A timeline of major actions in the environmental movement.
Pre-1900s
- 6th Century BCE: The Athenian Polis votes to protect nearby hills and mountains around Athens from deforestation and overgrazing as possibly the first acts of environmental protection in history.
1900s
- 1936: The CNT oversees green projects in Revolutionary Spain, including the construction of greenhouses, reforestation, permaculture and the shutting down of polluting metal factories.
- 1971: The four-year long Green Ban movement begins across Australia, where construction workers refuse to work on projects harmful to the environment or local communities.
- 1976: The Franklin River Campaign begins in Tasmania, Australia to block the construction of a destructive dam. It is highly successful over its 7-year run.
- 1980: Earth First! is founded to stop environmental destruction across the world via direct action.
- 1982: The Itoiz Ecovillages are founded in rural Spain, to show the world what a sustainable society might look like.
- 1988: Environmentalists successfully block the destruction of the Daintree Rainforest in Queensland, Australia.
- 1992: The Earth Liberation Front is founded in Brighton, England to use direct action and guerilla warfare to defend natural ecosystems.
- 1994: The Zapatista Revolution and resulting Chiapas Conflict have strong elements of environmentalism among indigenous participants, notably the EZLN.
- 1995: The Cascadia Free State is built to protect forests in Washington, USA
- 1995: The Global Ecovillage Network is founded following a conference in Scotland.
- 1998: The Minnehaha Free State is built to protect forests and indigenous land from highway construction.
2000s
- 2001: Can Masdeu is founded as a squat in Barcelona, Spain to raise awareness around climate change.
- 2002: The Esqul Anti-Mine Movement begins as citizens in Argentina stop the construction of a new gold mine.[1]
- 2005: Argentinians block the construction of environmentally destructive paper mills along the Uruguay River.[2]
- 2008: Indigenous Peruvians strike to protect the rainforests.
- 2009: Unist'ot'en is founded by indigenous Americans in so called 'British Columbia, Canada' to protect forests from oil development.
2010s
- 2011: The Cherán Revolution is partially inspired by efforts to protect local forests from deforestation.
- 2011: The Puna Anti-Mine Movement begins as citizens in Peru stop the construction of a new silver mine.[3]
- 2011: The Cajamarca Anti-Mine Movement begins as citizens in Peru work to stop the construction of a new gold mine.[4]
- 2011: Isiboro Secure Park is defended from destruction by armed indigenous militants in La Paz, Bolivia.[5]
- 2012: The Rojava Revolution is deeply influenced by environmentalism.
- 2013: The Gezi Park Uprising attempts to protect city parks and rural forests in Turkey from destruction.
- 2016: The 'Make Rojava Green Again' campaign begins to protect and restore the environment in Rojava.
References
- ↑ https://nvdatabase.swarthmore.edu/content/esquel-community-opposes-gold-mining-argentina-2002-2006
- ↑ https://nvdatabase.swarthmore.edu/content/argentines-protest-uruguayan-paper-mills-2005-2008
- ↑ https://nvdatabase.swarthmore.edu/content/peruvians-protest-silver-mining-project-may-june-2011
- ↑ https://nvdatabase.swarthmore.edu/content/peruvians-cajamarca-stop-building-giant-gold-mine-2011-2012
- ↑ https://nvdatabase.swarthmore.edu/content/indigenous-bolivians-challenge-road-through-isiboro-secure-park-2011