environmental racism

Filtering by: environmental racism

Chicago Wilderness: Equity and Culture Workshops
Feb
17
9:00 AM09:00

Chicago Wilderness: Equity and Culture Workshops

From Chicago Wilderness:

Join your peers to gain understanding of why inequities exist so we can do something about them.

Cream City Conservation will help the Chicago Wilderness community examine the disproportionate impacts of environmental hazards faced by communities of color, who are grossly under-represented in spaces that hold key decision-making power related to conservation and sustainability.

Register here: https://www.chicagowilderness.org/events/EventDetails.aspx?id=1565765&group=

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Chicago Wilderness: Equity and Culture Workshops
Jan
20
9:00 AM09:00

Chicago Wilderness: Equity and Culture Workshops

From Chicago Wilderness:

Join your peers to gain understanding of why inequities exist so we can do something about them.

Cream City Conservation will help the Chicago Wilderness community examine the disproportionate impacts of environmental hazards faced by communities of color, who are grossly under-represented in spaces that hold key decision-making power related to conservation and sustainability.

Register here: https://www.chicagowilderness.org/events/EventDetails.aspx?id=1565765&group=

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Chicago Wilderness Workshop: Introduction to Racial Equity
Oct
26
9:00 AM09:00

Chicago Wilderness Workshop: Introduction to Racial Equity

From Chicago Wilderness:

Join your peers to gain understanding of why inequities exist so we can do something about them.

Cream City Conservation will help the Chicago Wilderness community examine the disproportionate impacts of environmental hazards faced by communities of color, who are grossly under-represented in spaces that hold key decision-making power related to conservation and sustainability.

Register here: https://www.chicagowilderness.org/events/EventDetails.aspx?id=1558503&group=

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Screening 'District 15' + 'Reclamation: The Rise at Standing Rock'
Mar
14
3:00 PM15:00

Screening 'District 15' + 'Reclamation: The Rise at Standing Rock'

DISTRICT 15
Anjali Nayar and Senain Kheshgi/2020/23 min/Energy, Social Justice, Health

FILM DESCRIPTION: Sadly, the majority of Los Angeles industrial oil drilling activity takes place in communities of color and low-income communities. “District 15” highlights the hope and tenacity of the young activists of Wilmington, California, as they push the L.A. City Council to prohibit new and existing oil and gas drilling operations within 2,500 feet of homes, schools and hospitals. Communities for a Better Environment is behind this effort. The group does critical work on environmental justice and empowers Californian communities to stand up to polluting industries and build a green energy future.

RECLAMATION: THE RISE AT STANDING ROCK
Michele Noble/2018/23 min/Energy, Water, Social Justice, Health, People & Cultures

FILM DESCRIPTION: In 2016, Indigenous youth unite the Native Nations and rise up in spiritual solidarity against the Dakota Access Pipeline. These young Native Leaders honor their destiny by leading a peaceful movement of resistance which awakens the world.

Tickets available to U.S. viewers only.

Registration: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/district-15-reclamation-the-rise-at-standing-rock-watch-party-tickets-138624777441

Both films will be preceded by the 3-minute film "Fighting for Environmental Justice: The Health Crisis at the U.S.-Mexico Border" by Ilan Jinich, winner of the Sally Stovall Award for Activism in the One Earth Young Filmmakers Contest.

Please stay for a post-film discussion with:

Facilitator Kyra Woods, Clean Energy Organizer + Ready for 100 Chicago Coordinator, Sierra Club

Panelists:

  • Anjali Nayar, Director, District 15

  • Michele Noble, Director, Reclamation: The Rise at Standing Rock

  • Angela Tovar, Chief Sustainability Officer, City of Chicago

  • Naomi Davis, Founder and President, Blacks in Green

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Screening 'Flint: Who Can You Trust?'
Mar
6
6:30 PM18:30

Screening 'Flint: Who Can You Trust?'

Anthony Baxter/2020/119 min/Social Justice, Water, People & Cultures, Health

FILM DESCRIPTION: Filmed over 5 years and long after the story was front page news, “Flint: Who Can You Trust?” is full of new twists and turns. Journalist/filmmaker Anthony Baxter goes beyond the headlines in Flint, Michigan, where a government poisoned its own citizens’ water supply, to show the complete breakdown of authority, public trust and faith in the truth itself. “Flint” is a powerful investigation of the breathtaking scope of toxic pseudo-science, celebrity activism, and official negligence. The film reveals the devastating impact on poor people and people of color, which make up the majority of the residents in Flint, as they continue to seek justice and clean water. Featuring Marc Ruffalo and narrated by Alec Baldwin. Produced by Richard Phinney and Sabrina Schmidt Gordon.

Tickets available to U.S. viewers only.

Registration: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/flint-who-can-you-trust-watch-party-tickets-138489853881

After the screening, stay connected to discuss the film with:

Facilitator Alejandro Bodipo-Memba, Founder & CEO, OVP Management Consulting

Resource Panelists:

  • Anthony Baxter, Director, Flint: Who Can You Trust?

  • Nakiya Wakes, Resident of Flint, MI; appears in Flint: Who Can You Trust?

  • Nathalie Baptiste, Reporter and Columnist, Mother Jones Magazine

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