New on 'Connect the Dots': The Frontline Communities Fighting Back Against Polluting Pipelines

Center for Progressive Reform 2019-02-21

Summary:

For affected indigenous communities in the United States and Canada, new oil and gas pipelines snaking across their lands represent a new kind of attack. Dirty, polluting, dangerous, and built without the communities' consent, these pipelines are the inevitable outcome of North America's hydraulic fracturing and tar sands oil "revolutions" that have played out in recent decades. These indigenous frontline communities must bear the disproportionate costs brought about by developed nations' continued addiction to fossil fuels, all without seeing most of the benefits. In a special preview episode of Season 2 of the Connect the Dots podcast, CPR President Rob Verchick explores this poignant case study of environmental injustice with the guidance of Rachel Rye Butler, the head of the Democracy Campaign at Greenpeace.

Link:

http://www.progressivereform.org/CPRBlog.cfm?idBlog=7D550A5D-E19C-A864-4E96DB14D8633265

From feeds:

Berkeley Law Library -- Reference & Research Services ยป Center for Progressive Reform

Tags:

Authors:

James Goodwin

Date tagged:

02/21/2019, 09:20

Date published:

02/21/2019, 09:00