environmental justice

Posts Tagged ‘environmental justice’

ROCLA & LASC: Central America’s Forgotten History

Join ROCLA & LASC for Central America’s Forgotten History: Revolution, Violence and the Roots of Migration – a discussion with Aviva Chomsky. Join ROCLA’s mailing list here to be sent the Zoom details.

 

Aviva Chomsky has published numerous books on Latin American history, labor and migration, co-edited several anthologies, and has been active in Latin American solidarity and immigrants’ rights movements for several decades. Her most recent works include Central America’s Forgotten History: Revolution, Violence, and the Roots of Migration (2021); and Undocumented: How Immigration Became Illegal (2014; Mexican edition, 2014).

Her next book, “Is Science Enough? Forty Critical Questions about Climate Justice” is due out in 2022.

Webinar: End Militarism to Stop Climate Change

Communities across the U.S. and across the world have been devastated by military occupation, war, and state-sanctioned police violence. The U.S. military is also the single largest consumer of fossil fuels in the world and has served as the enforcer of the occupation of Indigenous sovereign lands while upholding violent resource extraction across the world. Addressing climate change requires ending the military-industrial complex. At the same time, increasingly militarized police forces perpetrate harm in Black, Indigenous, Latinx, Asian, Arab, Pacific Islander communities, poor, and marginalized people, and violence against women, and gender non-conforming peoples.

A Just Transition to a Regenerative Economy must end wars, military culture, and the violence of militarized forces and police in our communities and across the world.

Anti-militarism and Abolitionist movements in the U.S. and delegates from our communities will convene in a virtual town hall with our international allies in the Global south while participating in the 2021 UNFCC in Glasgow, Scotland.

We will hear testimonies from communities resisting militarism and occupation in their communities both inside and outside the U.S. and ultimately call on U.S. elected officials to take action to move away from funding unending wars and military presence and prioritize investing in regeneration and repair for communities impacted by militarism in the U.S and all over the planet.

 

Speakers will include:

Participants at the COP26 United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) in Glasgow:

  • Alejandria Lyons – Southwest Organizing Project
  • Ramon Mejia – GGJ Alliance
  • Sheila Babauta – Micronesia Climate Change Alliance
  • Sharif Zakout – Arab Resource & Organizing Center

Testimonies from international allies from the Global South and frontline community leaders in the U.S.:

  • Seydi Sarr – African Bureau of Immigration and Social Affairs (ABISA)
  • Kyle Kajihiro – Oahu Water Protectors
  • Youkyoung Ko – WILPF, Korea Peace Now!
  • Sha Merirei Ongelungel – Indigenous Environmental Network

Our speakers will discuss a just transition to a regenerative economy, alternatives to policing and military intervention, and a pledge for U.S. Members of Congress to sign on.

Can you support this event with a simple tweet? Click here for sample tweets to share on your social media accounts.

SURJ Abolition Action Hour

Join Showing Up for Racial Justice (SURJ)’s monthly Action Hours to take action together to close jails and detention centers, defund police, invest in communities, and protect Indigenous rights to land and water. You’ll receive education and training in community, and then be supported to participate in frontline racial justice campaigns. (If you can’t make it today, join next month on Nov. 4th!)