In this climate justice newsletter, we explore some of the key movements towards ecological justice.
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** Climate Justice
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In this climate justice newsletter, we explore some of the key movements towards ecological justice. First, forging a path towards water affordability. Next, we look at how the Slow Food movement is expanding. Finally, we feature our two remaining feature pieces from the latest Fall 2022 Climate Justice Magazine where we have a reflection on the Madrid climate movement conference and a look at Hawaii’s traditional natural resource management strategies.
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How do water shutoffs impact low-income communities? ([link removed])
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Water affordability was a crisis long before the pandemic. How can utilities and communities work together to prevent shutoffs and make the water sector more just? Read more… ([link removed])
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How will markets handle a return to some kind of normalcy in rates? ([link removed])
In the paper "The Not-So-Great Rate Reset", we examine the past four Fed tightening cycles to help theorize what lies ahead in the wake of the pandemic and the historical rise in inflation.
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Slow Food Wants to Bring Justice, Education, and Joy to the Food Experience ([link removed])
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Since its beginnings in the 1980’s on Italy’s Spanish Steps, the Slow Food movement has become an international celebration of locally grown, nourishing food. Read more… ([link removed])
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Design a Human-Centered Workplace ([link removed])
Every job open position represents a choice. Employers can start attracting the best talent by creating quality jobs for their workers.
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A Planet to Win—Where Do We Start? ([link removed])
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"But the task of movements for social justice is not to let the bare minimum be the standard; there is also the hard work of making sure that progressive governments do not give up on the more radical and difficult demands that bring them to power.” Read more… ([link removed])
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Fisheries and Stewardship: Lessons from Native Hawaiian Aquaculture ([link removed])
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Native Hawaiians built and utilized networks of loko iʻa (fishponds), an aquaculture system reflecting highly sophisticated hydrology. Now that system, long in decay, is being rebuilt. Read more… ([link removed])
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