This week’s Climate Justice newsletter is all about community.
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** Climate Justice
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This week’s Climate Justice newsletter is all about community. First, federal dollars are available for climate initiatives. How can this money get to the frontline organizations that need it the most? Next, a grassroots solution to food insecurity in communities also gives a surprising boost to the climate: how community fridges can cut down on emissions. Then, our series of climate fiction stories, also featured in the Fall 2023 issue of Nonprofit Quarterly Magazine, continues with the tale of a community in a water crisis. Finally, the story of a place dealing with the opposite: unrelenting rain.
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Local Solutions to Federal Problems: Moving Climate Dollars to Communities ([link removed])
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“There’s a growing fatigue among environmental and climate justice organizations weighing the cost-benefit of public funding opportunities which often exclude the very communities these funds are supposed to benefit.” Read more… ([link removed])
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To Reduce Carbon Emissions, Set Out a Fridge ([link removed])
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“When supply chains were crumbling, food prices were rising, and families across the country were struggling to find meals…the fridges were viewed as a creative response to an urgent need.” Read more… ([link removed])
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’Til the Rivers Come Home ([link removed])
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“We had never before witnessed a dry season so vicious—one that made all the wells like bone and the sand fiercely hot. That year, our river didn’t come home.” Read more… ([link removed])
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For Moses ([link removed])
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“Someday, things would start again, we thought, but we would not see it.” Read more… ([link removed])
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