Difference between revisions of "Eco-heroes"
m |
|||
Line 24: | Line 24: | ||
'''Lester Brown''' [http://www.grist.org/news/maindish/2006/03/06/roberts/ text interview and links], [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZkR1IT4ZjU0 Video of talk at Google] (1/2006), [http://www.earth-policy.org/Books/Seg/PB3ch01_ss7.htm free download] of new book | '''Lester Brown''' [http://www.grist.org/news/maindish/2006/03/06/roberts/ text interview and links], [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZkR1IT4ZjU0 Video of talk at Google] (1/2006), [http://www.earth-policy.org/Books/Seg/PB3ch01_ss7.htm free download] of new book | ||
+ | |||
+ | [http://www.stanforddaily.com/article/1999/3/10/columnColombianTragedyMustNotMartyrPeace Terry Freitas], UCSC grad student killed trying to stop Indigenous people from being harmed by oil company. | ||
'''Julia Butterfly Hill''' see movie Resistance | '''Julia Butterfly Hill''' see movie Resistance |
Revision as of 19:21, 5 May 2008
Note: New content tends to appear in gold font.
Activists
List of historical environmentalists
Awards and Lists
Goldman Prize: List by region, includes video and email contact and ways to take action Audio interview with four 2008 winners
Top 100 according to the Guardian UK
Youth award, includes Palo Alto student
People
Majora Carter video ***** Environmental Justice
Legacy: Portraits of 50 Bay Area Environmental Elders text by John Hart images by Nancy Kittle UCSC Sci Library S&E Stacks GE55 .K58 2006
Lester Brown text interview and links, Video of talk at Google (1/2006), free download of new book
Terry Freitas, UCSC grad student killed trying to stop Indigenous people from being harmed by oil company.
Julia Butterfly Hill see movie Resistance On Dec. 10, 1997, a 23-year-old woman named Julia "Butterfly" Hill climbed into a 55-meter (180 foot) tall California Coast Redwood tree. Her aim was to prevent the destruction of the tree and of the forest where it had lived for a millennium. Butterfly Hill worked in the tradition of Mahatma Ghandi, putting her own life on the line to save the life of a forest that was under immediate threat of destruction. The New College of California awarded her an honorary doctorate for her tree sit-activism. Read Grist interview to learn where Butterfly-Hill derives her inspiration. In CNN interview Butterfly Hill explains her involvement in transnational environmental movements after being deported by the Ecuadorian government for protesting an oil pipeline through the rainforest.
Gail A. Eisnitz (San Rafael, CA), winner of the Albert Schweitzer Medal for outstanding achievement in animal welfare, is the chief investigator for the Humane Farming Association. Humane Farming Association, P.O. Box 3577, San Rafael, CA 94912
Lois Gibbs is an 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. Gibbs now runs The Center for Health and Envrionmental Justice. CHEJ can help citizens understand the technical issues and how to get support in fighting environmental injustice. Recent interview with UCSC alum
Van Jones Oakland CA Environmental Justice
Van 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. Interview
Winona LaDuke Native American activist. article on native rice and GMO's.
Amory Lovins TEDtalk video on the Oil Endgame, a TEDtalk. See also www.oilendgame.com Interview on Charlie Rose
Wangari Mathai First environmentalist to win the Nobel Peace Prize (cf LOE interviews)
Bill McKibben author of classic End of Nature (excerpt)
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.
Ka Hsaw Wa co-founder and executive director of EarthRights International (ERI) and a member of the Karen ethnic nationality, was one of the student leaders in the 1988 Burmese student democracy uprising and has been a human rights activist ever since, working to document and resist human rights and environmental abuses within Burma (and around the world). Ka Hsaw Wa has been awarded the Goldman Environmental Prize, Reebok Human Rights Award, Whitley Fund for Nature/Sting and Trudie Styler Award for Human Rights and the Environment, and the Conde Nast Environmental Award.
Vandana Shiva is a physicist, ecofeminist, environmental activist and author. Shiva, currently based in New Delhi, is author of over 300 papers in leading scientific and technical journals. Shiva participated in the nonviolent Chipko movement during the 1970s. The movement, whose main participants were women, adopted the tactic of hugging trees to prevent their felling.
Diane Wilson, a fourth-generation fisherwoman, leads a one-woman crusade against Dow and other petrochemical plants, which create 17% of America’s pollution from her Texas town of 1,352. These factories have turned Seadrift from a traditional fishing port into a massive chemical cocktail that poisons the surrounding air, earth and waters, sardonically dubbed Texas Gold, video excerpt. From Texas to Wall Street to the front lawn of former Union Carbide CEO Warren Anderson's multi-million dollar mansion on Long Island -- all the while chased by Texas Rangers charged with bringing her to justice -- Diane pursues a reckless industry with a soft drawl, dogged determination and her own special brand of Southern bad-ass fisherwoman humor.
In the 16 years since she began her fight, Diane has received death threats and suffered intimidation tactics; shots were fired at her house from a helicopter and her dog was poisoned.Democracy Now interview Wilson's book, An Unreasonable Woman
E. O. Wilson biologist TEDtalk video