Environment

  • Read more: Canaries in the Coal Mine: HUD’s Failure to End Childhood Lead Exposure in Federally Assisted Housing

    Canaries in the Coal Mine: HUD’s Failure to End Childhood Lead Exposure in Federally Assisted Housing

    by Anna Aguilar and Sidney Lee In 1971, Congress tasked the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) with establishing procedures to “eliminate as far as practicable” the dangers of lead poisoning. Yet, HUD has repeatedly fallen short of accomplishing this. More than 50 years later, for children in federally assisted housing in the…

  • Read more: Reproductive Health at Risk: Climate Change and Agrotoxins in Latin America

    Reproductive Health at Risk: Climate Change and Agrotoxins in Latin America

    by Cristina Rosero-Arteaga The climate emergency in Latin America is intensifying a long-standing yet underrecognized health crisis: reproductive harm due to agrochemical exposure, particularly for rural women. As shifting climate patterns threaten to exacerbate these harms, it is crucial to bring these issues into the focus of climate action. The region’s human rights framework —…

  • Read more: Life rights for reproduction: Voices from the climate-affected rural subalterns

    Life rights for reproduction: Voices from the climate-affected rural subalterns

    Women queue to fill their buckets, Bolangir, Odisha, India 18.1.2022.                                                          ©Nairita Roy Chaudhuri by Nairita Roy Chaudhuri Most small farmers in rural India directly depend on rainwater…

  • Read more: Climate Change and Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights in Africa: The Urgent Need for Intersectional Approaches in Climate Change Policy and Governance

    Climate Change and Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights in Africa: The Urgent Need for Intersectional Approaches in Climate Change Policy and Governance

    Photo credit: @wambuigichobi | SMA A Masai woman raises her fist as other women leaders look on at COP 27 in Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt during one of the debriefs by the Women and Gender Constituency.  by Faith Lumonya, Esther Wambui, and Eunice Musiime As global temperatures rise and the frequency of extreme weather events…

  • Read more: Lula’s environmental foreign policy, the global far-right, and the climate agenda

    Lula’s environmental foreign policy, the global far-right, and the climate agenda

    by Danielle Hanna Rached and Denise Vitale Donald Trump’s second term in office promises to bring turmoil to the global climate agenda. Against the scientific consensus that fossil fuel is leading the world to a climate breakdown, Trump has managed to impose his opportunistic views on the rest of the world. For the amount of $1…

  • Read more: The impacts of climate change on the right to health in the United Kingdom 

    The impacts of climate change on the right to health in the United Kingdom 

    by Rossella De Falco Climate change is one of the most pressing threats to health in the U.K. While climate change impacts everyone, marginalized groups and those with pre-existing health conditions are suffering the most, leading to greater health inequalities. This article explains how climate change impacts the health of the most marginalized populations in…

  • Read more: BPA-free Does Not Mean Bisphenol-free and How Regulators are Grappling to Deal with It

    BPA-free Does Not Mean Bisphenol-free and How Regulators are Grappling to Deal with It

    By Jessica Samuels You’ve likely seen BPA-free plastic water bottles and Tupperware in stores and opted to grab those over similar, non-labeled products. You probably didn’t know, however, that those products likely just contain other bisphenols, like BPS or BPAF, instead. Regulating bisphenols, a class of endocrine disrupting chemicals, has been challenging due to “regrettable…

  • Read more: Reinventing South African Trade Unions to Protect the Health of Informal Workers in the Face of Climate Change

    Reinventing South African Trade Unions to Protect the Health of Informal Workers in the Face of Climate Change

    by Cecile de Villiers South Africa is considered the most unequal country in the world, with stagnant economic growth and staggeringly high unemployment. More than five million or 31.2% of workers in South Africa find economic opportunities in the “informal economy,” often because there are fewer barriers (training, skills, regulation) to entering the sector.  Informal…