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Indigenous Leadership in the US Environmental Justice Movements

Provided by: The Climate Reality Project |Published on: December 20, 2022
Videos Grades 9-12, ap-college

Synopsis

  • This video is from a panelist event spotlighting four Indigenous activists who share their perspectives on environmental justice, climate justice, and their work in that space.
  • The video introduces students to different forms of Indigenous knowledge, the critical role Indigenous peoples play in protecting the environment and solving climate change, and the teachings of various tribes in North America.
  • It mentions the Dakota Access Pipeline, the Atlantic Coast Pipeline, the Lumbee Tribe, the Nottoway Tribe, Yaqui, Apache, Standing Rock Sioux, and other tribal nations.

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Subjects: Civics, History, Geography
Authors: Climate Reality Project
Region: North America, USA - Northeast, USA - West, USA - South, USA - Midwest, United States, North Carolina, Illinois, New Mexico, Arizona, Oklahoma, Iowa, North Dakota, South Dakota, West Virginia, Virginia
Languages: English

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About the Partner Provider

The Climate Reality Project
Climate Reality Project seeks to catalyze a global solution to the climate crisis by making urgent action a necessity across every sector of society. They recruit, train, and mobilize people to become powerful activists, providing the skills, campaigns, and resources to push for aggressive climate action and high-level policies that accelerate a just transition to clean energy.

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