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Il y a 6 modules dans ce cours
Studies of the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries demonstrated persistent trends in the US: race, income, and other factors predispose marginalized communities to higher toxic waste exposure and poorer quality of air, water, housing, and recreational spaces. In “Environmental Justice,” you’ll learn how these burdens have individual, interpersonal, and intergenerational effects and how environmental justice has helped mitigate these inequities
In this course, you’ll learn about the historical events that have helped shape the environmental justice movements of today, and legislative victories, like the removal of lead from automotive fuels and the establishment of mandates within the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. In addition to previous successes, this course will explore current work emerging in the field of environmental justice, including Indigenous sovereignty, conservation, climate and migration justice, affordable housing, policing, digital equity, disability rights, and more.
This is a course within the “Green Skills for a Sustainable and Just Future," a course series dedicated to shaping the next generation of sustainable practices and leadership.
In this module, we'll talk specifically about how the Environmental Justice movement gained momentum through community responses to the distributive justice problem of inequitable siting of waste facilities in residential areas where nonwhite Americans live. We will discuss the uneven distribution of waste burdens, the "not in my back yard" or NIMBY movements that came together in response to create the wider EJ movement and field of study. We'll scrutinize the socio-environmental implications of waste management, the quest for fairer consumptive and recycling practices, and outline the intricate relationship between activism, research and teaching, policy, and the pursuit of environmental equity.
Inclus
8 vidéos7 lectures1 devoir2 sujets de discussion
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8 vidéos•Total 126 minutes
Welcome to the Course•6 minutes
Instructor Journey into Environmental Justice •10 minutes
Introduction to the Course•8 minutes
Distributive Justice & the Birth of a Movement•13 minutes
Methods & Movements: Foundations of a Field•9 minutes
Interview: Paul Mohai (part 1)•44 minutes
New Tracking & Teaching Tools•8 minutes
Interview with Joan Martínez Alier•30 minutes
7 lectures•Total 148 minutes
Meet Your Instructor•3 minutes
Syllabus•10 minutes
A New Understanding of Human History and the Roots of Inequality TED Talk•18 minutes
Help Us Learn About You•10 minutes
Growing Authentic Leaders From Communities Most Impacted By Environmental Injustice And Climate Change Podcast•70 minutes
Bunyan Bryant: A Fighter for Environmental Justice •7 minutes
[OPTIONAL] Environmental Justice Tools of the 21st Century•30 minutes
1 devoir•Total 30 minutes
Module 1 Quiz •30 minutes
2 sujets de discussion•Total 50 minutes
Share Your Journey into Environmental Justice •20 minutes
Exploration of EJAtlas •30 minutes
Procedural Justice and Energy Equity as Environmental Justice
Module 2•5 heures à terminer
Détails du module
In this module, we will explore the concept of Procedural Justice in the context of EJ, and its institutionalization. Focusing on both Energy Justice Systems, we will discuss decision-making, political contexts and implications for the built environment and human experience. What role does energy access play in achieving Environmental Justice goals? We will have interviews with energy specialists Tony Reames, Deputy Director for Energy Justice at the U.S. Department of Energy and Rahul Agrawal Bejarano, Project Manager and Data Analyst at the Energy Equity Project, to examine cases from their work and assess relevant legislative and policy frameworks. We will also discuss tools for practitioners to incorporate procedural justice principles.
Inclus
5 vidéos6 lectures1 devoir
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5 vidéos•Total 76 minutes
Foundations of Procedural Justice •9 minutes
An Introduction to Energy Justice•9 minutes
Interview with Rahul Agrawal Bejarano•36 minutes
Introduction: Globally Interconnected Energy Justice•11 minutes
Interview with Tony Reames•11 minutes
6 lectures•Total 195 minutes
[OPTIONAL] Conflicts Over Energy Policy •30 minutes
Energy Equity Project•20 minutes
The Intersection of Equity and Justice •35 minutes
[OPTIONAL] Farming and Fishing the Wind•30 minutes
[OPTIONAL] Fueling the Energy Transition•30 minutes
Project Finance and Sustainable Development in the Global South •50 minutes
We define Retributive Justice in relation to EJ, and and aspects of Infrastructural and legal Justice in US carceral and criminal systems that punish those committing harm, contrasting them with the practices currently in vigor vis a vis responsibilities and actions of corporations. We scrutinize punitive approaches, costs and environmental impacts of imprisonment, compared with processes of corporate accountability in light of social and environmental injustices. Through critical analysis, we will engage with the ethics and pragmatics of holding individuals and corporations to account.
Inclus
4 vidéos4 lectures1 devoir
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4 vidéos•Total 49 minutes
Foundations of Retributive Justice •9 minutes
Carceral Economics and Environmental Justice•12 minutes
Corporate Accountability and Environmental Justice •15 minutes
Interview with Tobias Ruttenauer •13 minutes
4 lectures•Total 135 minutes
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy: Retributive Justice •60 minutes
Prisons are a daily environmental injustice•15 minutes
Conceptualize the principles and practices of Restorative Justice as defined by the United Nations, and others, as they relate socially restorative practices in ever wider use to restoration ecology and its expansion at present. The module will not only consider the expanding use of restorative justice circles and related practices in households, schools, local communities and even entire nation states in post conflict settings, but will also consider the relationship between social justice process and the healing of environmental harms through ecological re-introductions and management.
Inclus
4 vidéos5 lectures1 devoir
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4 vidéos•Total 75 minutes
Restorative Justice and the Healing of Harms•9 minutes
Restorative Justice in Practice•8 minutes
Interview with Shiloh Maples•51 minutes
Critiques of Restorative Justice•8 minutes
5 lectures•Total 68 minutes
About Restorative Justice •5 minutes
Opinion: More reparative justice, less restorative justice is needed•8 minutes
The Origins of “Braiding Sweetgrass”•10 minutes
Restoring Mnomen, a Step on the Path to Reconciliation•15 minutes
[OPTIONAL] Decolonizing University Land and Water Management•30 minutes
1 devoir•Total 30 minutes
Module 4 Quiz •30 minutes
Reparative and Relational Justice
Module 5•6 heures à terminer
Détails du module
This module discusses Reparative Justice, widely understood but still limited in practice. It also explores emergent justice frameworks, relying most on the frame of Relational Justice, an emerging term that captures a range of justice approaches that are less transactional or rooted in existing harms and more about harm prevention. We consider these practices in light of histories like slavery and colonial violence that undergird many modern nation states, and relate them to contemporary challenges for attaining climate justice. We review initiatives like the US "Justice 40" push to put funding for climate adaptation into frontline vulnerable communities, and explore their effectiveness in healing harms.
Inclus
5 vidéos9 lectures1 devoir
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5 vidéos•Total 108 minutes
Foundations of Reparative Justice•9 minutes
Reparative Justice in Practice •13 minutes
Interview with Willi Haas•33 minutes
Interview: Latia Leonard •36 minutes
Emergent Relational Justice•17 minutes
9 lectures•Total 195 minutes
What Are Reparations?•15 minutes
The United States Has Paid Reparations for a Host of Issues. Why not Slavery?•7 minutes
United Nations Declaration of Rights of Indigenous People•30 minutes
Between activism and science: grassroots concepts for sustainability coined by Environmental Justice Organizations •40 minutes
Harvard sets up $100 million endowment fund for slavery reparations•8 minutes
[OPTIONAL] Indigenous Forest Guardianship: A Success Story•30 minutes
Emergent Strategy Ideation Institute•20 minutes
A Single Night of Bird Collisions in Chicago Points to the Need for Window Safety•15 minutes
Against Crisis Epistemology•30 minutes
1 devoir•Total 30 minutes
Module 5 Quiz •30 minutes
Course Coda
Module 6•1 heure à terminer
Détails du module
This module wraps up our course with a synthesis of the course and part 2 of the Interview with Paul Mohai. As a founding father of the EJ movement, it's fitting that our course began and is now ending with the Mohai interview.
Inclus
2 vidéos1 lecture
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2 vidéos•Total 25 minutes
Interview: Paul Mohai (part 2)•21 minutes
Course Conclusion•4 minutes
1 lecture•Total 10 minutes
Post Course Survey •10 minutes
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