Relational Activism: Re-imagining Women's Environmental Work as Cultural Change

Authors

  • Sara O'Shaughnessy University of Alberta
  • Emily Huddart Kennedy University of Alberta

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29173/cjs7507

Keywords:

Gender, Activism, Environment, Social Capital, Maternal Politics

Abstract

We introduce the term “relational activism” to call attention to the way that relationship-building work contributes to conventional activism (re-activism) and constitutes activism in and of itself. In so doing, we unravel Mohai’s paradox – a long-standing “ironic contrast” that notes that women’s environmental concern is not reflected in greater contributions to activism than men’s. We position relational activism as a bridging concept between re-activism and social capital. Relational activism differs from re-activism in four key areas: the role of the individual, effectiveness, motivating values, and temporal scale. To support these claims, we draw upon 26 ethnographic interviews conducted with families in Edmonton, Alberta, who strive to reduce their environmental impact.

Author Biographies

Sara O'Shaughnessy, University of Alberta

PhD Candidate in Environmental Sociology at the University of Alberta

Emily Huddart Kennedy, University of Alberta

PhD Candidate in Environmental Sociology at the University of Alberta

Downloads

Published

2010-09-28

Issue

Section

Articles