The conversation about climate change has come a long way from the days of polar bears and melting ice caps, but as our guest this week shares, there's still a long way to go in creating truly inclusive climate policy. In order to do that, those who are most impacted by environmental racism need to be involved in the policymaking process.
Rhiana Gunn-Wright is the director of climate policy at the Roosevelt Institute and one of the intellectual architects of the Green New Deal. She grew up on Chicago's South Side and talks about how environmental justice shaped her life from an early age — event if she didn't know that's what it was. We also discuss how climate reform is connected to other parts of America's political system and efforts to reform democracy.
Is common ground hiding in plain sight?
When four threats to democracy collide
Wynton Marsalis on democracy as jazz and The Ever Fonky Lowdown
News deserts are democracy deserts, too
The Supreme Court's politics and power
The perfect storm for election disaster
The 2020 election from WPSU's Take Note
Hong Kong's fight is everyone's fight
Sheriffs 101
Students learn, students vote
A dark side to "laboratories of democracy"
A fall preview — with a new cohost!
YIMBYs and NIMBYs in a democracy
After 100 years, there's still no "woman voter"
She Votes! — Susan B. Anthony and "voting while female"
Reason in politics and hope for democracy
The people who choose the President
Broken Ground: Robert Bullard on environmental justice
The world's most punitive democracy [revisited]
Suspect citizens in a democracy [revisited]
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