Wilson Lecture | Environmental Justice: Past, Present and Future

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 7 окт 2024
  • Rev. Dr. Benjamin F. Chavis Jr. in conversation with Catherine Coleman Flowers. Moderator: Cameron Oglesby.
    This event, recorded Sept. 15 2022, commemorates the 40th anniversary of the Warren County protests in North Carolina. The nonviolent protests in 1982 surrounded the state's disposal of soil laced with PCBs in the predominately Black community. The protests were considered among the earliest for environmental justice in the United States.
    The Robert R. Wilson Distinguished Lecture features the Rev. Dr. Benjamin F. Chavis, Jr., who is credited for coining the term "environmental racism," which he declared from his prison cell after being arrested during the protests. Chavis will be joined in conversation by Catherine Coleman Flowers, activist and recent McArthur Genius Grant awardee.
    Event partners include the Sanford School of Public Policy, the Nicholas School of the Environment and the Duke Human Rights Center at the Franklin Humanities Institute. In addition to the Wilson Distinguished Lecture support, this event is also supported by the Reckoning with Race and Racism in the American South grant and the Environmental Law and Policy Clinic. This event is a part of a larger series of lectures and celebrations of environmental justice this fall at Duke University.
    More about the other events:
    duke.is/ck5j8
    More about the environment and energy key theme at the Sanford School of Public Policy at Duke University:
    sanford.duke.e...
    Subscribe to our podcasts. In 2022-2023 both are focused on climate change and the environment:
    waysandmeanssh...
    policy360.org/

Комментарии • 1