Climate Justice Alliance
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Climate Justice Alliance (CJA) is a non-governmental collective of over 70 rural and urban community-based organizations focused on sustainability, development of underrepresented communities, race and ethnicity, economic development, and poverty alleviation — all with the wider aim of addressing climate change. Founded in 2013, CJA is rooted in the environmental justice movement in that it centers efforts around protesting and organizing against the disproportionate harm of climate change on marginalized communities.[1]
The stated goal of CJA to create "[apply] the power of deep grassroots organizing to win local, regional, statewide, and national shifts" in regards to climate change and unjust exposure of marginalized communities to its damaging effects.[2]
Roots
While CJA was officially formed in 2013, the organization traces its origin to a 3-year period of coordinated grassroots protest activities. Most notably, early members of CJA organized a 400-person assembly for climate justice at the 2010 US Social Forum in Detroit.[3]
Formation of CJA
Following its formal establishment, CJA launched its first coordinated effort with an organized effort hosted by the Black Mesa Water Coalition in the Black Mesa region of Arizona. The activities sought to coordinate community-led action strategies to alleviate urban development of the region and gathered 100 of its members to protest activities of large coal mining companies and their effects on vulnerable populations in the area.[4]
Our Power Campaign
As part of their Black Mesa activities, CJA established an ongoing effort called the “Our Power Campaign”[5] which involves the construction of what they call a “local living economy”.[6] CJA calls these groups “Our Power Communities” (OPC) and they are based on a model of:
- Zero Waste
- Regional Food Systems
- Public Transportation
- Clean Community Energy
- Efficient, Affordable, and Durable Housing
- Ecosystem Restoration and Stewardship
CJA has also established a loan fund as part of the campaign that helps their OPCs become loan-ready via technical support and coaching.[7]
