
Shades of Green Podcast
1) Justice in Public: Reconciliation, Reparations and the Decolonized Future
What will Mi'kma'ki look and feel like when environmental justice is achieved? Over the last couple of years, we've asked this question to dozens of people working on the front lines of these movemen...Show More
Justice in Public: Reconciliation, Reparations and the Decolonized Future
1:10:49 | Mar 15th, 2018
2) Listen Up: Building Relationships Across Difference in the Environmental Movement
When it comes to environmental justice, are environmental organizations listening? Are we willing to change in the ways that we are being asked? Environmental justice movements define our environment...Show More
Listen Up: Building Relationships Across Difference in the Environmental Movement
1:08:24 | Mar 1st, 2018
3) Peace, Friendship and Environmental Justice: The Alton Gas Resistance
"We are all Treaty people". It's a phrase we're hearing more often these days. But what does it really mean, here in Mi'kma'ki? And what does it have to do with environmental justice? Most settlers d...Show More
4) Toxic Legacy: Setting a Context for Environmental Racism in Nova Scotia
Why are there so many garbage dumps close to African Nova Scotian communities? Why do Mi’kmaq communities experience food insecurity on their unceded territory? Who defines what counts as environmenta...Show More
5) What is the Environment and Where is the Justice?
What is environmentalism? What do we mean when we talk about “the environment” here on unceded Mi'kmaq territory? Who defines what's included in that meaning, and what's left out? At Shades of Green,...Show More
6) Podcast Series Trailer
Shades of Green is a podcast series exploring environmental justice from unceded Mi'kmaq Territory. It is supported by Ecology Action Centre and the Community Conservation Research Network. Our th...Show More
7) Alan Knockwood and Wallace Nevin
A few weeks ago I was lucky enough to be invited to visit to elder Alan Knockwood’s house in Sipeknekatik . Alan Knockwood is an elder and pipe carrier. He is also active as a Human Rights consultan...Show More
8) Dylan Letendre and Tayla Paul
Tayla Paul and Dylan Letendre are two participants in a project exploring urban Aboriginal identity called “This is What I Wish you Knew.” Fifty community members carved and painted their personal sto...Show More
9) Sudha Nandagopal
Sudha Nandagopal oversees Seattle’s new environmental justice initiative — one of the only examples of its kind in the country. As program director, she convenes a working group that represents the in...Show More
10) Randolph Haluza-Delay
Describing himself as a father, birdwatcher, and cycle commuter, Randolph Haluza-Delay spent 15 years as a wilderness guide. As a sociology professor at The King’s University in Edmonton, Alberta (Can...Show More