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News & Events A Global Movement for Environmental Justice
A Global Movement for Environmental Justice
A Global Movement for Environmental Justice
A Global Movement for Environmental Justice
A Global Movement for Environmental Justice

In a recent episode of the podcast Uncharted Ground, host Jonathan Levine spoke with Namati about building a global environmental justice movement. You can find it on any major podcast platform or listen to the episode (and access the full transcript)  on Stanford Social Innovation Review's website. A  recap of the episode, written by SSIR, is below.


From coal plants to large-scale agriculture, industrial activities contributing to the environmental crisis tend to concentrate in minority communities with little power, wealth, or legal knowledge to defend themselves. The consequences to health and livelihoods are frequently devastating.  To help them protect themselves, the nonprofit Namati trains paralegals to educate and organize ordinary citizens to fight for justice within the legal system and change the laws that threaten their well-being.


This episode tells the story of Namati and founder Vivek Maru’s lifelong campaign to give the vulnerable a voice in the legal systems that impact their lives. Now, as climate change exacerbates nearly every form of social injustice, Namati is doubling down on the threats to land and environmental rights by forming a coordinated movement of environmental justice organizations around the world. This episode:


  • begins with a landmark land-grab case in Sierra Leone that illustrates the power of a community exercising its rights (0:06);
  • explains how years of deep experience in individual cases can lead to systemic changes in laws that benefit entire societies (07:21);
  • traces Maru’s personal history from the influence of his grandfather, a disciple of Mahatma Gandhi, through his college studies of the social movements of Gandhi, Martin Luther King Jr., and Malcolm X (09:00);
  • describes the origins of the Namati strategy in 1950s South Africa (11:52) and Maru’s first experience in combining law and community organizing in Sierra Leone (12:47);  
  • chronicles the work of Namati on abuses of land, citizenship, and other rights from Myanmar to Kenya, and the formation of an international network of justice empowerment organizations (16:47);
  • highlights Namati’s plans to turbo-charge its response to land and environmental abuses (22:05); and
  • how Namati is now transferring its experience in developing countries back home to address environmental injustices in the United States (26:18).

Text source:  https://ssir.org/podcasts/entry/a_global_movement_for_environmental_just...