Contents
Preface: A Prequel to the Green New Deal
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
1. “The Biggest Threat to Our Humanity”: Climate Change and the Emerging Labor–Climate Movement
Changing Climate, Changing Society
Confronting the Major Pillars of Support for the Fossil Fuel Regime
Motivation for This Research
Primary Research Questions and Methods
Studying the Labor–Climate Movement: Three Case Sites
Outline of the Chapters
The Journey Begins
2. From Donora to Dakota: A Mixed History of Labor–Environmental Relations in the United States
Understanding Labor Opposition to Environmental Protection
Understanding Labor Support for Environmental Protections
When Structure Meets Agency: Why Some Unions May Be More Likely to See Environmental Protection as a Labor Issue
From Understanding the Past to Decoding the Present
3. Industry, Interests, and Ideology: Understanding the Labor–Climate Spectrum
The Labor–Climate Spectrum
The Big Picture
4. “Climate Change Is Unequivocally a Labor Issue”: Defining the Problem and Identifying Targets
Enter the Labor–Climate Movement
Collective Action Framing and Frame Alignment Processes
Defining the Problem: Diagnostic Framing in the Labor–Climate Movement
Attributing Blame: Identifying Targets of the LCM
Building the Base: Frame Alignment Processes in the Labor–Climate Movement
Redefinition
5. Union Workers for a Clean and Just Economy: The Prognostic Frames of a Just Transition
Just Transitions: A Brief History of the Concept
Just Transition Frames in the Labor–Climate Movement
Explaining Variation in Just Transition Frames among Labor–Climate Movement Activists, Unions, and Social Movement Organizations
From Framing to Action
6 Educate, Agitate, Organize: The Tactical Repertoire of the Labor–Climate Movement
Time for Some Action: Tactical Repertoires of the Labor–Climate Movement, 2014–2018
Actions Initiated by the State Partnership for Employment and Climate
Actions Initiated by Unions for a Sustainable Economy
Actions Initiated by Labor Unions for Public Energy
The Shape of Things to Come
7. Pandemics, Presidents, and Public Perceptions: Changing Opportunity Structures for the Labor–Climate Movement
Changing Opportunity Structures for the Labor–Climate Movement, 2018–2022
Finding Movement in Labor: Labor–Climate Responses to Changing Opportunity Structures
Stakes Are High and Time Is Short
8. Conclusion: The Journey from Climate Alienation to Climate Solidarity
Just Transition and Modes of Change
Climate Justice Is Labor Justice?
Possible Futures for the Labor–Climate Movement
Conclusion
Notes
References
Index