Four Pillars of the Green Party

Part of the green politics series
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Green issues


Worldwide green parties: Global Greens · European Greens · Asia-Pacific Green Network


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

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The worldwide green parties are committed to the following Four Pillars:

  1. Ecology (sometimes "Ecological Wisdom" or "Ecological Sustainability")
  2. Social Justice (sometimes "Social Equality and Economic Justice")
  3. Grassroots Democracy
  4. Non-Violence

In German, it is known as Die Grünen: ökologisch, sozial, basisdemokratisch, gewaltfrei.

These were originally defined by European Green Parties, from the foundation of the German Green Party in 1979-1980, and later adopted by the U.S. Green Party. The U.S. Green Party has expanded these into Ten Key Values of the Green Party. The Green Party of Canada has adopted the Six Principles of the Global Greens.

The four pillars are generally considered interdependent, reinforcing each other in non-obvious ways e.g. Arundhati Roy describes the connectedness of Democracy, Peace and Non-Violence: "Where there is oppression, it will always be challenged... I don't believe that there can ever be peace without justice... The two go together. And there cannot be peace in the world with full-spectrum dominance."[1]. This approach arose from shared concerns of the peace movement and ecology movement.

See also: Four Pillars of the Green Party, Arundhati Roy, Asia-Pacific Green Network, Ecological wisdom, Ecology movement, European Greens, German Green Party, Global Greens, Global Greens Charter