 Stories About: interview
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Author |
Published |
Section |
Movement Shakers Two eco-leaders -- one mainstream, one radical -- debate the movement's past and future |
Kathryn Schulz |
29 Mar 2006 |
Main Dish |
| Eric Mann. When Eric Mann first encountered environmentalists, he saw them as a bunch of "arrogant, racist airheads." When Frances Beinecke first encountered environmentalists, she felt she'd found her cause. Frances Beinecke. Nearly four decades later, both are tireless proponents of environmental sanity, but they work in very different ways. Mann is ... |
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| Topics: environmental justice, heroes, interview, NRDC, politics, Poverty and the Environment (all these topics) |
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Garden of Edens Jason Edens, rural solar advocate, answers Grist's questions |
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27 Mar 2006 |
InterActivist |
| Jason Edens. Where do you work? I work at the Rural Renewable Energy Alliance, a grassroots nonprofit organization whose mission is to make solar power accessible to people of all income levels. What does your organization do? At RREAL, we install solar heating systems onto the homes of low-income families qualifying for energy assistance. In Minnesota, and indeed across the country, hundreds of thousands of ... |
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| Topics: energy, energy at home, green living, InterActivist, interview, Japan, Minnesota, Poverty and the Environment, solar voltaic power (all these topics) |
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Give Him a Farmhand Tirso Moreno, farmworker organizer, answers readers' questions |
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24 Mar 2006 |
InterActivist |
| Tirso Moreno, Farmworker Association of Florida. A note from Moreno: This interview is especially timely as next week (March 27 - April 2) is national Farmworker Awareness Week. I hope you will all take a few minutes to find out more about the actions, activities, and campaigns going on around the country and see what you can do to help make a difference for farmworkers in the U.S. Do you support bans ... |
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| Topics: agriculture, environmental justice, Florida, health, InterActivist, interview, Poverty and the Environment, toxics (all these topics) |
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An interview with Rabbi Michael Lerner On spiritual environmentalism |
David Roberts |
22 Mar 2006 |
Gristmill |
| A few weeks ago, I sat down for a long chat with Rabbi Michael Lerner. The first half -- most directly related to environmental issues -- is here. The second half, wherein in we discuss general spiritual and theological issues, is below. In his new book The Left Hand of God (you can read an excerpt here), Lerner says the religious right offers what he calls the right hand of God: a stern authoritarian father, who punishes sin, demands self-reliance, and inspires ... |
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| Topics: interview, religion and spirituality (all these topics) |
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What the Left Hand's Doing Rabbi Michael Lerner calls on environmentalists to develop a spiritual vision |
David Roberts |
22 Mar 2006 |
Main Dish |
| As we strolled through downtown Seattle in search of coffee, Rabbi Michael Lerner casually pointed over my shoulder and said, "That's where I was in jail." Rabbi Michael Lerner. Photo: Mark Werlin. He was referring to his membership in the Seattle Seven, a group of Vietnam War protesters whose 1970 arrest and trial sparked a legendary media circus. It wa ... |
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| Topics: consumerism, God and the Environment, green living, interview, religion and spirituality (all these topics) |
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Integrate Expectations An interview with integration advocate Sheryll Cashin |
Jon Christensen |
21 Mar 2006 |
Main Dish |
| Space is the place where race, poverty, and the environment get sorted out, for better or worse. And the spaces where we live, work, learn, and play are the places where integration succeeds or fails, argues Sheryll Cashin. The Georgetown University law professor wrote 2004's The Failures of Integration: How Race and Class Are Undermining the American Dream, one of the most important and p ... |
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| Topics: education, environmental justice, heroes, interview, politics, Poverty and the Environment (all these topics) |
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The Not-So-Funny Farm Tirso Moreno, farmworker organizer, answers Grist's questions |
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20 Mar 2006 |
InterActivist |
| Tirso Moreno. What's your job title? General coordinator for the Farmworker Association of Florida. What does your organization do? We work to empower communities of farmworkers and the rural poor, focusing on a wide range of issues, from workplace and community organizing to disaster preparedness and response, from vocational rehabilitation to immigrants' rights advocacy for farmworkers and students. ... |
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| Topics: agriculture, environmental justice, Florida, health, InterActivist, interview, Poverty and the Environment, toxics (all these topics) |
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Fit to Be Ride Francisca Porchas, clean-bus campaigner, answers readers' questions |
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17 Mar 2006 |
InterActivist |
| Francisca Porchas of the Bus Riders Union. How is your organization working with the state of California and the feds to bring cleaner transportation options to your communities? I noted that you mentioned gas-powered buses -- how many? -- Bill Turner, Dillsburg, Pa. Our main focus to this day has been working with the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, an agency with an annual budget of $3 bill ... |
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| Topics: air pollution, California, environmental justice, grassroots activism, health, InterActivist, interview, Mexico, Poverty and the Environment (all these topics) |
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The Bus Stops Here Francisca Porchas, clean-bus campaigner, answers Grist's questions |
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13 Mar 2006 |
InterActivist |
| Francisca Porchas. What work do you do? I am a lead organizer with the Labor/Community Strategy Center and the Bus Riders Union's Clean Air, Clean Lungs, Clean Buses Campaign, based in Los Angeles. How does it relate to the environment? The Strategy Center has engaged in environmental-justice and civil-rights campaigns for the last 17 years, combining grassroots organizing and policy work with a str ... |
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| Topics: air pollution, California, environmental justice, grassroots activism, health, InterActivist, interview, Mexico, Poverty and the Environment (all these topics) |
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SWOP and Go Tomasita González, environmental-justice organizer, answers readers' questions |
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10 Mar 2006 |
InterActivist |
| Tomasita González, of SouthWest Organizing Project. Albuquerque and Santa Fe, and probably other cities and towns in New Mexico, are seeing lots of development of housing for new residents. What are the environmental implications? How seriously is the water supply strained? Are underprivileged or minority communities affected? -- Mark Stephen Caponigro, New York, N.Y. Thanks for the question ... |
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| Topics: environmental justice, InterActivist, interview, New Mexico, politics, Poverty and the Environment, waste, water conflicts (all these topics) |
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You're a Good Man, Lester Brown An interview with the founder of Worldwatch and Earth Policy Institute |
David Roberts |
06 Mar 2006 |
Main Dish |
| There are few titans remaining in the environmental world -- figures that command respect not only inside the movement but in the larger global political milieu as well. Lester Brown is one of them. In 1974, he founded the Worldwatch Institute, one of the first think tanks to focus on the global environmental situation (its agenda-setting yearly reports, State of th ... |
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| Topics: China, climate, interview, Lester Brown, nuclear power, population, renewable energy (all these topics) |
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González in 60 Seconds Tomasita González, environmental-justice organizer, answers Grist's questions |
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06 Mar 2006 |
InterActivist |
| Tomasita González. What work do you do? I work as a community organizer at SouthWest Organizing Project, based in Albuquerque, N.M. What does your organization do? For over a quarter century, SWOP has worked to build an environmental-justice movement in disenfranchised, working, and people-of-color communities. In the '90s, we sought to challenge the mainstream "Group of Ten" ... |
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| Topics: environmental justice, InterActivist, interview, New Mexico, politics, Poverty and the Environment, waste, water conflicts (all these topics) |
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Nursery Time Alan Hipólito, creator of green jobs for low-income people, answers readers' questions |
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03 Mar 2006 |
InterActivist |
| How can I and others help low-income people of color? -- Corey Paradis, Burlington, Vt. Well, that's a big question. Not to be too short, but I would ask them, the ones in your area. To me, and in my experience, and what I tell my students, the most important thing is to truly place yourself at the service of these communities. Seek out organizations serving or from these communitie ... |
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| Topics: environmental justice, gardening, green jobs, InterActivist, interview, placemaking, Poverty and the Environment (all these topics) |
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Work in Progress Alan Hipólito, creator of green jobs for low-income people, answers Grist's questions |
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27 Feb 2006 |
InterActivist |
| What work do you do? I run a very small, very new nonprofit organization called Verde. What does your organization do? What, in a perfect world, would constitute "mission accomplished"? Verde offers a helping hand in the form of green jobs for low-income folks. Photo: iStockphoto. The mission of Verde is to increase the economic health of low-income and people-of-color com ... |
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| Topics: environmental justice, gardening, green jobs, InterActivist, interview, placemaking, Poverty and the Environment (all these topics) |
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The King and I An interview with Sir David King, Britain's top scientist and climate crusader |
Amanda Griscom Little |
17 Feb 2006 |
Main Dish |
| British Prime Minister Tony Blair has earned a rep as a global leader in the fight against climate change, and, at least in part, he has Sir David King to thank for it. Sir David King. King, the U.K. government's chief scientific adviser and an outspoken advocate of aggressive action to forestall global warming, has pushed the climate crisis up the PM's priority list ... |
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| Topics: climate, climate change adaptation, fossil fuels, interview, Kyoto Protocol, politics, United Kingdom (all these topics) |
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All About Steve Steve Frillmann, community-garden guru, answers readers' questions |
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17 Feb 2006 |
InterActivist |
| Steve Frillmann, executive director of Green Guerillas. I'd love to hear a juicy story of how community gardening is a tool for community development. Would you share one? -- Lisa Gelczis, Flagstaff, Ariz. Just this past summer, Green Guerillas cut the lock off the fence of a once-vibrant community garden that had fallen into disrepair. We put up fliers, knocked on doors, and went to community meeti ... |
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| Topics: environmental justice, food, gardening, InterActivist, interview, New York, placemaking, Poverty and the Environment (all these topics) |
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Guerillas in the Midst Steve Frillmann, community-garden guru, answers Grist's questions |
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13 Feb 2006 |
InterActivist |
| Steve Frillmann. With what environmental organization are you affiliated? I am the executive director of Green Guerillas, New York City's oldest community-gardening group. What does your organization do? At Green Guerillas, we help people carry out their visions for what community gardens can be in a dense, vibrant urban area -- urban farms, botanic gardens, performance spaces, community centers, ... |
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| Topics: environmental justice, food, gardening, InterActivist, interview, New York, placemaking, Poverty and the Environment (all these topics) |
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Return of the Native Movement Evon Peter, director of Native Movement, answers readers' questions |
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10 Feb 2006 |
InterActivist |
| Evon Peter, director of Native Movement. I've heard that some Indigenous peoples in Alaska support drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, while some sturdily oppose it. How do you feel about the proposal to drill? And what do you think the division is doing to the communities there? -- Joshua Moro, Laramie, Wyo. There is no simple answer to this question. The history of unju ... |
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| Topics: environmental justice, environmental movement, heroes, InterActivist, interview, Poverty and the Environment (all these topics) |
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Getting Evon Evon Peter, director of Native Movement, answers Grist's questions |
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06 Feb 2006 |
InterActivist |
| Evon Peter. What work do you do? I am the executive director of Native Movement. What does your organization do? Native Movement is a collective of around 15 organizers who work on a myriad of projects focusing on youth leadership development, sustainability, protection of sacred sites, and social, political, economic, and environmental justice. We work mostly with Indigenous peoples in the Southwest and ... |
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| Topics: environmental justice, environmental movement, heroes, InterActivist, interview, Poverty and the Environment (all these topics) |
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What Goes Sup Wenonah Hauter, director of Food and Water Watch, answers readers' questions |
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03 Feb 2006 |
InterActivist |
| Wenonah Hauter, director of Food and Water Watch. If city tap water is full of chemicals and bottling spring water damages ecosystems, what on earth is a health-conscious environmentalist supposed to drink? -- Molly Miller, Denver, Colo. In many places, healthy people can drink the water out of the tap. You can request testing results from your utility. If you are concerned and don't want to ... |
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| Topics: food and agriculture, InterActivist, interview, water pollution (all these topics) |
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Some Like It Hauter Wenonah Hauter, director of Food and Water Watch, answers Grist's questions |
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30 Jan 2006 |
InterActivist |
| Wenonah Hauter. With what environmental organization are you affiliated? I am the executive director of Food and Water Watch, a brand-new consumer advocacy organization in Washington, D.C. What does your organization do? We're focused on protecting two critical essentials: food and water. Our mission is to challenge the economic and political forces that are promoting industrialized food p ... |
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| Topics: food and agriculture, InterActivist, interview, water pollution (all these topics) |
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Madame Butterfly Julia Butterfly Hill, activist and onetime tree-sitter, answers readers' questions |
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27 Jan 2006 |
InterActivist |
| How do you feel about your experiences surrounding Luna being turned into a film? What is your involvement with the project? -- Chris Schults, Seattle, Wash. Over the last seven years, various individuals, producers, and studios have approached me, wanting to turn my story into a film. Even when there were financially lucrative opportunities at the table, I ended up walking away fro ... |
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| Topics: environmental non-government organizations, InterActivist, interview (all these topics) |
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Float Like a Butterfly Julia Butterfly Hill, activist and onetime tree-sitter, answers Grist's questions |
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23 Jan 2006 |
InterActivist |
| What work do you do? I founded Circle of Life in 1999 while living in the branches of an over-1,000-year-old redwood to keep it from being cut down by MAXXAM-owned Pacific Lumber Company. What does your organization do? Circle of Life activates people through education, inspiration, and connection to live in a way that honors the diversity and interdependence of all life. We beli ... |
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| Topics: environmental non-government organizations, InterActivist, interview (all these topics) |
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Eager Beaver Beaver Theodosakis, founder of prAna, answers readers' questions |
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20 Jan 2006 |
InterActivist |
| Beaver Theodosakis, founder of prAna. On the prAna website, only a small minority of items are listed as organic. Is there a practical barrier to going all-organic with your cotton apparel? -- Shawn Severance, Ann Arbor, Mich. Many of our products are not cotton. Because our business is grounded in outdoor activities and yoga, technical attributes -- like moisture management -- are a must in many cases, ... |
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| Topics: environmental non-government organizations, InterActivist, interview, outdoor recreation (all these topics) |
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Climb-It Science An interview with swashbuckling climate scientist Lonnie Thompson |
Amanda Griscom Little |
19 Jan 2006 |
Main Dish |
| Lonnie Thompson has clocked more hours above 18,000 feet than any other person in history, and yet he doesn't exactly like climbing mountains. A masochist? No, just a hard-driving climate scientist. The iceman cometh. Photo: Courtesy Lonnie Thompson. Thompson treks up the highest peaks of the tropics -- including the Himalayas and Andes -- to extract ice-core samples. He the ... |
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| Topics: climate, climate science, interview (all these topics) |
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