should be: a practical reality. For too long we’ve debated sustainability in a conceptual sense, as if we’ve got all the time in the world, when we know that time is actually our most scarce resource. And for too long we’ve allowed our critics to frame environmentalism as a step backwards, when we know it to be a critical step forward for humanity. It’s curious, for example, that there are very few dedicated environmental think tanks.

A campaign has to consist of several activities

So it’s time for some of us to focus on campaigning for the long term, and to learn how to do this well. Part of the movement needs to work on our route map to a more sustainable world in 2050, and to set out the big changes and milestones that need to happen, decade on decade, to get us there – in a joined-up and holistic way.

But if we’re going to do this well, we need to see it as a separate job from campaigning on specific issues in the short or medium term. Campaigning for change in the medium term Long-term visions and route maps serve an important purpose, but they don’t directly result in the development of new, well-thought-out policy measures.

At one time the environment movement didn’t have much influence in policy circles and preferred to shout loud from outside the tent and hope that sooner or later someone on the inside would respond. But thanks to the success of the previous generation of campaigners, today’s generation can sometimes have a direct impact on shaping policy. Given that this is the

And as a result they continued winning the hearts and minds of the public with slogans such as “Save the Whale”, rather than “Support IWC moratorium on killing of whales for commercial purposes” – even if this was the main policy win that resulted from this campaign. So in this decade we need a group of us in the environment movement to focus on campaigning to win the hearts and minds of the public once again. Our campaigns need to deliver the zeitgeist shifts that will be necessary to win big policy changes in the medium term, and transformational change in the longer term. But they mustn’t be required to refer to these in a literal or deterministic sense, or they will fail to engage the audiences we need to win.

If the environment movement is to avoid being overwhelmed by the opportunities available to it in the years ahead, we need to get better at identifying the different jobs that need to be done, and to get really good at them. Only then will we bring about the scale of change we really want.

Craig Bennett has been instrumental in restructuring the Friends of the Earth Policy and Campaigns Department.

56 Resurgence & Ecologist

November/December 2012

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