Dr. Eban Goodstein, professor of economics at Lewis & Clark College in Portland, Ore., wants college students around the country to join the fight against global warming, and he’s focused on getting Hispanics and other minorities involved.
In addition to his teaching responsibilities, he’s the director of Focusthenation, a landmark organizing project that is coordinating teams of faculty and students at more than 1,000 educational institutions to engage in a collaborative discussion about solutions to global warming.
Focusthenation launched the Green World Project to educate Hispanic and Asian immigrants about how America’s consumer culture impacts global warming in their native countries. Other goals include connecting these communities to participating universities and teaching the principle of “one-person-one-vote.”
“It’s disproportionately vulnerable people in poor communities who are bearing the brunt of extreme weather events,” Goodstein says. Hurricane Katrina, he notes, highlighted the adverse impacts of global warming on people of color. “It brought the issue into everybody’s living room. It framed the issue in terms of social justice.”
Historically Black colleges such as Morehouse have organized focusthenation teams as well. Goodstein draws a parallel between the strategies of today’s environmental activists and those of civil rights activists 40 years ago.