Climate change researcher Gianluca Grimalda shares his story of losing his job for refusing to fly back from fieldwork in Papua New Guinea due to his climate activism. He discusses fatalistic beliefs on climate change, challenges faced by coastal communities, mentality of the super-rich, civil disobedience, and promoting unity among climate movements.
Janluka prioritized environmental convictions over job security, highlighting the importance of personal values in crisis situations.
Institutional resistance to Janluka's slow travel approach and environmental activism led to legal disputes and financial accusations.
Deep dives
Challenged with Firing Due to Environmental Convictions
Facing a dismissal threat, Janluka, a climate change researcher, stood firm on his environmental convictions. Even after his institute demanded his immediate return from fieldwork, he refused to fly back, prioritizing his promise to vulnerable communities in Papua New Guinea facing climate change impacts. The moral clarity of his decision to lose his job rather than compromise his values resonated through his activism.
Employment Dispute and Allegations of Misusing Research Money
Amid legal battles with his institute, Janluka faced accusations of misusing research funds post-firing. Despite his adherence to work commitments during fieldwork, the institute withheld payments and implied financial mishandling. Interactions revealed institutional resistance to Janluka's slow travel approach and environmental activism, leading to ongoing legal disputes.
Humanitarian Principles Over Institutional Pressure
In a stance against institutional procedure and dismissal threats, Janluka's commitment to humanitarian principles and accountability shone through. Despite facing legal challenges and lack of colleague support, his dedication to climate activism and ethical conduct remained unwavering, emphasizing the importance of individual integrity over institutional norms.
Promoting Climate Activism and Unity in Global Movements
Inspired by Janluka's advocacy, calling for unity among climate movements, Alex Forti, F-40-I, has organized the World Climate Congress to foster collaboration and a shared agenda. Encouraging solidarity among diverse climate groups, the initiative aims to amplify collective voices in combating climate crises and facilitating impactful climate actions worldwide.
Gianluca Grimalda, a climate change researcher, lost his job after he refused to fly back from fieldwork in Papua New Guinea. Gianluca has been “slow travelling” for decades. He thinks his former employer tried to make an example out of him because of his climate activism. It’s one of those stories that reveals the madness of the world—he was sent to research how vulnerable communities are responding to climate change as the seas consume their villages, and then told he could no longer continue that research if he did not commit an act of harm.
He joins me to share the preliminary results of his fieldwork and tell this incredible story: his activism, the threats of dismissal, the ongoing fight with the institute, and the incredible journey from Bougainville to Germany by ferry, train and coach. This is a tale that reminds us that some things are less complicated than we are led to believe—and that we cannot rely on our institutions for moral clarity.
Watch the film made about Gianluca’s journey here.