15.1 Globalization: The U.S. in the Wider World
    1980s - 2000s

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    2. The Environmental Policy Cycle

    3. The 1980s: Reaction to Regulation

    • Relaxation of environmental quality standards.
    • Self-regulation by industries.
    • Reagan administration’s reaction to environmentalism.
    • Budget cuts: EPA, OSHA, CEQ.
    • James Watt appointed head of Interior.
    • Anne Gorsuch, head of EPA.
    • Rise of wise use and property rights movements.
    4. The Group of Ten
    • Environmental Defense Fund
    • Environmental Policy Institute
    • Friends of the Earth
    • Izaak Walton League
    • National Audubon Society
    • National Parks and Conservation Association
    • National Wildlife Federation
    • National Resources Defense Council
    • Sierra Club
    • Wilderness Society
    5. National Wildlife Federation
    • Jay Hair of NWF.
    • Washington Headquarters of NWF.
    • $40 million dollar building; $63 million 1988 budget.
    6. 1988 Budgets of the Big Ten
    • National Wildlife Federation: $63 million; Donors: Amoco, ARCO, CocaCola, Dow, Duke Power, DuPont, Exxon, GE, GM, IBM, Mobil, Monsanto, Tenneco, Waste Management, Westinghouse, Weyerhauser.
    • Audubon Society: $38 million; Donors: Rockefeller, Waste Management, GE, GTE, Amoco, Chevron, Dupont, Dow Chemical, Exxon, Ford, IBM, Coca Cola.
    • Sierra Club: $19 million; Donors: ARCO, British Petroleum, Chemical Bank, Pepsi, Transamerica. 
    7. Love Canal, 1978

    8. Grassroots Toxics Movement

    • John O'Connor, National Toxics Campaign.
    • Meryl Streep, Mothers and Others; campaign. against Uniroyal to remove Alar from apples. 
    9. Ben Chavis
    • Toxic Wastes and Race in the United States, United Church of Christ Commission for Racial Justice, National Report, 1987.
    10. Fifty Metropolitan Areas with Greatest Number of Blacks in Toxic Waste Areas

    11. Warren County, N. C.

    • 1982. Protest blocks PCB filled trucks from landfill.
    • Origins of the environmental justice movement.
    12. Robert Bullard
    • Dumping in Dixie: Race, Class, and Environmental Quality (1990).
    • Editor of Confronting Environmental Racism: Voices from the Grassroots (1993).
    13. Morrisonville, Louisiana
    • "Cancer Alley" in Morrisonville, where Dow Chemical Co. bought out entire neighborhoods.
    14. Morrisonville, Louisiana
    • Three boys look through Dow Chemical Company’s fence, south of Baton Rouge.
    15. Los Angeles, California
    • Number of uncontrolled toxic waste sites in areas of 50% or greater and 20-49% Hispanic population.
    16. Los Angeles Incinerator
    • Los Angeles City Energy Recovery Project, LANCER, proposed 1983; architect’s drawing.
    • Network of three 1,600-ton-per day garbage incinerators.
    17. Mothers of East Los Angeles
    • Maria Roybal and Aurora Castillo of MELA.
    18. West Harlem Environmental Action
    • March 31, 1990 protest: "Stop Pollution Today; Build Promised Park Tomorrow."
    • Emissions from North River Sewage Treatment Plant in Harlem cause health problems.
    • "1000 Points of Blight" campaign. NYPIRG
    19. New York City
    • El Puente Ojo Cafe (Brown Eyed Bridge), formerly known as "Toxic Avengers," joined with other groups in the January 14, 1993 action to protest the proposed Brooklyn Navy Yard incinerator.
    20. Esperanza Maya
    • People for Clean Air and Water.
    • Kettleman City, California.
    • Protest against Chemical Waste Management’s proposal for a toxic waste incinerator.
    21. Carl Anthony
    • Former President of Earth Island Institute, San Francisco.
    • Director/founder of the Urban Habitat Program.
    • Editor of newsletter: Race, Poverty, and Environment.
    • National award: "He combines the tradition of Martin Luther King, Jr. with that of John Muir."
    22. Winona LaDuke
    • Anishinabe, Algonquin culture.
    • Indigenous versus industrial values.
    • Reciprocity versus accumulation.
    • Industrial law versus natural law.
    23. Fannie Yazzie
    • Widow of Navajo uranium miner and several of her children.
    • Dangers of uranium mining and radioactive wastes on Indian lands.
    • Women of All Red Nations: WARN.
    24. Native Americans
    • Carlyle Randall, a Native American Vietnam War veteran speaks at a rally near the main gate of the Nevada Test Site on November 10, 1991.
    • Hand sign means "I bear no weapons."
    25. White Earth Recovery Project
    • "Since our lands were stolen, we’ve been to the State; we’ve been to Congress; we’ve been to the Senate; We’ve been to the Supreme Court; now we’re coming to you."
    26. The Deep Ecologists
    • Bill Devall, Humboldt State University, Arcata, Ca.
    • George Sessions, Sierra College, Rochlin, Ca.
    • Deep Ecology: Living as if Nature Mattered, 1985.
    27. The Social Ecologists
    • Socialist Scholar's Conference, 1987, New York City.
    • Murray Bookchin, "Post-Scarcity Anarchism," 1971; The Ecology of Freedom, 1982; Remaking Society, 1989.
    • Barry Commoner, The Closing Circle, 1971; The Poverty of Power, 1976; Making Peace with the Planet, 1990.
    28. The Ecofeminists
    • Irene Diamond and Gloria Orenstein at Ecofeminist Encampment, Mt. Grove, Oregon, July 1995.
    • Authors/editors of Reweaving the World: The Emergence of Ecofeminism (1990).
    29. The 1990s: Era of Global Concerns
    • Global ecological crisis.
    • Population explosion.
    • Global warming.
    • Ozone depletion.
    • Sustainable development.
    • Biodiversity; endangered species.
    • Environmental justice: rich and poor; North and South; majorities and minorities.
    30. Questions for Discussion
    • Is the movement for environmental justice a force for fundamental social change?
    • What is the best way to bring about environmental change?
    • What should be humanity's relation to nature?