Climate change is the defining challenge of our time. It poses an existential threat to humanity and the planet, as well as a profound social and economic crisis for millions of workers and communities. To address this challenge, we need a radical transformation of our energy system, our infrastructure, our industries, and our consumption patterns. We need a just transition that ensures a fair and equitable future for all. This transition will require massive investments in clean and renewable energy sources, public transportation, energy efficiency, waste management, ecosystem restoration, and adaptation measures. It will also create millions of new jobs across sectors and regions-jobs that can contribute to solving the climate crisis while improving the lives and livelihoods of workers and their families. However, not all climate jobs are created equally. Some may be precarious, low-paid, unsafe, or socially undesirable. Some may displace or disrupt existing workers and communities, especially those dependent on fossil fuels and other high-emitting sectors. Some may reproduce or exacerbate existing inequalities based on class, race, gender, or geography. Therefore, it is not enough to create more climate jobs-we need to create better climate jobs. We need to ensure that climate jobs are secure, community sustaining, and democratic, and that they advance the goals of social and environmental justice. This volume brings together researchers, activists, and practitioners from different disciplines and regions to explore the concept, potential, and challenges of climate jobs. Drawing on case studies from various sectors, the contributors examine how climate jobs can be created, protected, and expanded in the context of the global climate crisis and the changing world of work. They also discuss how climate jobs can be integrated into broader strategies for climate action and social transformation. The volume aims to provide a comprehensive and critical perspective on climate jobs and to inspire further debate and action on this vital topic.
Richard A. Benton is the director of the Climate Jobs Institute and an associate professor in the School of Labor and Employment Relations at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. His research interests include corporate governance, social networks, economic sociology, and social stratification. In general, he focuses on the role of social networks in individual and organizational outcomes as well as the dynamics of network change. Mainly, his research stream examines the consequences of network fracturing among U.S. corporate leaders. Much of his research applies advanced models for network dynamics. Lara Skinner is executive director of Climate Jobs Institute at Cornell University. Her research, writing, and labor education work focuses on the intersection of job creation, economic development, and climate protection. She began her career in labor working with Oregon's Farmworkers Union (Pineros y Campesinos Unidos del Noroeste), the University of Oregon Labor Education and Research Center, and as an active member of the Graduate Teaching Fellows Federation, Local 3544. Skinner has worked for unions doing campaign research and policy development since 1999.
Introduction Richard A. Benton Chapter 1: Green Jobs, Climate Jobs, and Competing Visions for a New Energy Economy Brendan Davidson and Dimitris Stevis Chapter 2: Working Conditions in the U.S. Solar Industry: Findings and Learnings from Studies in New York and Texas Jillian Morley and Avalon Hoek Spaans Chapter 3: Organizing a Worker- and Community-Centered Transition: The Contra Costa Refinery Transition Partnership as Case Study Virginia Parks and Jessie HF Hammerling Chapter 4: Fracking or No Fracking? How a Green Transition Can Work for Workers Robert Pollin and Jeannette Wicks-Lim Chapter 5: From Here to There-Advancing a Just Transition for All Todd E. Vachon Chapter 6: Climate Jobs and Manufacturing: Green Industrial Policy Must Mean Good Jobs Mike Williams Chapter 7: Stronger Together: The Role of Sectoral Bargaining in Advancing a Just Transition for Autoworkers Hunter Moskowitz and J. Mijin Cha Chapter 8: Industrial Environmental Policy: Markets, Labor, and the Rhode Island Experiment Patrick Crowley Chapter 9: Building a Diverse, Equitable, and Unionized Clean Energy Workforce: Best Practices and Lessons Learned Zach Cunningham and Melissa Shetler