The Green New Deal Network concluded its work at the end of 2025. This archive preserves a small set of resources created during that time—documents that reflect how movements aligned, governed, and translated climate ambition into real-world outcomes.
These materials are shared as historical reference and practical guidance for organizers, advocates, researchers, and public servants working toward climate justice, economic dignity, and democratic resilience.
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Broken Promises, Rising Prices: How Trump’s Policies Hurt Farmers and Families
This report analyzes the real economic impacts of Trump-era policies on farmers, rural communities, and working families, highlighting rising costs, broken promises, and the consequences of failed trade and economic strategies.
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Direct Pay in Practice: A Green New Deal Guide for Cities, with Chicago as a Case Study
This guide explains how the City of Chicago can use the Inflation Reduction Act’s Direct Pay tax credits to finance clean energy, public infrastructure, and good union jobs—while centering equity, labor standards, and community ownership.
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False Solutions Memo
An internal 2024 Green New Deal Network memo analyzing climate “false solutions,” their environmental justice impacts, and associated federal funding, shared here for historical and educational reference.
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How States Can Flex Federal Funding from Highways to Green Transit
This report explains how states can “flex” federal transportation funding away from highway expansion and toward climate-smart public transit projects, using existing authority under the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act.
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Inflation Reduction Act: A Campaign Guide for State and Local Organizers
This guide outlines how state and local organizers can use Inflation Reduction Act investments to build power, advance climate justice, and deliver tangible benefits to frontline communities.
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Organizing Toolkit: How to Fight GOP Budget Cuts on Climate, Jobs, and Justice
This toolkit includes strategy, demands, talking points and messaging guidance, and how to take action in your district. There is also guidance on organizing tools: How to Prepare for a Congressional Visit, How to Organize a Press Conference, How to write an op-ed.
These resources represent a fraction of the work carried by the Green New Deal Network and its partners. They are shared in the spirit of continuity—so that lessons learned, tools developed, and pathways tested can continue to inform and strengthen the broader movement.
