Ecologists in Action

Ecologistas en Acción (Ecologists in Action)
Formation December 9, 1998 (1998-12-09)
Type NGO
Legal status Confederation of organizations
Purpose Ecological
Headquarters  Spain (Madrid)
Marqués de Leganés 12
Coordinates 40°25′20″N 3°42′26″W / 40.422105°N 3.707349°W / 40.422105; -3.707349Coordinates: 40°25′20″N 3°42′26″W / 40.422105°N 3.707349°W / 40.422105; -3.707349
Region served
Spain
Membership
34,000
Website http://www.ecologistasenaccion.org

Ecologists in Action (Spanish: Ecologistas en Acción, sometimes Ecologistas en Acción-CODA) is a confederation of over 300 Spanish ecological groups, founded 9 December 1998.

Ecologists in Action is aligned with the philosophy of social ecology, which views environmental problems (and many other social problems) are having their origin in an ever more unsustainable and globalized model of production and consumption, a model that must be changed to resolve the ecological crisis. To that end, they conduct campaigns to publicize ecological problems, such as public denunciation of actions that damage the environment. They publish a magazine, El Ecologista and have an Internet presence as Proyecto EcoSpip.

History

Ecologists in Action was established in 1998 as a coalition of ecologically oriented groups, many of them already grouped under Aedenat (Asociación Ecologista de Defensa de la Naturaleza) or CODA (Coordinadora de Organizaciones de Defensa Ambiental), as well as other groups on the political left. The objective was to create a common organization with a single name, which would have a comparable public recognition to existing groups such as Greenpeace, World Wildlife Fund, Friends of the Earth or SEO/BirdLife. In the event, several large groups chose not to join; these included Grupo Ornitológico Balear in the Balearic Islands, Acció Ecologista - Agró in the Valencian Community and the majority of Catalan groups, already integrated into Ecologistes de Catalunya.

Ideology

The organization is composed of member groups of various political origins and is not linked to any one political movement or party. Nonetheless, its internal operation through direct democracy has determined which sectors of the population are likely to be drawn to it. The common denominator of its activists and associates is the defense of the environment in line with social ecology. Their actions center on publicizing and denouncing what they see as actions counter to the interests of the environment, and in taking legal action on behalf of the environment, as well as conducting awareness campaigns. They also engage in elaborating viable alternatives in the various areas where they work.

Structure

Demonstration called by Ben Magec - Ecologistas en Acción, the Ecologists in Action federation in the Canary Islands.

The confederation is structured along territorial lines, with a different federations organized based on the autonomous communities of Spain. However, not all autonomous communities are represented in the confederation. Also, in the autonomous communities that contain multiple provinces and where Ecologists in Action is active, the federations at the level of autonomous communities further subdivide into provincial federations. Each federation is, in turn, composed of local groups. These groups—independently of the number of their associates or activists—each have one vote at the annual confederal assembly of Ecologists in Action.

As of February 2009, Ecologists in Action is active in Andalusia (with the largest number of local groups, over 100), Aragón, Asturias, the Canary Islands, Cantabria, Castile and León, Castile-La Mancha, Catalonia, the Community of Madrid, the Basque Country, Extremadura, La Rioja, Navarre, the Valencian Community and the Region of Murcia, as well as in the autonomous cities of Ceuta and Melilla.

Functionally, the structure is the same as this in the different areas of work, focused on different environmental problems. Depending on the size of the groups, work in a given area is assigned to a particular "commission"; obviously, the smaller groups do not break down into commissions. These groupings along lines of areas of work are also important in bringing proposals to the confederal assembly.

Areas of work

Areas of work, often overlapping, are identified as:

Notes

External links

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