Greens

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article is about the political category. For the vegetables, see Leaf vegetable.
Part of the Politics series on Green politics

Green movement
Greens


Worldwide green parties: Global Greens · Africa · Americas · Asia-Pacific · Europe

Principles

Four Pillars
Global Greens Charter: ecological wisdom
social justice
participatory democracy
nonviolence
sustainability
respect diversity

Issues

List of Green issues


Politics Portal ·  v  d  e 


Greens are people who support some or all of the goals of a Green Party without necessarily working with or voting for that or any party. Most of them consider themselves to be part at least of a global Green movement. A potential basis of unity for Greens could be Green values (as made explicit in the Four Pillars of the Green Party and other documents), but even these aren't shared by all people who consider themselves Greens.

Historically, "being green" developed as a political identity together with the blooming of the peace movement, the ecology movement (see preventive paradigm), and the feminist movement in the late 1970s, the time the first green parties on a local level were founded.

[edit] Different kinds of Greens

A small sample of the factions or tendencies that exist on the movement's fringe — some only in very small numbers:

  • Viridian Greens are a more artistic movement in the U.S., originated by science fiction writer Bruce Sterling, and have fewer objections to media or technology.

[edit] See also

  • The article on Worldwide green parties gives an overview about organized green parties all over the world, their history, their goals, and their cooperation.
  • The article on the Green movement describes the broader world-view of "being green" in the sense of a personal political identity.

[edit] External links

In other languages