Infrastructure Activism

Introduction

A lot of activism focuses on changing people's minds, getting politicians to vote for or support certain causes, or on personal behavior. This can feel very inefficient, like placing a single block at a time while the fossil industries bulldoze the foundations of everything we hold dear. 

Common Solutions are Impossible without Infrastructure

There's also the issue that many "solutions" aren't actually accessible to many people. For example it's hard or even impossible to use public transportation if your community doesn't have any, or has very limited and hard-to-access mobility options. It is much harder to recycle when your community doesn't offer a pick up or drop off service.

Filling in the Gaps

On our Levels of Activism page we discuss levels 1 and 2 or personal and small groups such as friend, families, or co-workers. Level 3 as community-wide actions and solutions, and level 4 as the national or even international systems, laws, and programs. There is often a disconnect between levels 1 & 2 vs level 4, in that governments are hesitant to provide solutions or laws unless there is enough support from the people. The mirror issue is that people who want to make personal changes, or convince those close to them to make eco-friendly changes often lack the infrastructure, grants, or other types of support from their communities or national leaders.

When we focus on infrastructural change, we not only make the small personal changes easier for ourselves, but also for everyone else in our community. These improvements can help gain momentum, which in turn provides evidence to our leaders that change is desired, as well as evidence that if more infrastructure is built, people will in fact use it and benefit from those changes.

Types of Infrastructural Activism

Agriculture

Our food system has the biggest impact on our land use, fertilizer and pesticide use, uses most of our water for the least efficient food products, and currently encourages food shortages through wasteful practices. By better understanding the current systems impact on food security and water security, deforestation, water pollution and other aspects, we can help forge a path towards a cleaner, and more efficient farm system in the future.

Some solutions to the problems caused by modern farming include topics such as vegan agriculture with a focus on switching production to livestock alternatives and non-lethal pest control.

Education

Today's education will have far-reaching effects on how today's students think about and solve the problems we are already beginning to experience. That is why we've started a selection of topic pages For Teachers

Schools

In an attempt to start a sustainable transition, we can help set a good example for the younger generation, with some solutions such as School Solar systems and green School Yards providing educational opportunities.

As solar energy builds momentum, there are a growing number of companies with programs designed specifically for the schools they equip, allowing students to see how their schools energy use in real time, as well as how the solar panels meet their campus's energy needs.

School yards are not only important for child development (and sometimes provide a community's only public playground for weekend and summer play). These spaces can also provide space for wildlife (especially if planted with trees, bushes and flowers), as well as additional SUD space for flood control.

Public Education

Libraries provide valuable information including books and other resources about local history, wildlife, and infrastructure. In addition they can also offer items including tools, crafting supplies, and much more, which can be useful in reducing a community's consumption habits.

Citizen science and local monitoring practices can help a community or region track important data that might be hard to gather or sift through otherwise. This info in turn can be used to support local projects, petitions, and programs.

Transportation

Walkable Infrastructure

Rail Transport

Urban Infrastructure

"Build up" land only accounts for around 1% of Earth's habitable space, but that number is expected to double as our population increases to around 2%. Though this is a relatively small area, the way these spaces are designed has a massive impact on transit emissions, heating & cooling emissions, light pollution, human health, water pollution, as well as people's access to basic needs and social justice.

Through Urban Design (and re-design), we can not only minimize humanity's impact on the planet, but make our communities more equitable and human-friendly. 

Green & Wild Spaces

Green spaces are important for human health and wellbeing, but overly-tidied spaces that grow invasive species can cause more harm than good for both wildlife and humans. Allowing our green spaces to become a little more wild can help reverse this problem. By avoiding common gardening practices that produce large amounts of landscape-related pollution, and by encouraging or planting natives instead of invasives, we can maximize our positive impact, while also boosting our wellbeing. These efforts can even help us as individuals or even governments to save money while reaching sustainability targets.

Tools & Calculators

North America

USA

Minnesota

Organizations & Programs

Europe

UK

North America

USA

Maps

International

Europe

UK

Grants & Funding

North America

USA

Minnesota

Oceana

Australia

Western Australia