Community organizations allege that St. James Parish has discriminated against Black residents by allowing chemical facilities in majority Black areas, dubbed “Cancer Alley”
Known for water apartheid in Palestine, Mekorot is growing its global footprint across the U.S. and Latin America—including in Argentina, where the company aims to privatize water
Rubble, open sewage, damaged wells, and lack of electricity pose dangers, as Israel blocks equipment needed to rebuild from genocide
Israel sent the Gaza Strip into a full blackout in 2023, but Gaza’s power was unreliable for years since Israel bombed its only power plant in 2006
A movement in Canada for the Yukon River to be granted legal personhood is reaching across the U.S. border
The “liquid heart” of Florida is the Everglades, says filmmaker Sasha Wortzel, and colonial violence is killing it
The coalition of Native Hawaiians and local residents organizing against the government’s operations has only grown since 2021, when a military-owned bunker spilled jet fuel into an aquifer, poisoning thousands of families
The legal challenge is yet another effort by the tribe to prevent the Canadian-owned corporation Enbridge from operating near the Bad River Reservation
Before government intervention, Native stewardship maintained salmon stocks since time immemorial, providing physical and spiritual nourishment
The real estate boom along the Chesapeake Bay’s shoreline is just the latest form of extraction to hit the region
As an oppressive heat settled over Gaza, Israel told people to stay away from the Mediterranean Sea, a source of food and small joys during the genocide
Tucked behind skyscrapers, a lush quarter-acre site with Indigenous, ecological, and archaeological significance is at risk of destruction. Locals, spiritual leaders, and preservationists rally to protect the spring-fed sanctuary
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