Young people from around the world made their voice heard today at the UN Framework Convention on Climate change in Poznan, Poland. After an inspiring speech from Al Gore, over 200 young people from India to the U.S. to the Congo held a spontaneous action inside, with banners that read "SURVIVAL IS NON-NEGOTIABLE."

 

The demonstration was the next step in our "project survival" – inspired by a speech earlier this week by a representative from the Alliance of Small Island States (AOSIS), stating that current emissions targets set by powerful countries condemn their nations to extinction. In the last two days youth have mobilized to get over 80 country delegations to sign a pledge to "safeguard the survival of all peoples and nations." Youth organized actions, tracked down delegates in the halls, lined the entrance to the plenaries, and knocked on meeting room doors to push their countries to sign the Survival Pledge. This morning our text has been adopted in the official UN Ministerial declaration document emerging from COP14, the COP President’s text on long-term vision. Heads of state referenced our call in major speeches. "It’s been an amazing success," said Amanda McKenzie, of the Australian Youth Climate Network. "Hearing Australia’s Climate Minister Penny Wong commit to ‘survival’ yesterday had me cheering in the halls. Now, it’s time to make sure she delivers." Actions like the one that happened 15 minutes ago aim to create the pressure to do just that. At the end of our action (after engaging with some angry UN people) several delegates and dignitaries came to thank the Youth for their action. A woman said "I am in a very high position in my government in Norway. Youth doing actions like this makes my work easier. Thank you."

 

 

We’ve had an exciting victory, but we know we must continue to organize to make the implications of that statement meaningful – we know that any targets less than 350ppm will not insure the survival of all peoples and nations, and we know that any solution that is not equitable and just, is no solution at all.

 

 

While our demonstration today was not permitted by the United Nations, young people felt compelled to step outside the boundaries of rules to ensure that the main message emerging from COP14 is one of SURVIVAL. This is an especially tricky thing to do when Youth have been organizing for years to gain legitimacy within the UN, and we risked our own ability to attend these negotiations with our action. We knew that our situation is so dire, so urgent, that we cannot always wait for protocol of a system that is increasingly not working. We will continue to work year round, taking on this generational challenge.

 

the media reacting to us:

 

for more photos see: http://pa.photoshelter.com/gallery-show/G0000SIp4.f3wK2U


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Joshua Kahn Russell is an organizer working to bridge movements for ecological balance and racial justice. He is a strategy and non-violent direct action trainer with the Ruckus Society, and serves communities directly impacted by fossil fuel extraction.

Joshua offers workshops, training, consulting, facilitation, and action coordination to groups and organizations.   

He has authored chapters for several books and numerous organizing manuals, most recently Organizing Cools the Planet: Tools and Reflections to Navigate the Climate Crisis, with Hilary Moore, on PM Press. Joshua is a regular writer for the blogs ZnetGristRabble.caWireTap, and It’s Getting Hot In Here, and his articles have appeared inYes! MagazineLeft Turn MagazinePeacework Magazine,Upping the Anti, and Z Magazine, among others.

Joshua has worked internationally with civil society groups at United Nations Climate Negotiations and has been a leading voice in the International Youth Climate Movement. Joshua spent four years as Rainforest Action Network’s Grassroots Actions Manager, helping to win campaigns to stop corporations from fueling our addiction to coal and oil, and helping transform Wall Street with successful campaigns that shifted six banks away from financing fossil fuel projects.

Joshua has coordinated and helped build numerous civil disobedience actions, including the 4,000 person Capitol Climate Action in 2009. Recently he was a trainer and action coordinator for the Tar Sands Action which mobilized 1,250 people including scientists, senators, Indigenous leaders, farmers, teachers, mothers, religious leaders, students and celebrities to participate in 2 weeks of daily sit-ins at the White House. He has served on the steering committee of the Energy Action Coalition, a youth-led coalition of over 48 groups spanning the environmental spectrum, and helped found the “new” Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), a national multi-issue youth & student group, which in less than a year grew to over 250 chapters and nearly 3,000 members nationwide. He helped revitalize the Activist Resource Center and other student groups at Brandeis University, where he coordinated university-wide student walkouts in 2003 and 2006. He was awarded a fellowship from the International Center for Ethics, Justice, and Public Life; The Elise Boulding Sociology and Social Activism Award; and the Karpf Peace Award. During that time he has done international solidarity work in Cambodia, Jamaica, and Mexico with groups such as the Womyn’s Agenda for Change and the International Jamaican Council for Human Rights.

His artwork has appeared on the cover of books authored by INCITE! Women of Color Against Violence, and Noam ChomskysmartMeme, and in the Celebrate People’s History poster series.

 

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