The best solution to your problem


jeudi 2 avril 2015

Black and Brown Want Green Jobs Too

Source: http://ift.tt/hFWySe - Thursday, April 02, 2015

This week, hundreds of environmental experts will be descending on Washington, D.C. for the 15th National Conference and Global Forum on Science, Policy and the Environment. One topic that has received a recent flurry of attention and should continue at the convening: the lack of racial and ethnic diversity in most mainstream green groups and government agencies. While this is no revelation -- for decades it's been a hushed issue that's fractured the movement and kept minorities out of the green insider's club -- we now have empirical evidence of the industry's lingering racial divide. Dorceta Taylor, professor of the School of Natural Resources and Environment at the University of Michigan, has laid out the dire situation in her report , "The State of Diversity in Environmental Organizations: Mainstream NGOs, Foundations, Government Agencies." The report's message is clear and numbers don't lie: the green movement does not value minorities. Despite being nearly 40 percent of the American population -- and disproportionately affected by contamination -- people of color have yet to break the decades long 12 to 16 percent "green ceiling" at large-budget environmental institutions. And this is despite proven interest by minorities in environmental issues according to recent polling. Of the paid staffers employed by mainstream organizations that completed the survey, 88 percent are White. And their governing boards were no different





from Top News on RSS Feeds http://ift.tt/1GkSW6D

Aucun commentaire:

Enregistrer un commentaire