“The People” and Climate Justice: Reconceptualizing Populism and Pluralism within Climate Politics
Today, populism is widely understood to entail an exclusionary conception of “the people” that threatens climate change action. While this threat is real, I argue that populism itself can be understood as a response to perceived exclusion and marginalization, making it possible to conceptualize a more heterogeneous conception of populism’s “people.” Examining two approaches to climate change action rooted in contrasting conceptions of the people and the elite, I argue that climate justice organizing offers a promising effort to construct a heterogeneous people and offers a powerful critique of the elite representation of climate change action in which “we are all in this together.” Yet along with this promise, climate justice organizing must navigate tensions that are inescapable within any populist formation. One neglected thread of populist history and theory offers resources for doing so; in the final section of this paper, I explore its relevance to climate justice today.
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Meyer, J. (2024). “The People” and Climate Justice: Reconceptualizing Populism and Pluralism within Climate Politics. Polity: the journal of the Northeastern Political Science Association, 56(2), 252-274. doi:10.1086/729277.