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Science in Resistance

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Scientists around the world rise up for climate and ecological justice In April 2022, hundreds of scientists rose in civil disobedience, breaking the law in more than twenty-eight countries. Riskin...
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  • 28 October 2025
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Scientists around the world rise up for climate and ecological justice

In April 2022, hundreds of scientists rose in civil disobedience, breaking the law in more than twenty-eight countries. Risking arrest, they glued their hands to roads, blocked government and corporate buildings, and chained themselves to the White House fence. In Science in Resistance, Fernando Racimo provides a first-person account of the Scientist Rebellion, a growing international movement of researchers stepping beyond conventional roles to alert the public about the need for action in the climate emergency. Combining personal stories, interviews with frontline activists, and insights from research on direct action and academia, he explores the challenges scientists face when taking a stand for climate and social justice.

Reflecting on his role as a scientist-activist, Racimo describes how he came to be involved in the movement. He also explores the many ways in which academic institutions today are complicit in climate breakdown—whether by accepting funding from and collaborating with the very industries driving it, or by discouraging scientists from speaking up. Drawing on lessons from political science, psychology, ecology, sociology, and the history of science, this inspiring book shows how we can all take a stand for climate justice, by collectively organizing for change.

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Price: $24.95
Pages: 312
Publisher: University of California Press
Imprint: University of California Press
Publication Date: 28 October 2025
Trim Size: 8.50 X 5.50 in
ISBN: 9780520420342
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

“Science in Resistance . . . a book that does not ask science to ‘communicate better,’ but to change its moral and political stance.”

Fernando Racimo is Associate Professor of Ecology and Evolution at the University of Copenhagen and a founding member of the Danish chapter of Scientist Rebellion.
Contents
 
Prologue: A Rainy Day
 
Introduction: Where Are the Scientists?
1. Acknowledging Failure
2. Scientists of the World, Unite!
3. Education as Resistance
4. Out of the Lab and into the Streets
5. Academia and its Discontents
6. The Enemy Within
7. The Road Less Traveled
8. What Is It Like to Participate in Direct Action?
9. Reflections Inside (and about) Cages
10. The Privilege of Rather
11. Academia in the Age of Climate Breakdown
Epilogue: A Sunny Day
 
Acknowledgments
Notes
Selected Readings
Index