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Contested Land and Water along Lake Michigan: Thoughts from a Member of the Pokagon Band of Potawatomi

Over a hundred years ago, members of the Pokagon Band of Potawatomi filed claims of ownership to land built into Lake Michigan in what is now known as Streeterville. Today, this land is home to Navy Pier, part of the Magnificent Mile, and the downtown Northwestern campus. John Low, enrolled citizen of the Pokagon Band of Potawatomi Indians and professor at Ohio State University at Newark, discusses this land built into the waters of Lake Michigan.

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Evanston adopts Environmental Justice Resolution

On Monday, September 14, the Evanston City Council voted 8-0 in favor of adopting an environmental justice resolution. The resolution acknowledges the disproportionate effects of environmental issues on communities of color in the Evanston area, and outlines actions to correct these injustices. Read more about the process this resolution went through to get adopted here.

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How Citizens’ Greener Evanston Keeps the Movement Alive During A Global Pandemic

When the COVID-19 pandemic ravished its way through the Evanston community this year, everything was brought to a halt. Community activists like Citizens’ Greener Evanston president Rachel Rosner were faced with the task of balancing the fear of an unknown virus while adapting to a new online form of activism.

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I Would Walk 500 Miles, and I Would Walk 1500 More: What It Means to Hike the Entire Appalachian Trail

To thru-hike the 2,000-mile trail spanning the entirety of the Appalachian Mountains is a feat that the most expert hikers take years to prepare for. But for Jacob Myers, a nature enthusiast from North Carolina, his thru-hike was cut short after 17 days when trails were closed due to the coronavirus outbreak in mid-March. Ali Wilt has the story.

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Evanston Group Educates Community in Lost Art of Repairs

A local group is doing battle against our culture of waste. Spanish immigrant Beatriz Echeverria founded the Evanston Repair Clinic in 2018 to combat what she sees as Americans' tendency to throw away and replace broken items rather than attempting to repair them. The clinic started out as a place where people could go to get their belongings fixed for free, but its mission eventually became to teach them how to do repairs themselves. It's part of a worldwide movement promoting repair as the key to a more sustainable life.

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Inflexible Supply Chain Causes Food Destruction as Global Hunger Crisis Looms

“As the coronavirus pandemic has caused disruption to the supply chain, farms and stores across the country have been forced to dump and destroy extra food and euthanize animals at the same time a global hunger crisis looms.” Hannah Paridis has the story on Real Food, Real Talk.

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Environmental Groups Respond to Death of George Floyd and Resulting Protests

Read how different environmental groups are showing a shift from the environmental movement of decades past, conservation focused and with a racist history, towards environmental justice and making the environmental movement more inclusive. This shift is reflected in the support environmental groups are showing for the Black Lives matter movement, a few of which have statements quoted in this piece.

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