Climate Change
Youth in Action: Greening Hip Hop
The Greening of Hip-Hop: Urban Youth Address Climate Change and Sustainability
By Eric Arnold
Carmen Rojas—Voices of Climate Justice

As someone new to the field of philanthropy, I am consistently disappointed by the often cited issue of capacity used to explain why certain grantees are funded while others remain under resourced. Capacity has come to replace the concept of risky and is overwhelmingly used to describe community-based organizations working in low-income communities and communities of color and led by committed leaders of color. If there is a capacity issue with an organization in one of our communities, the Mitchell Kapor Foundation understands that it is our responsibility to step up and provide the necessary resources to these organizations and work in partnership with them to make the change we hope to see in the world.
Table of Contents— Climate Change: Catalyst or Catastrophe?
Resources on Climate Change
310 8th Street, Suite 309
Oakland, CA 94607
(510) 834-8920
www.apen4ej.org
Brightline Defense Project
P.O. Box 420250
San Francisco, CA 94142
(415) 837-0600
www.brightlinedefense.org
Center for Food and Justice
Urban & Environmental Policy Institute
Occidental College
1600 Campus Road MS M-1
Los Angeles, CA 90041
(323) 341-5099
New Orleans Black Diaspora: Will the Residents Come Back?
"The white elite is fighting to bring New Orleans back, richer than it was and whiter than it was, with no concern for anybody else."
Debunking False Solutions
Earlier this year, U.S. Energy Secretary Samuel W. Bodman visited agribusiness giant Archer Daniels Midland’s Decatur, Illinois, headquarters to tout its part in President Bush’s Biofuels Initiative. The secretary posed for photos with then Archer Daniels Midland (ADM) Chair G. Allen Andreas and announced that the Department of Energy would offer up to $160 million for the construction of three bio-refineries to expand U.S. ethanol production.
"Partnerships with industries like these will lead to new innovation and discovery that will usher in an era of reduced dependence on foreign sources of oil, while strengthening our economy at home,” Secretary Bodman said from ADM’s trade floor. Given the absence of conditions imposed by the Department of Energy, the three bio-refineries could well be partially coal-powered. ADM already operates coal-fired plants at its company base in Decatur, Illinois, and Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and is currently adding another coal-powered facility at its Clinton, Iowa ethanol plant and planning another coal fired plant in the town of Columbus, Nebraska.
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