Blue-Green Coalitions: Constraints and Possibilities in the Post 9-11 Political Environment

Authors

  • Kenneth A. Gould Saint Lawrence University
  • Tammy L. Lewis Muhlenberg College
  • J. Timmons Roberts College of William and Mary

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5195/jwsr.2004.314

Abstract

Workers and environmentalists in the United States have often found themselves on opposite sides of critical issues. Yet at the WTO meeting in Seattle in November 1999, they came together in a historic protest many see as a watershed in the formation of a new blue-green ?Seattle Coalition.? However the two camps are again in con?ict over substantive issues, and in the changed political climate of post 9-11, the question arises of the coalition?s durability. The paper ?rst brie? y reviews the history of labor-environment interactions in the United States. It then examines a series of problems and potential areas of promise for the movements: di?culties of coalition-building, expectations of reciprocation, local vs. national connections, and the question of di?ering class cultures and interests. Finally, three areas of potential research and action are suggested: new roles for the mainstream environmental groups, just transition alliances and climate justice alliances. We propose that the environmen-tal justice and environmental health wings of the green movement are more suited to making long-term coalitions with labor than are habitat-oriented green groups.

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Published

2004-02-26

How to Cite

Gould, K. A., Lewis , T. L., & Roberts, J. . T. (2004). Blue-Green Coalitions: Constraints and Possibilities in the Post 9-11 Political Environment. Journal of World-Systems Research, 10(1), 91–116. https://doi.org/10.5195/jwsr.2004.314

Issue

Section

Global Social Movements Before & After 9/11