Local democracy in action for a greener, more peaceful world

Disparate Impacts: Environmental Injustice

Presenter(s): 
Date & Time: 
November 6, 2009 - 2:30pm
Location: 
North Hearing Room, Wisconsin State Capitol

How well do we understand the differences in the ways people and communities suffer from environmental harm? These differences are called "disparate impacts," and form the basis for understanding how race, class, gender, and age, as well as the rural/urban divide, impact the lives of less powerful communities. This workshop will address problems of environmental injustice in south central Wisconsin, as well as what activists are doing to fix those problems.

User login

CONVENERS

Convened by Liberty Tree, Lawyers Committee on Nuclear Policy, Western States Legal Foundation, Global Action to Prevent War, and Mayors for Peace in cooperation with Cities for Progress, Nukewatch, Physicians for Social Responsibility, Wisconsin Carbon Free/Nuclear Free, Wisconsin Network for Peace and Justice.

For a full list of conveners, organizers, and community, industry, major, and media sponsors, please click here

SPREAD THE WORD

Please use these buttons to add a link:

Future Cities 2009 button

<a href="http://www.FutureCities2009.org" target="_blank"><img align="middle" alt="Future Cities 2009 button" height="150" hspace="3" src="http://www.democracysquare.org/files_public/future-cities-web-buttons-square-2.png" vspace="3" width="150" /></a>

 

Future Cities 2009 button

<a href="http://www.FutureCities2009.org" target="_blank"><img align="middle" alt="Future Cities 2009 button" height="117" hspace="3" src="http://www.democracysquare.org/files_public/web-button-1-future-cities-2009.png" style="cursor: default; " vspace="3" width="200" /></a>

BACKGROUND

Cities are assuming an active role in nuclear abolition and climate protection initiatives. Over 900 mayors have signed the U.S. Conference of Mayors Climate Protection Agreement, pledging to work to implement the Kyoto Protocol in their own communities.

Future Cities 2009 follows on a similar, smaller conference hosted by Des Moines Mayor Frank Cownie last October. For the details on that event, click here.