“I Will Still Fight for It till the End”: Factors That Sustain and Detract from Indian Youths’ Climate Activism
Abstract
:1. Introduction
“The truth, at one point [you] might be telling [me] that there is no way back and the earth is doomed… But at that point, also, I would still maintain what I should do. And I will still fight for it till the end… If right now somebody says to me that there is no solution out there and the Earth is doomed, I will say how are you sure about it?… There’s no 100% in this universe, so you can keep your opinion to yourself, I won’t disturb that. But I would still believe that there must be some 0.0001% probability that I can, or the people of Earth can come up with a solution and save this place. I will fight for that probability, and fight for that solution. And that’s why I will keep fighting for it”.—Abhishek
1.1. The Youth Climate Movement in India
1.2. Factors Motivating and Detracting from Youth Climate Activism
1.3. Political Repression and Youth Climate Activism
2. The Current Study
3. Methods
3.1. Sample
3.2. Recruitment
3.3. Procedure
3.4. Analysis
4. Findings
4.1. Gatekeeping Factors in Youth-Sustained Climate Activism
4.2. Sustaining Factors in Youth Climate Activism
Initially, I should think that I’m the only one person in this entire world who is doing all this, because I don’t have similar people around me. So I had that feeling of alienation. But now when I go with Fridays for Future, or now when I go with youth groups, it’s just so fun to see, like, you know, people are there, people are actually working, people are so aware. So that kind of, I mean that feeling is something which I really, really cherish most in my life. And that is what I get out of being in this climate movement.
If we don’t do it, who else will? You know, there’s literally like, it’s our future, right? And I think it’s mostly because we care, and there’s no one else to do it if we don’t do it. So I would say, that’s what motivates us. Sometimes we become exhausted and burn out, we take a break, but then we come back, because we care for our future.
I do have a folder called Don’t Quit. And it has sort of messages that people have given me on [social media]. There are so many people who text me that they have been inspired from what I talk about, what I tell people to do, and they have adopted change. So surely there is some, even if it’s a very small impact, I have dropped some impact on my own… and that is actually the motivation that you need that if you have done that much work, you can do a lot more than that if you are determined to go ahead.
So this last time strike, I was doing it alone… I was handling media and I was conversing people alone, campaigning alone… And I tend to pull [several hundred] people on the strike in [city name], which is a great number… these are small things, which, you know, keep me motivated.
I started studying about it [climate change] … [through] online sessions where I can learn more about this activism and make people aware about the [same]. And yes, that’s what kept me going… And then I slowly use my social media as a weapon, as a tool to learn and to gather more about this thing. So started writing blogs… And then I started working for Friday’s for Future.
4.3. Factors Detracting from Youth Climate Activism
Once you get into activism, you know, specifically in India, the government considers you as you are their enemy or something. Because your activism has a very different meaning… it’s always considered as protest because here in India, whenever you do any sort of peaceful demonstration… then you require you to take permission from the city magistrate.
That definitely slowed the entire climate movement in India down. I mean, there are people doing their best on local level. But still, I mean, like, whatever an entire nation could do together. That definitely has went dormant. And because Friday’s for future, the name was attached to her. Most of parents have also stopped, like, you know, supporting their children when they’re doing this. And yeah, as I said, parents play a very important part in the child’s life or rather an Indian child’s life… And then you know, we stopped associating us with Friday’s for future for a few months… Because see it’s a big deal, because honor and respect. And if you’re going to go in jail, your parents would literally be, like, so angry on you and… when it comes to like, the overall movement, I’m sure that many of people definitely left the movement.
I’ve seen posts and even sometimes my own post where things got really out of hand, and people get abusive for no reason, because it’s just the climate denial… So yes, it gets really, it gets really sad and demotivating that even after your efforts, even after you’re trying to speak up for truth, this is happening and people are not believing. And instead, they are trying to defame you or they’re trying to demotivate you.
It [climate anxiety] has affected my level [of activism]. And sometimes it motivates me because anxiety is for a reason. It exists for a reason, right? It’s a fight or flight response. So realizing that situations are dire and something needs to be done, motivates me a lot of the times, but when the work doesn’t get done, when we’re not able to mobilize people as effectively, when we’re not able to see as much change as there should be, then it kind of demotivates us too. So it’s really about this complex balance of maintaining enough motivation, and maintaining enough hopefulness and positiveness to be able to just push through it all.
4.4. Youth Holding Marginalized Identities Face Additional Detractors to Their Climate Activism
5. Discussion
5.1. Implications for the Climate Movement
5.2. Expanding Research with Young Climate Activists
6. Future Research
7. Limitations
8. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Number | % | |
---|---|---|
Gender | ||
Female | 9 | 41% |
Male | 12 | 55% |
Nonbinary | 1 | 4% |
Age | ||
14–16 | 4 | 18% |
17–19 | 7 | 32% |
20–23 | 11 | 50% |
Religion | ||
Christianity | 1 | 5% |
Hinduism | 12 | 55% |
Islam | 4 | 18% |
Zoroastrianism | 1 | 5% |
None or agnostic | 4 | 18% |
Geographic Area | ||
Rural | 3 | 14% |
Urban | 19 | 86% |
Family Socioeconomic Class | ||
Lower | 0 | 0% |
Lower middle | 1 | 5% |
Middle | 15 | 68% |
Upper middle | 4 | 18% |
Upper | 2 | 9% |
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Wilf, S.; Rudra, A.; Wray-Lake, L. “I Will Still Fight for It till the End”: Factors That Sustain and Detract from Indian Youths’ Climate Activism. Youth 2024, 4, 1238-1259. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth4030078
Wilf S, Rudra A, Wray-Lake L. “I Will Still Fight for It till the End”: Factors That Sustain and Detract from Indian Youths’ Climate Activism. Youth. 2024; 4(3):1238-1259. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth4030078
Chicago/Turabian StyleWilf, Sara, Aditi Rudra, and Laura Wray-Lake. 2024. "“I Will Still Fight for It till the End”: Factors That Sustain and Detract from Indian Youths’ Climate Activism" Youth 4, no. 3: 1238-1259. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth4030078
APA StyleWilf, S., Rudra, A., & Wray-Lake, L. (2024). “I Will Still Fight for It till the End”: Factors That Sustain and Detract from Indian Youths’ Climate Activism. Youth, 4(3), 1238-1259. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth4030078