Environmental Justice and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
From the Summer 2024 Fish & Wildlife News
Environmental justice means simply that all people have a right to just treatment and meaningful engagement in activities that affect human health and the environment where they live, work, play, learn, and pray. It means that economic status or race should not be a factor when deciding where to build a pollinator garden and where to put a factory.
As we more clearly merge environmental justice with our standard conservation work, some may wonder whether we have the capacity for both. The truth is we are already doing great work to further both conservation and environmental justice. Take a read:
- Service Mission Leads to Environmental Justice
- From the EYES of Others
- Faith Communities Make Space for Pollinators in Wilmington, Delaware
- A Pathway Beyond the Sawgrass
- Bringing Some Green to Southwest Philly
- A River Runs Through Me
- The Intersection Between Justice and Conservation
- Environmental Justice Air Monitoring Network
- A Space of Our Own
- U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and Sisseton-Wahpeton Oyate Celebrate Co-Stewardship
- Finding Purpose Along the Detroit River
- Funding Justice in the Delaware Watershed
- Restoring the ‘Lifeblood’ of Prince of Wales Island, Alaska
- Read the full magazine or subscribe.