Difference between revisions of "Category:Environmental Justice"
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+ | 2/15 Convergence emerges: Yellowstone River pipeline spill (after Gulf BP spill) PLUS Torrence refinery explosion (after Richmond CA), PLUS 200 offshore CA fracking well PLUS bomb trains exploding show a pattern we can't ignore. [http://uprisingradio.org/home/2015/02/19/february-19-2015-exxon-refinery-explodes-ethel-paynes-legacy/ Uprising radio] (audio) with [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antonia_Juhasz Antonia_Juhasz], author of Black Tide and [http://www.amazon.com/The-Tyranny-Oil-Powerful-Industry/dp/0061434515 The Tyranny of Oil: The World's Most Powerful Industry--and What We Must Do to Stop It] , [https://archive.org/details/ZGraphix-AntoniaJuhaszTheTyrannyOfOilTheWorldsMostPowerfulIndu568 video]. See also [http://www.ic.ucsc.edu/college8core/c8wiki/index.php?title=Category:Energy Energy]. | ||
[http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/01/23/2012-chevron-richmond-refinery-fire_n_6529382.html 2012 Chevron Richmond Refinery Fire Was Result Of Flawed Safety Culture, Report Finds] 1/15. | [http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/01/23/2012-chevron-richmond-refinery-fire_n_6529382.html 2012 Chevron Richmond Refinery Fire Was Result Of Flawed Safety Culture, Report Finds] 1/15. |
Revision as of 17:08, 20 February 2015
Environmental justice asserts that everyone should be able to live in a clean environment and be healthy, not just those who can afford it. See also Native Americans, Chemicals and Air, as well as labor and Solid Waste. See also Human Rights as well as Water.
Global Warming and climate change may be the ultimate EJ topic. Early Warning Signs from all over the world from Slate and NPR Living on Earth. See also Bangladesh article. Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting provides a view from Bangladesh, a nation already reeling from the impact of climate change.12/09 UPDATE: Oxfam report 9/12.
Extensive EJ Bibliography by Sarah Frohardt-Lane
Katrina five year anniversary shows EJ still a factor in the Big Easy, but Brad Pitt's green houses are a bright spot (audio).
Contents
News and Reports
2/15 Convergence emerges: Yellowstone River pipeline spill (after Gulf BP spill) PLUS Torrence refinery explosion (after Richmond CA), PLUS 200 offshore CA fracking well PLUS bomb trains exploding show a pattern we can't ignore. Uprising radio (audio) with Antonia_Juhasz, author of Black Tide and The Tyranny of Oil: The World's Most Powerful Industry--and What We Must Do to Stop It , video. See also Energy.
2012 Chevron Richmond Refinery Fire Was Result Of Flawed Safety Culture, Report Finds 1/15.
Fracking Threatens Millions of Californians A new report shows that 5.4 million Californians—more than 14 percent of its 38.3 million population—live within a mile of an oil or gas well, and almost four million of those, or nearly 70 percent, are Hispanic, Asian or African-American, according to a new Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) report Drilling in California: Who’s at Risk? Non-whites make up slightly more than 40 percent of California’s total population. 10/14. see Fracking.
California’s cap-and-trade program will fund environmental justice see EJ and CA.
Autism Risk Higher Near Pesticide-Treated Fields, Study Says 6/14 see Chemicals.
Research from Environment America shows that 2012 was a bigger year for toxic chemical dumping than most of us could have imagined. Industrial facilities across the U.S. dumped more than 206 million pounds of toxic chemicals into waterways in 2012, according to the “Wasting Our Waterways” report. The figures about the nation, as a whole, are stark, as are figures about individual regions and companies. For instance, Tyson Foods Inc. alone dumped more than 18.5 million pounds—about 9 percent of the nationwide total. Report pdf 6/14.
EPA’s next challenge: Protect communities in nation’s industrial dumping grounds] 5/14.
Governor Jerry Brown thinks fracking has "zero impact," but we know a few towns in the Central Valley that beg to differ. Kern County is California's most-fracked county. It also has the worst air quality in the nation, as well as highly elevated rates of cancer and respiratory illness.
Little oversight of chemical plants 5/14.
Chemical plants endanger 134 million Americans. Who gets the worst of it? 5/14.
Pesticides and school report 5/14.
Pesticides Can Lower Intelligence (includes Salinas Valley) 4/14.
Toxic Tech: Apple And Other Manufacturers Have to Stop Poisoning Their Workers 4/14.
Baykeeper recently helped scuttle proposals by developers for two dangerous new facilities to export dirty coal from the Port of Oakland. Coal breaks apart easily, forming dust that contains mercury, arsenic, uranium, and other toxic substances. Transporting millions of tons of coal in mile-long open car trains to the port, and then loading it onto ships, would send toxic dust into the Bay. It would also further pollute the air of nearby communities already suffering from disproportionate pollution. 3/14.
Dow hires private security firm to spy on Bhopal activists. New documentary, Bhopali (trailer.)
Over the last 15 years, there's been a spike in valley fever cases, especially among people in agriculture, construction, the solar industry and prisons. 5/13 Valley Fever(video) in the Central Valley made worse by drought. 6/13.
Goldman "Green Nobel" AwardKimberly Wasserman led local residents in a successful campaign to shut down two of the country’s oldest and dirtiest coal plants — and is now transforming Chicago’s old industrial sites into parks and multi-use spaces. [Green Nobel Prize won by Rossano Ercolini, Italy]. An elementary school teacher, Ercolini began a public education campaign about the dangers of incinerators in his small Tuscan town that grew into a national Zero Waste movement. Also, unfazed by powerful political opponents and a pervasive culture of violence, Nohra Padilla organized Colombia’s marginalized waste pickers to make recycling a legitimate part of waste management.
Pesticide Action Network (PANNA), new study links chemicals to autism (not, interestingly to childhood vaccines, hmmnnnn....). These numbers reflect a 78% increase in prevalence since 2002, with the largest rate of growth among Hispanic and black children. Public health experts now refer to this dramatic nationwide trend as an autism epidemic.
Roundup, An Herbicide, Could Be Linked To Parkinson's, Cancer And Other Health Issues, Study Shows 4/13.
Where Mercury comes from 12/12. Mercury in fish 1/13 (audio). EJ/human rights issue.
Arsenic levels are required to be lowered by EPA, but poor communities are not benefitting, for example in San Joachin Valley.
After cancer-causing methyl iodide was pulled from the U.S. market last year, California state officials convened a panel to investigate ending reliance on all fumigant pesticides (like methyl iodide) in strawberry fields. The Department of Pesticide Regulation released the panel's report detailing current research to help strawberry growers transition away from using fumigant pesticides. And while farmers, scientists and health advocates welcome the report, many are calling for bolder, swifter action.
Sit-in and Hunger-Strike in Mexico City Against GMO Corn Plantations 2/14.
The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People has released a report that documents the disproportionate health impacts of coal-fired power plants on low-income communities of color. 11/12
LA's History Lesson on Environmental Justice and Waste 12/12.
Kettleman City CA has toxic waste and now a new power plant. UPDATE, EPA sues 11/12 (text and audio).
Rosie Spinks, ENVS major, worked at UCSC's City on a Hill Press and co-founder of UCSC's first environmental magazine, Gaia. This work helped win her a coveted editorial internship at Sierra magazine, the national publication of the Sierra Club. A story she wrote for Sierra (about the teenage daughter of a Watsonville farm worker family fighting the use of the pesticide methyl iodide) was published on the magazine's website.
Green progress in California could help the poor 11/12
Tulare County water contaminated by farms. 11/12.
Climate change will be ‘devastating’ to world’s poor, World Bank says 11/12
Coal ash dumped on poor people. 6.12 They are also most affected by mountaintop removal. See Fossil Fuels.
Working Women's Bodies Besieged by Environmental Injustice 6.12
Manual Pastor, former Slug, works with the USC Program for Environmental and Regional Equity (PERE) . many documents on air quality etc.
Van Jones on importance of solar and climate 5/12
In San Diego, a run-down urban neighborhood finds life in a dead stream, inspired by the revitalization of the LA River. Community hopes to reduce gang violence.
South LA chemicals: In industry’s shadow: After years of illnesses, family looks for answers. Blood test results.
Pesticide use in Central Valley (photo-essay) 2/12.
America's Food Sweatshops and the Workers of Color Who Feed Us. 2/12
Poisoned Places four part NPR report and interactive map of air pollution. 11/11
Bottled Water and Environmental Justice (6/11) We've known for a long time that bottled water costs far more than safe, reliable, municipal tap water systems, with those costs falling on individuals, communities, and the environment. But there is new and growing evidence that the failure to provide safe drinking water, or the fear (or reality) of contamination in tap water that forces people to buy bottled water, imposes special financial burdens on poor and minority communities. More.
Harrison, J. (UCSC alum) “Abandoned Bodies and Spaces of Sacrifice: Pesticide Drift Activism and the Contestation of Neoliberal Environmental Politics in California.” Geoforum 39, no. 3 (2008): 1197-214. 133 (pdf download).
Justice in the Air: Tracking Toxic Pollution from America's Industries and Companies to Our States, Cities, and Neighborhoods. PERI at UMass. Top 100 air polluters.
Citizen science collects data for maps by Brian Beveridge of the West Oakland Environmental Indicators Project. Air is more dangerous than Superfund site.
Food deserts in CA Central Valley. 3/11
Growing vast monocrops of cotton, it turns out, is a dirty business. Globally, cotton occupies 2.4 percent of cropland -- and burns through 16 percent of the insecticides used every year, the Environmental Justice Foundation reports. Indeed, conventional cotton production in the United States has long required a veritable monsoon of poisons. Cotton can even give even industrial corn a run for its money in terms of environmental impact. According to the U.S. Geological Survey, pesticide applications for cotton run "3 to 5 times greater per hectare than applications of pesticides to corn." To try and stem the chemical cascade, farmers in cotton country have largely switched to seeds genetically modified to contain a pesticide and to withstand Roundup, Monsanto's broad-based herbicide. Today, upwards of 60 percent of cotton grown in the U.S. contains those traits. Trouble is, that "solution" to cotton's chemical dependence is already failing More 5/12/10.
Uranium mining and Native people. (See also native activism on XL pipeline).
People
See Majora Carter, Van Jones, Winnona LaDuke and others on the Eco-Heroes page, as well as the links below.
Will Allen, son of a sharecropper, former professional basketball player, ex-corporate sales leader and now farmer, has become recognized as among the preeminent thinkers of our time on agriculture and food policy. The founder and CEO of Growing Power Inc., a farm and community food center in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Will is widely considered the leading authority in the expanding field of urban agriculture. MacArthur Genius recipient.
Robert Bullard, sociologist widely regarded as the first to articulate the concept of environmental justice. See A Firce Green Fire excerpt. One of the leaders of the First National People of Color Environmental Leadership Summit in 1991. Most recently has been writing about Hurricane Katrina as the latest environmental sacrifice zone. Professor Bullard was featured in the July 2007 CNN People You Should Know, Bullard: Green Issue is Black and White - CNN.com In this interview Bullard explains why the environmental justice movement is different than mainstream environmental organizations. (See Books below). How have hurricane responses also created Superfund sites in poor neighborhoods? Bullard discusses this in an interview with Amy Goodman on Democracy Now.
Majora Carter video ***** Environmental Justice. One of the most effective persuasion examples you'llever find, and not coincidentally one of the most-watched TEDtalks.
Lois Gibbs is a pioneering environmental activist who discovered that her son’s elementary school was built on top of a toxic waste dump in Niagara Falls, NY. Upon subsequent investigation she discovered that her entire neighborhood was built on the same dump, known as the Love Canal. (short video) Gibbs now runs The Center for Health and Environmental Justice. CHEJ can help citizens understand the technical issues and how to get support in fighting environmental injustice. Recent interview (text) with UCSC alum.
West Virginia coal activist Maria Gunnoe is used to intimidation. Gunnoe has been an activist for years, in 2009 winning the Goldman Environmental Prize (video} for her work trying to stem mountaintop-removal mining. The prize came with a $150,000 award – money she planned to use modestly: to extend the city water system to her house. But she was recently threatened with child porn charges by Republican legislators. She is in the documentary Burning the Future.
Van Jones (Oakland CA Environmental Justice). Jones, civil rights leader and founding and executive Director of the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights. Jones has made a name for himself linking prisons and environmental injustice, working in a pro-active way to ensure that marginalized inner city youth will not miss out on the next wave of “green capitalism.”In this short one page article Van Jones argues against the environmental limits idea, but showing that the damage from Hurricane Katrina was not just the force of nature, but the negligence of the U.S. government. Good simple article for considering how environmental justice gets defined. A better sense of his ideas are in Ec0-Apartheid on green collar economy.Interview 2008 book on greening the economy. Book Excerpt. Here is an Oct 2008 interview (audio). 5/09 audio interview 5/10 audio interview, including how he got attacked and forced to resign from Obama administration). His blog. extended 2010 interview. Powershift 2011 talk (video). New book Rebuild the Dream (2012) audio interview. Videos on BigThink.
Winona LaDuke Native American activist. article on native rice and GMO's..
Lopez, Anna A , who obtained her PhD in Environmental Studies from UC Santa Cruz, wrote The Farmworkers' Journey brings together for the first time the many facets of this issue into a comprehensive and accessible narrative: how corporate agribusiness operates, how binational institutions and laws promote the subjugation of Mexican farmworkers, how migration affects family life, how genetically modified corn strains pouring into Mexico from the United States are affecting farmers, how migrants face exploitation from employers, and more. (also Google book). She now runs Center for Farmworker Families based in Felton (volunteer?).
Wangari Mathai First environmentalist to win the Nobel Peace Prize. 11/06 Interview (audio). 2007 audio interview. A new documentary shown on PBS Taking Root, trailer )(UCSC owns it: McHenry Media Center DVD6865 and DVD7441) Living on Earth series including her history. Video of 2009 talk "Challenge for Africa." Sadly, she recently passed away at age 71.
The democratically-elected president of the Maldives, Mohamed Nasheed, has emerged as an international leader on climate change issues, since the low-lying island nation is particularly vulnerable to sea level rise. But public protest and police mutiny linked to his predecessor forced Nasheed out of office in February. audio interview with documentarian.
Penny Newman, CA Executive Director for the Center for Community Action and Environmental Justice (CCAEJ), a non-profit organization working on environmental justice issues. The Center for Community Action and Environmental Justice is one of the oldest and most accomplished environmental justice/health organizations in the nation. CCAEJ’s believes the key to effectively solving community problems lies in bringing the diverse segments of the community together in democratically based, participatory organizations and networks in ways that empower. Penny Newman has gained wide recognition for her work on Environmental Justice issues with the emergence of toxic waste sites in the early 80’s. Her activities at the Stringfellow Acid Pits, California’s top priority Superfund site, led to extensive public policy changes on the state and federal level. Penny’s primary expertise on public participation methods and community organizing has made her a highly sought speaker on environmental health and justice issues.
Living under the constant threat of assassination, Francisco Pineda courageously led a citizens' movement that stopped a gold mine from destroying El Salvador's dwindling water resources and the livelihoods of rural communities throughout the country. Learn more at goldmanprize.org.
Rosa Hilda Ramos turned personal tragedy into a positive outcome for people and the planet (environmental justice).
Human Rights in Cancer Alley by Ike Sriskandarakah The residents of Mossville Louisiana live in the shadow of 14 petrochemical refineries. Community members allege that their high rates of cancer stem directly from these plants. After years of making this argument in American courts they sought a higher judicial body. Now, for the first time ever, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights will hear an environmental human rights case against the United States. Audio 4/10(7:30)
Pablo Fajardo and Luis Yanza are fighting for justice after what has been called one of the most catastrophic environmental disasters in history. They leading an unprecedented community-driven legal battle against a global oil giant. According to the plaintiffs, beginning in 1964 and through 1990, Texaco dumped nearly 17 million gallons of crude oil and 20 billion gallons of drilling wastewater directly into the Ecuadorian Amazon.
Books
Ellen Griffith Spears'Baptized in PCBs: Race, Pollution, and Justice in an All-American Town. see Chemicals.
In his new book, Tomatoland, food writer Barry Estabrook details the life of the mass-produced tomato — and the environmental and human costs of the tomato industry, including slavery. audio interview and excerpt 5/11
Lopez, Anna A , who obtained her PhD in Environmental Studies from UC Santa Cruz, wrote The Farmworkers' Journey brings together for the first time the many facets of this issue into a comprehensive and accessible narrative: how corporate agribusiness operates, how binational institutions and laws promote the subjugation of Mexican farmworkers, how migration affects family life, how genetically modified corn strains pouring into Mexico from the United States are affecting farmers, how migrants face exploitation from employers, and more. (also Google book). She now runs Center for Farmworker Families based in Felton (volunteer?).
Robert Bullard (bio), sociologist widely regarded as the first to articulate the concept of environmental justice. Dumping in Dixie (excerpt) Most recently has been writing about Hurricane Katrina as the latest environmental sacrifice zone. In this interview Bullard explains why the environmental justice movement is different than mainstream environmental organizations.
In Lead Wars: The Politics of Science and the Fate of America’s Children, Markowitz and Rosner chronicle the battles that have taken place over lead poisoning for the last half-century, with special emphasis on a study in which researchers from Johns Hopkins University conducted what the Maryland Court of Appeals deemed unethical research on African-American children. Knowing that some of the children in their study could be exposed to lead from old paint in the apartments they were moved into and so at greater risk for learning disorders and behavioral problems, they went ahead anyway. If it sounds to you like some dark corollary to the notorious Tuskegee experiment, in which hundreds of black men with syphilis were denied treatment with penicillin so that U.S. government researchers could study the course of the disease, you’re not alone in thinking it. The Maryland Appeals Court thought so, too. But while the Tuskegee study began in the 1930s, when protocols for protecting people from medical experimentation were lax, the Johns Hopkins research started in the 1990s, when regulations supposedly provided ample protection from harm at the hands of public health professionals.More.
Black, White, and Green is one of the first books to carefully theorize the green economy, to examine the racial dynamics of food politics, and to approach issues of food access from an environmental-justice perspective. See also Urban Agriculture.
In Sacrifice Zones, Steve Lerner tells the stories of twelve communities, from Brooklyn to Pensacola, that rose up to fight the industries and military bases causing disproportionately high levels of chemical pollution. Lerner is the author of Eco-Pioneers: Practical Visionaries Solving Today's Environmental Problems 1998) and Diamond: A Struggle for Environmental Justice in Louisiana's Chemical Corridor (2005), both published by the MIT Press. video
Faber, Daniel, Capitalizing on environmental injustice : the polluter-industrial complex in the age of globalization / Daniel Faber. Lanham : Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, c2008. Google Book
Environmental justice and environmentalism : the social justice challenge to the environmental movement/ edited by Ronald Sandler and Phaedra C. Pezzullo Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press, c2007 S&E Stacks - GE220 .E578 2007
Organizations
Lopez, Anna A , who obtained her PhD in Environmental Studies from UCSC and spoke at core plenary 2013, wrote The Farmworkers' Journey (also Google book). She now runs Center for Farmworker Families based in Felton.
EarthRights International (ERI) is a nongovernmental, nonprofit organization that combines the power of law and the power of people in defense of human rights and the environment, which we define as "earth rights." We specialize in fact-finding, legal actions against perpetrators of earth rights abuses, training grassroots and community leaders, and advocacy campaigns. Anti-corrpution, True Cost of Chevron.
Greenaction: To learn more about Bradley Angel's Environmental Justice work with Greenaction and what you can do to help the people of Kettleman City link
Environment Justice for All Recently did a national tour, and has posted videos (including Oakland, Silicon Valley, Hunter's Point, Delano).
LCV drive to increase Latino voices 1/14.
(S)heroes of EJ, by EJ Resource Center.
Directory of EJ organizations, including Pesticide Action Network***.
Airhugger features important grass roots monitoring by Global Community Monitor, their citizen science Bucket Brigades have gathered data on the East Bay(their community partners), including diesel exhaust as well as Chevron Richmond refinery fire. Also metal recyclers and Fracking. You can help.
Communities for a Better Environment*** had Bucket Brigade to do citizen science. Important in Richmond refinery issue. See above
Environmental Working Group chemical index, also asbestos and Health/Toxins
Pesticides overview from Encyclopedia of Earth
CA Department of Toxic Substances
Toxicological profiles (Look up chemicals and what they do.
New CA law helps us protect ourselves
Sierra Club Useful Sierra Club site.
Children's Environmental Health Network
Eco-USA Superfund sites, organizations
Natural Resources Defense Council
Pesticide Action Network *** has specific info on California.
Californians for Pesticide Reform
Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition*** has info on electronic waste and mfg industry (run by a Slug!).
Public Justice Public Justice's Environmental Enforcement Project uses citizen suits and other litigation to force compliance with environmental laws, including mountaintop removal.
Video
(See also Environmental Films)
Majora Carter video ***** Environmental Justice.
Bangladesh: Tanneries Harm Workers, Poison Communities October 10, 2012.
2011 Goldman Prize for North America: Hilton Kelley, Port Arthur Texas, USA, now featured in a documentary Shelter in Place.
Quileute 'Twilight' Tribe Deals With Rising Sea Levels That Threaten Way of Life Nov. 26, 2012 PBS Newshour.
The Island President(synopsis) is the story of President Mohamed Nasheed of the Maldives, a man confronting a problem greater than any other world leader has ever faced—the literal survival of his country and everyone in it. After bringing democracy to the Maldives after thirty years of despotic rule, Nasheed is now faced with an even greater challenge: as one of the most low-lying countries in the world, a rise of three feet in sea level would submerge the 1200 islands of the Maldives enough to make them uninhabitable. He was forced out in a coup. (trailer).
Homeland: Four Portraits of Native Action.
Unnatural Causes: Is Inequality Making US Sick? PBS study of food and other factors.
Van Jones "A New Green Deal" (see Eco-heroes). 2009
Unnatural Causes is a seven hour documentary on environmental justice shown on PBS. Extensive coverage of Native Americans, food, diabetes and asthma. More information and segments ***
Maquilapolis: City of Factories
Toxic Tour (Deborah Woo's East Bay tour) / produced by Community Television of Santa Cruz County 1998 Media Center VT6652.
The Digital Dump: Exporting Re-Use and Abuse to Africa
Exporting Harm: The High-Tech Trashing of Asia
The GardenThe fourteen-acre community garden at 41st and Alameda in South Central Los Angeles is the largest of its kind in the United States. Started as a form of healing after the devastating L.A. riots in 1992, the South Central Farmers have since created a miracle in one of the country’s most blighted neighborhoods. Growing their own food. Feeding their families. Creating a community. But now, bulldozers are poised to level their 14-acre oasis. The Garden follows the plight of the farmers, from the tilled soil of this urban farm to the polished marble of City Hall. Mostly immigrants from Latin America, from countries where they feared for their lives if they were to speak out, we watch them organize, fight back, and demand answers. See Urban agriculture and Food Scarcity
Ain't I a Person? new documentary on poverty in America (trailer)
Audio
Planet Harmony is FUBU green stories, including eco-heroes.
EPA Head and Cancer Alley 8/11.
The Promised Land is a public radio show about leaders and visionaries who are transforming lives and communities for/by people of color. Includes Majora Carter and Winona LaDuke.
Toxic sites in California and how we are dealing with them (includes brownfields and Hunter's Point).
Urban Forests contains stories about revitalization of the Bronx, as well well as a link to Tales of Urban Forests and
Brownfields are abandoned industrial hazardous waste sites, the most infamous is Love Canal, another site, which helped spark the third wave of the American eco-movement. CA railroads are offering land for development. Now, these are an important aspect of environmental justice.
Dr. Beverly Wright is a sociology professor at Dillard University and director of the Deep South Center for Environmental Justice in New Orleans. Dr. Wright says she's seeing a significant change in EPA's attitude toward environmental justice issues, starting with the new administrator Lisa Jackson.
Agricultural pesticides. Much of inland California is rural and poor, a sharp contrast with hip, upscale coastal life. Residents in the rural regions sometimes live with a high degree of pollution. LOE.org roducer Devin Robins visited three women who became activists over concerns for their communities’ health. 3/10
In collaboration with the online magazine theRoot.com, Tell Me More speaks with a panel of writers and advocates. Environmental justice activist Majora Carter, along with Dayo Olopade and Kai Wright from theRoot.com tell us what they think about being both black and green. April 22, 2009. Link
NPR's Tavis Smiley takes a closer look at how the so-called "environmental justice" movement has evolved with Barry Hill, director of the EPA's Office of Environmental Justice, and Vernice Miller-Travis, co-founder and board member of West Harlem Environmental Action. 2004.
Interview w/ Hilton Kelley, Environmental activist in Port Arthur, Texas, and 2011 Goldman Environmental Recipient for North America. 4/11 Link
RISE: Part I Sounding the Waters Series: RISE: Climate Change and Coastal Communities. Sea level rise, includes Bay Area. San Francisco Bay is the largest estuary on the Pacific coast of the Americas. Part 3: Chuey Cazares has lived all of his 21 years in Alviso, a tiny hamlet jutting into the salt ponds at the southern tip of the San Francisco Bay. Part of a close, extended Chicano family, with hundreds of relatives living in town, Chuey works as a deck hand on a shrimp boat off Alviso's shores. His town's history — and its future — are defined by water. In the 1800's, farmers drained the aquifer, and the land sank thirteen feet below sea level. Then, the conversion of wetlands to salt ponds made the rivers back up during heavy rains and flooded Alviso. Now sea level rise from the Bay and more rain swelling the rivers threaten more frequent flooding. Chuey's family was traumatized by the last big flood in 1983, and although they fear the next one, they don't want to move anywhere else. Meanwhile, Mendel Stuart of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is working to save Alviso by restoring wetlands. But who is Alviso being saved for? As the flood risk lessens, property values are increasing, making housing in Alviso unaffordable for Chuey and his relatives. And the wetlands conversion has driven his boss's lucrative shrimping business out of the salt ponds.
Images
Twenty-Five Stories from the Central Valley, an online exhibit, uses photos, theater, stories and sound to paint a vivid picture of the environmental toxins that “the other California” lives with every day. Women leaders give us a window into the little-known lives of people who are making this region safer for everyone. Their stories are shocking, sad, and inspiring.
Photovoice from South LA.
Petrochemical America explores Louisiana's Cancer Alley, among other places; includes maps and infographics. samples Kate Orff
Local Resources
Sheila Davis is Executive Director of the Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition, which has played a valuable role in shaping environmental policy in the high-tech industry. Her research, advocacy and policy development led to a successful ban on hazardous electronic waste (e-waste) from the California municipal landfills and the subsequent passage of the first electronic recycling legislation in the nation. Sheila holds a Bachelor's Degree from the University of California and served as a journalist, state legislative aide and community development specialist before joining the staff of SVTC.
Lopez, Anna A , who obtained her PhD in Environmental Studies from UC Santa Cruz, wrote The Farmworkers' Journey brings together for the first time the many facets of this issue into a comprehensive and accessible narrative: how corporate agribusiness operates, how binational institutions and laws promote the subjugation of Mexican farmworkers, how migration affects family life, how genetically modified corn strains pouring into Mexico from the United States are affecting farmers, how migrants face exploitation from employers, and more. (also Google book). She now runs Center for Farmworker Families based in Felton (volunteer?).
ENVS faculty Flora Lu, accompanied by her former UCSC advisees Néstor Silva, Leah Henderson, and Yukari Shichishima, traveled to Yasuní National Park as part of Lu's National Science Foundation funded research project investigating the daily, lived experiences of local families living in zones of oil extraction. ENVS faculty Flora Lu, accompanied by her former UCSC advisees Néstor Silva, Leah Henderson, and Yukari Shichishima, traveled to Yasuní National Park as part of Lu's National Science Foundation funded research project investigating the daily, lived experiences of local families living in zones of oil extraction.
Ravi Rajan's research focuses on environmental issues in governance, corporate responsibility, globalization, entrepreneurship, technology choice, and risk and disaster management. Rajan has served with Environment and History, American Society for Environmental Historyand National Science Foundation. Rajan has also served as the President of the Board of Directors of Pesticide Action Network, North America(PANNA). Environmental rights lecture (video). As a student journalist, he was an eyewitness to Bhopal.
Andy Szasz also studies Environmental Justice. New book on Inverted Quarantine is Shopping Our Way to Safety [1].
Articles in category "Environmental Justice"
The following 10 pages are in this category, out of 10 total.