Top Posts
Report shows 2024 as hottest in Africa, warns...
Research shows two-thirds of global warming since 1990...
Survey shows Africans less likely to blame rich...
Environment minister says tree planting key to combating...
Study shows two-thirds of global warming caused by...
Climate Change: Heavy surge wipes out six Lagos...
Study shows mountain plants won’t adapt fast enough...
Magnitude 4.1 earthquake hits Marrakech
Weather expert warns climate change to hit agriculture...
NGO wants govt to tackle climate change-driven conflicts
EcoNai Newsroom
  • Newsround
  • Nigeria
  • Africa
  • World
World

Prominent historian urges wants fossil-fuel era ended to address colonial injustices

by admineconai February 16, 2024
written by admineconai February 16, 2024
604

One of Europe’s leading historians has said that cities in the global north that curb their carbon emissions are doing more to address colonial injustices than those who focus their efforts on taking down statues and changing street names.

David Van Reybrouck, who is the Belgian author of a bestselling history of the Democratic Republic of the Congo and a new book on Indonesia’s independence from Dutch rule, has become one of the key drivers of a nascent and often fraught debate about Europe’s colonial legacies. Those who have lauded his work include the German chancellor, Olaf Scholz, the French president, Emmanuel Macron, and the former UN secretary general Kofi Annan.

In an interview with the Guardian, Van Reybrouck took a swipe at the movement of historical reckoning for being too focused on the past, calling instead for more awareness of the “colonisation of the present and the future”.

“There is more to colonialism than historical colonialism,” Van Reybrouck said. “Today’s climate change is deeply colonial: it has been largely caused by the temperate zones from the northern hemisphere and it is most deeply felt in the tropics and the Arctic. You cannot decolonise without decarbonising and vice versa.”

Read also: NGO seeks community involvement in climate policy

He was quoted as saying that the dominance of identity politics in US, British and Dutch societies meant that a vital conversation about enduring colonial structures risked being relegated to mainly marginal debates around symbolic gestures rather than radical solutions.

“A mayor who makes her city fossil-free by 2040 has done more against colonialism, racism and discrimination than another mayor who decolonises all the street names, statues and schoolbooks while keeping the city running on fossil fuels,” he said.

Former colonial powers, said Van Reybrouck, should jointly contribute to funds to fight the impact of the climate crisis in the global south rather than just engaging in state-to-state negotiations about reparations.

In his book Revolusi: Indonesia and the Birth of the Modern World, published in David Colmer and David McKay’s English translation last week, Van Reybrouck makes a broader pitch for rethinking the unravelling of Europe’s colonies in the global south. Not only should they be seen as a tug-of-war between coloniser and colonised, he argues, but as a series of dynamic processes in which independence movements across Asia and Africa nourished each other.

“These horizontal dynamics are often forgotten, because we’re entirely focused on the local resistance against the colonised,” Van Reybrouck said.

Story was adapted from the Guardian.

0 comment 0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
admineconai

previous post
NGO seeks community involvement in climate policy
next post
Death toll in Malawi elephant relocation project rises

Related Posts

Study shows two-thirds of global warming caused by...

May 8, 2025

Weather expert warns climate change to hit agriculture...

May 5, 2025

Trump dismisses authors of major climate report

April 30, 2025

New UN report shows Indigenous Peoples sidelined in...

April 25, 2025

UN Report shows Climate crisis driving surge in...

April 24, 2025

UNDP joins Global Network to assist countries cope...

April 24, 2025

Earthquakes hit Mae Hong Son, Myanmar border on...

April 21, 2025

European State of the Climate report finds 2024...

April 21, 2025

Study links climate change to rising arsenic levels...

April 18, 2025

5.6 Magnitude Earthquake Hits Southern Philippines

April 16, 2025

Leave a Comment Cancel Reply

Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment.

Newsletter

Subscribe my Newsletter for new blog posts, tips & new photos. Let's stay updated!

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Linkedin
  • Bloglovin
  • Vimeo

@2021 - All Right Reserved. Designed and Developed by Eco-Nai+

EcoNai Newsroom
  • Newsround
  • Nigeria
  • Africa
  • World