10 Hairy Legs, 108 Monkeys, 4Th Street Arts, 741 Collaborative

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

10 Hairy Legs, 108 Monkeys, 4Th Street Arts, 741 Collaborative 10 Hairy Legs, 108 Monkeys, 4th Street Arts, 741 Collaborative Partnership, Inc., A Better Chance for Our Children, Inc., A Community For Peace, A More Balanced World, A Place Called Home, Aaron & Margaret Wallace Foundation, Ability Foundation, Academic Foundation for International Cultural Exchange, Achieving Dreams, Acknowledge Alliance, Active 20-30 Club of Chico #100, Actors and Others for Animals, Adoptive and Foster Family Coalition of New York, Advocacy, Inc., Advocates of Lake County, African People’s Education and Defense Fund, Inc., Aging In Place-The Woodlands, Agraj Seva Kendra, AHH (A Helping Hand), AIDS Project of the East Bay, Alcohol Drug Council-High Gain Project, Ali Akbar College of Music, All Five Preschool, All People United, Inc., All the Difference, Inc., Alliance for Strong Families and Communities, Alliance for Youth Organizing, Alliance of Women Coaches, Inc., Allies with Families, Almost There, Inc., Alpha Clay Pearls, Inc., Alta Arts Council, Alzheimer’s Aid Society NC, Amador Community Foundation, America On Track, American Blues Theater, American Family Living Counseling & Fletcher Courtyards Event Center, American Indian Alliance, American Sports Institute, Americas Media Initiative, Amman Imman: Water is Life, Andy’s Friends, Inc., ANGELS, Animal Friends for Life, Animal Health Foundation, Animal Network, Inc., Animal Rescue League, Animal Welfare Assistance Group, Animal-Assisted Healing Center, Anne Arundel County CASA, Inc., Antelope Valley Rural Museum of History, Anthony Wayne Area Arts Commission, Arcata Interfaith Gospel Choir , ARIEL Theatrical, Aromas Hills Artisans, Art Escape, Art House Productions, Art in Action, Art Without Limits, Arts Council Santa Cruz County, Arts Escape, Inc., Arts Habitat, Asian-American Homeownership Counseling, Inc., ASPIRE Creative Arts Program, Assateague Island Alliance, Assistance League of San Luis Obispo County, Association for Adults with Developmental Disabilities, Association for Pelvic Organ Prolapse Support, Association of Two-Way & Dual Language (ATDLE), Association on Aging with Developmental Disabilities, Asylum Access, Athens Area Homeless Shelter, Avenue Act 1, Azule, Bailey Outdoor Education and Recreation Area, Balmoral School of Piping and Drumming, Base Camps Wilderness Institute, Bay Area Business Roundtable, Bay Area Community Land Trust, Bay Area Furniture Bank, Bay Area Women Against Rape, BayAreaDanceWatch, BAYS Florida, BBoy Federation, BDT Academy, Beautiful Foundation Fund, Inc., Before Columbus Foundation, Bennett’s Beavers, Berkeley Public Schools Fund, Bessie’s Hope, Beverly’s Birthdays, Bicycle Helmet Safety Institute, Bienvenidos Food Bank, Big Brothers Big Sisters of Ventura County, Big Island Sailing Foundation, Bike JC, Bikes for the World, Bilateral Safety Corridor Coalition, Bird Center of Washtenaw County, Inc., Black Storytellers of San Diego Inc., Blessings of Summit & Portage Counties, BLOCKS, Inc., Bloomfield Players Community Theatre, Bloomingdale Aging in Place, Blue Devils Parents Association, Blue Light Players, Blue Star Ranch, Bluegrass Heritage Foundation, Boys & Girls Club of Bethalto, Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Redlands-Riverside, Bradbury-Sullivan LGBT Community Center, Brain Injury Association of Georgia, Inc., Brain Rehabilitation And Injury Network (B.R.A.I.N.), Brandywine Counseling and Community Services, Brevard County 4H Youth Foundation, Building Bridges Foundation at Anderson Farm, Burbank Tournament of Roses Association, C.A.S.A. of San Bernardino County, C.B. King Memorial School, C.L.A.W. Corp., C4 Atlanta, Inc., Cabrillo National Monument Conservancy, California Alliance of Children and Family Services, California Calls, California Family Foundation dba Beechwood School, California Fly Fishers Unlimited, California Green Business Network, California Language Teachers’ Association, Inc., California Product Stewardship Council, California Revels, Call of the Sea, Calpulli Mexican Dance Company, Cambria Community Council , Cambria Scarecrow Festival, Inc., Camden County Technical Schools First Robotics Boosters, Cameron Highlanders Pipe Band of San Diego County, Campaign for Southern Equality, Canal Society of New York State, Cancer Commons, Canine Collective Dog Rescue, Cape-Atlantic Citizens Altering The Strays, Caps Of Love, Inc., Captive Hearts Ministries, Carmel River Watershed Conservancy, Carpinteria Valley Arts Council, Carson & Colorado Railway, Inc., CASA of Merced County, CASA of San Luis Obispo County, CASA of Siskiyou County, Casino Star Theatre Foundation, Cast Your Cares, Inc., Cathedral of Faith, Cats Cradle Rescue, Celiac Support Group, Centennial Area Health Education Center, Center for Domestic Peace, Center for Land-Based Learning, Center for Learning in Retirement (CLIRR), Center for Sierra Nevada Conservation, Center for the Arts Evergreen, Central Valley Anglers, Centro Hispano José Hernández (Spanish Council of York, Inc.), Ceres Community Project, Chamber Players International, Changed Lives Inc. dba Krista Foster Homes, Chapel HIll-Carrboro Meals on Wheels, Character Community Services, Inc., Charitable Connections, Inc., CHARITYSMITH, Charles H. Kim Education Fund, Cherished Cockers Rescue, Chicago Voyagers, Chicago Youth Symphony Orchestras, Child Action, Inc., Child Advocates of Placer County, Child, Inc., Children’s Home Society of America, Children’s Hospital Branches, Inc., Children’s Resources, Inc., Chippewa Valley Theatre Guild, Christian Men and Women In Action, Christopher Xavier Dickerson Foundation, Cinnabar Theater, Circle of Change, Circle, Inc., Citadel Ministries, Inc., Citizens Coalition for a Safe Community, Citizens for a Better Eastern Shore, Citizens Television, Inc., City Garage Theatre at Bergamot Station Arts Center, Civic and Cultural Restoration, Clark County Museum Guild, Cloud Forest Institute, Cold Hollow to Canada, Colorado Music Festival & Center for Musical Arts, Colorado Nonprofit Association, Colorado Springs Food Rescue, Column1, Communities In Schools of Spokane County, Community & Employment Links, Community Actors Theatre, Community Bonds, Inc., Community Catalysts of California, Community Concern for Arts, Music, and Sports, Community Education Partnership of West Valley City, Community Housing & Empowerment Connections Inc., Community Music School of Santa Cruz , Community of Churches for Social Action, Community Options for Families and Youth, Inc., Community Partnership for Chil- dren, Community Projects of Havre de Grace, Inc., Community Rowing of San Diego, Inc., Companion Animal Foundation, Compassionate House Aftercare, Inc., Connected Blessings, Connecticut Council for Interreligious Understanding, ConPaz Organization, Consumer Advocates for RCFE Reform (CARR), Contra Costa Kops for Kids, Cottonwood Community Center & Park, Inc., Council for Drug Free Youth, Coyote School DBA Elsewhere Studios, CRA Community Develop- ment Group, Cresswind LL Community Fund, Inc., Crested Butte Center for the Arts, CultureConnect, Inc., Current River Sheltered Workshop, Dallas Genealogical Society, Danville Light Opera Company, Inc., Daraja Education Fund, David J. Drakulich Art Foundation for Freedom of Expression, Davis Arts Council, Davis Oral Health Project, Delaware Center for Horticulture, Delaware Dance Company, Delaware Dreams, Inc., Delaware Seaside Railroad Club, Inc., Denison Animal Welfare Group, Inc., Descanso Gardens , Designers for Learning, Diego Beekman Mutual Housing Association, HDFC, Doberman Pinscher Rescue, Inc., Dogs Run Free of Nevada County, Dogwood Literacy Council, Dolphin Force Foundation, Donovan Creason Memorial Fund, Double Entendre Music Ensemble, Doula Program to Accompany and Comfort, Downtown Aurora Visual Arts (DAVA), Downtown Camas Association, Drumm Center for Children, Inc., Dui Hua, Earth Abides Land Trust Foundation, EASEL Animal Rescue League, East Bay Media Center, East Oakland Leadership Academy, EcologyAction of Santa Cruz, Ed Brown Senior Center at Rancho Bernardo dba Ed Brown Center for Active Adults, EDS Wellness, Inc., Educare Foundation, Inc., Education Foundation of Morris Plains, Educators Society for Heritage of India, eGo CarShare, EIIA, Eileen Hawthorne Fund for Animals, El Centro de Amistad, El Paso de Robles Area Pio- neer Museum, Elevate Your G.A.M.E., Embrace Families, Emerging Enterprise Center, Inc., Emerging Leaders in the Arts Buffalo, Empower Youth, English In Action, Enso House, Entrepreneur Education Center, Environment in the Public Interest, Esperanto League for North America, Inc., Estes Valley Crisis Advocates, Eth-Noh-Tec, Facing Addiction, Fair Trade LA, Faith in Action Solano, Families of Autistic Children in Tidewater, Families to Freedom, Families Uniting Families, Family Service of Middletown, Family Support Services of North Florida, Inc., Family Water Alliance, Inc., FamilyGreenSurvival, Inc., Fandom Charities Inc., Farm to Pantry, Field Manor Foundation, First NV, First Unitarian Church, FISH of Park Ridge, Fishes and Loaves Cooperative Ministries, Fitness Without Borders, Florida Association of Nonprofits, Florida Keys Healthy Start Coalition, FLUX Foundation, Focus, Inc., FoodWhat, Fort Mason Community Garden, Fort Ord Hos- tel Society Inc., Fort Ord Recreation Trails (F.O.R.T.) Friends, Foster Kids Fund, Foster Parents Association of Washington State, Foundation for Monterey County Free Libraries, Fountain Project Foundation, Four Corners School of Outdoor Education, Four Paws To Freedom, Frank Brown International Foundation for Music, Friends for
Recommended publications
  • Vegetarianism and World Peace and Justice
    Visit the Triangle-Wide calendar of peace events, www.trianglevegsociety.org/peacecalendar VVeeggeettaarriiaanniissmm,, WWoorrlldd PPeeaaccee,, aanndd JJuussttiiccee By moving toward vegetarianism, can we help avoid some of the reasons for fighting? We find ourselves in a world of conflict and war. Why do people fight? Some conflict is driven by a desire to impose a value system, some by intolerance, and some by pure greed and quest for power. The struggle to obtain resources to support life is another important source of conflict; all creatures have a drive to live and sustain themselves. In 1980, Richard J. Barnet, director of the Institute for Policy Studies, warned that by the end of the 20th century, anger and despair of hungry people could lead to terrorist acts and economic class war [Staten Island Advance, Susan Fogy, July 14, 1980, p.1]. Developed nations are the largest polluters in the world; according to Mother Jones (March/April 1997, http://www. motherjones.com/mother_jones/MA97/hawken2.html), for example, Americans, “have the largest material requirements in the world ... each directly or indirectly [using] an average of 125 pounds of material every day ... Americans waste more than 1 million pounds per person per year ... less than 5 percent of the total waste ... gets recycled”. In the US, we make up 6% of the world's population, but consume 30% of its resources [http://www.enough.org.uk/enough02.htm]. Relatively affluent countries are 15% of the world’s population, but consume 73% of the world’s output, while 78% of the world, in developing nations, consume 16% of the output [The New Field Guide to the U.
    [Show full text]
  • Mining's Toxic Legacy
    Mining’s Toxic Legacy An Initiative to Address Mining Toxins in the Sierra Nevada Acknowledgements _____________________________ ______________________________________________________________________________________________________________ The Sierra Fund would like to thank Dr. Carrie Monohan, contributing author of this report, and Kyle Leach, lead technical advisor. Thanks as well to Dr. William M. Murphy, Dr. Dave Brown, and Professor Becky Damazo, RN, of California State University, Chico for their research into the human and environmental impacts of mining toxins, and to the graduate students who assisted them: Lowren C. McAmis and Melinda Montano, Gina Grayson, James Guichard, and Yvette Irons. Thanks to Malaika Bishop and Roberto Garcia for their hard work to engage community partners in this effort, and Terry Lowe and Anna Reynolds Trabucco for their editorial expertise. For production of this report we recognize Elizabeth “Izzy” Martin of The Sierra Fund for conceiving of and coordinating the overall Initiative and writing substantial portions of the document, Kerry Morse for editing, and Emily Rivenes for design and formatting. Many others were vital to the development of the report, especially the members of our Gold Ribbon Panel and our Government Science and Policy Advisors. We also thank the Rose Foundation for Communities and the Environment and The Abandoned Mine Alliance who provided funding to pay for a portion of the expenses in printing this report. Special thanks to Rebecca Solnit, whose article “Winged Mercury and
    [Show full text]
  • What Made Nonviolent Protest Effective During the Civil Rights Movement?
    NEW YORK STATE SOCIAL STUDIES RESOURCE TOOLKIT 5011th Grade Civil Rights Inquiry What Made Nonviolent Protest Effective during the Civil Rights Movement? © Bettmann / © Corbis/AP Images. Supporting Questions 1. What was tHe impact of the Greensboro sit-in protest? 2. What made tHe Montgomery Bus Boycott, BirmingHam campaign, and Selma to Montgomery marcHes effective? 3. How did others use nonviolence effectively during the civil rights movement? THIS WORK IS LICENSED UNDER A CREATIVE COMMONS ATTRIBUTION- NONCOMMERCIAL- SHAREALIKE 4.0 INTERNATIONAL LICENSE. 1 NEW YORK STATE SOCIAL STUDIES RESOURCE TOOLKIT 11th Grade Civil Rights Inquiry What Made Nonviolent Protest Effective during the Civil Rights Movement? 11.10 SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC CHANGE/DOMESTIC ISSUES (1945 – PRESENT): Racial, gender, and New York State socioeconomic inequalities were addressed By individuals, groups, and organizations. Varying political Social Studies philosophies prompted debates over the role of federal government in regulating the economy and providing Framework Key a social safety net. Idea & Practices Gathering, Using, and Interpreting Evidence Chronological Reasoning and Causation Staging the Discuss tHe recent die-in protests and tHe extent to wHicH tHey are an effective form of nonviolent direct- Question action protest. Supporting Question 1 Supporting Question 2 Supporting Question 3 Guided Student Research Independent Student Research What was tHe impact of tHe What made tHe Montgomery Bus How did otHers use nonviolence GreensBoro sit-in protest? boycott, the Birmingham campaign, effectively during tHe civil rights and tHe Selma to Montgomery movement? marcHes effective? Formative Formative Formative Performance Task Performance Task Performance Task Create a cause-and-effect diagram tHat Detail tHe impacts of a range of actors Research the impact of a range of demonstrates the impact of the sit-in and tHe actions tHey took to make tHe actors and tHe effective nonviolent protest by the Greensboro Four.
    [Show full text]
  • Summary of Results of Charitable Solicitation Campaigns Conducted by Commercial Fundraisers in Calendar Year 2016
    SUMMARY OF RESULTS OF CHARITABLE SOLICITATION CAMPAIGNS CONDUCTED BY COMMERCIAL FUNDRAISERS IN CALENDAR YEAR 2016 XAVIER BECERRA Attorney General State of California SUMMARY OF RESULTS OF CHARITABLE SOLICITATION BY COMMERCIAL FUNDRAISERS FOR YEAR ENDING 2016 (Government Code § 12599) TABLE OF CONTENTS PAGES SUMMARY 1 - 5 TABLE SUBJECT/TITLE 1 ALPHABETICAL LISTING BY CHARITABLE ORGANIZATION 2 LISTING BY PERCENT TO CHARITY IN DESCENDING ORDER 3 THRIFT STORE OPERATIONS – GOODS PURCHASED FROM CHARITY 4 THRIFT STORE OPERATIONS – MANAGEMENT FEE/COMMISSION 5 VEHICLE DONATIONS – ALPHABETICAL BY CHARITABLE ORGANIZATION 6 COMMERCIAL COVENTURERS – ALPHABETICAL BY CHARITABLE ORGANIZATION California Department of Justice November 2017 SUMMARY Every year Californians provide generous support to a wide array of charities, either directly or through commercial fundraisers that charities hire to solicit donations on their behalf. The term “commercial fundraiser” refers generally to a person or corporation that contracts with a charity, for compensation, to solicit funds. The commercial fundraiser charges either a flat fee or a percentage of the donations collected. By law, commercial fundraisers are required to register with the Attorney General’s Registry of Charitable Trusts and file a Notice of Intent before soliciting donations in California. For each solicitation campaign conducted, commercial fundraisers are then required to file annual financial disclosure reports that set forth total revenue and expenses incurred. This Summary Report is prepared from self-reported information contained in the annual financial disclosure reports filed by commercial fundraisers for 2016 and includes statistics for donations of both cash and used personal property (such as clothing and vehicles) for the benefit of charity. Only information from complete financial reports received before October 20, 2017 is included.
    [Show full text]
  • North Bloomfield Gravel Mining Co. Records: Finding Aid
    http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf2f59n5kg No online items North Bloomfield Gravel Mining Co. Records: Finding Aid Processed by The Huntington Library staff; supplementary encoding and revision supplied by Xiuzhi Zhou and Diann Benti. The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens Manuscripts Department 1151 Oxford Road San Marino, California 91108 Phone: (626) 405-2129 Email: [email protected] URL: http://www.huntington.org © 2000 The Huntington Library. All rights reserved. North Bloomfield Gravel Mining mssHM 51035-51130 1 Co. Records: Finding Aid Overview of the Collection Title: North Bloomfield Gravel Mining Co. Records Dates (inclusive): 1890-1891 Collection Number: mssHM 51035-51130 Creator: North Bloomfield Gravel Mining Company. Extent: 96 pieces in 1 box Repository: The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens. Manuscripts Department 1151 Oxford Road San Marino, California 91108 Phone: (626) 405-2129 Email: [email protected] URL: http://www.huntington.org Abstract: This collection consists primarily of letters from the secretary to the president of the North Bloomfield Gravel Mining Company of Nevada County, California, in 1890-1891 related to the company and hydraulic mining. Language: English. Access Open to qualified researchers by prior application through the Reader Services Department. For more information, contact Reader Services. Publication Rights The Huntington Library does not require that researchers request permission to quote from or publish images of this material, nor does it charge fees for such activities. The responsibility for identifying the copyright holder, if there is one, and obtaining necessary permissions rests with the researcher. Preferred Citation [Identification of item]. North Bloomfield Gravel Mining Co.
    [Show full text]
  • Colby College Catalogue 1989 - 1990
    Colby College Digital Commons @ Colby Colby Catalogues Colby College Archives 1989 Colby College Catalogue 1989 - 1990 Colby College Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.colby.edu/catalogs Part of the Curriculum and Instruction Commons, and the Higher Education Commons Recommended Citation Colby College, "Colby College Catalogue 1989 - 1990" (1989). Colby Catalogues. 61. https://digitalcommons.colby.edu/catalogs/61 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Colby College Archives at Digital Commons @ Colby. It has been accepted for inclusion in Colby Catalogues by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Colby. liege C�talogue 1989-1990 Colby College Catalogue SEPTEMBER 1989-1990 Waterville, Maine 2 INQUIRIES Inquiries to the College should be directed as follows: Academic Counseling MARK R. SERDJENIAN, Associate Dean of Students, 872- 3106 Admission PARKER J. BEVERAGE, Dean of Admissions and Financial Aid, 872-3168 Business Matters ROBERT ST. PIERRE, Controller, 872-3159 Grants, Loans, and Student Employment LUCIA SMYTH, Director of Financial Aid, 872-3379 Health and Medical Care CARL E. NEL SON, Director of Health Services, 872- 3398 Public Affairs EDWARD HERSHEY, Director of Public Affa irs, 872-3226 Records and Transcripts GEORGE L. COLEMAN II, Registrar, 872-3197 Student Affairs jANICE SEITZINGER, Dean of Students, 872-3103 Summer Programs and Conferences ROBERT H. KANY, Director of Special Programs, 872-3385 Mailing address: Colby College, Waterville, Maine 04901. Telephone: (207) 872-3000. FAX: (207) 872-3555. A booklet, Colby Perspective, with illustrative material, has been prepared for prospective students and may be obtained from the dean of admissions. Colby College is accredited by the New England Association of Schools and Colleges.
    [Show full text]
  • Abolitionist Animal Rights: Critical Comparisons and Challenges Within the Animal Rights Movement
    WellBeing International WBI Studies Repository 11-2012 Abolitionist Animal Rights: Critical Comparisons and Challenges Within the Animal Rights Movement Corey Lee Wrenn Colorado State University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://www.wellbeingintlstudiesrepository.org/anirmov Part of the Animal Studies Commons, Civic and Community Engagement Commons, and the Politics and Social Change Commons Recommended Citation Wrenn, C. (2012). Abolitionist animal rights: critical comparisons and challenges within the animal rights movement. Interface, 4(2), 438-458. This material is brought to you for free and open access by WellBeing International. It has been accepted for inclusion by an authorized administrator of the WBI Studies Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Interface: a journal for and about social movements Article Volume 4 (2): 438 - 458 (November 2012) Wrenn, Abolitionist Animal Rights Abolitionist animal rights: critical comparisons and challenges within the animal rights movement Corey Wrenn Abstract The abolitionist movement is an emergent and radical approach to nonhuman animal rights. Calling for a complete cessation in nonhuman animal use through the abolishing of property status for nonhuman animals and an adoption of veganism and nonviolence, this approach stands in stark contrast to mainstream approaches such as humane production and welfare reform. This paper describes the goals and stances of abolitionism; the basic debate between abolitionism and other nonhuman animal rights movements; and the current state, challenges, and future prospects for abolitionism. It is argued that abolitionism, as developed by Francione, is the only morally consistent approach for taking the interests of nonhuman animals seriously.
    [Show full text]
  • MARTIN LUTHER KING and the PHILOSOPHY of NONVIOLENCE Wikimedia Commons Wikimedia
    Bill of Rights Constitutional Rights in Action Foundation SUMMER 2017 Volume 32 No4 MARTIN LUTHER KING AND THE PHILOSOPHY OF NONVIOLENCE Wikimedia Commons Wikimedia Martin Luther King, Jr. addressing the crowd of about 250,000 people at the March on Washington in August 1963. Martin Luther King, Jr. is remembered for his achievements The man, who turned out to be an American Nazi Party in civil rights and for the methods he used to get there — member, continued to flail. namely, nonviolence. More than just a catchphrase, more than just the “absence of violence,” and more than just a tactic, The integrated audience at first thought the whole nonviolence was a philosophy that King honed over the thing was staged, a mock demonstration of King’s non- course of his adult life. It has had a profound, lasting influ- violent philosophy in action. But as King reeled, and real ence on social justice movements at home and abroad. blood spurted from his face, they began to realize it was In September 1962, King convened a meeting of the no act. Finally, several SCLC members rushed the stage Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC), the to stop the attack. main organizational force behind his civil rights activism, But they stopped short when King shouted, “Don’t in Birmingham, Alabama. King was giving a talk on the touch him! Don’t touch him! We have to pray for him.” need for nonviolent action in the face of violent white The SCLC men pulled the Nazi off King, who was beaten racism when a white man jumped on stage and, without so badly he couldn’t continue the speech.
    [Show full text]
  • Veganism Through a Racial Lens: Vegans of Color Navigating Mainstream Vegan Networks
    Portland State University PDXScholar University Honors Theses University Honors College 5-24-2018 Veganism through a Racial Lens: Vegans of Color Navigating Mainstream Vegan Networks Iman Chatila Portland State University Follow this and additional works at: https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/honorstheses Let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Recommended Citation Chatila, Iman, "Veganism through a Racial Lens: Vegans of Color Navigating Mainstream Vegan Networks" (2018). University Honors Theses. Paper 562. https://doi.org/10.15760/honors.569 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access. It has been accepted for inclusion in University Honors Theses by an authorized administrator of PDXScholar. Please contact us if we can make this document more accessible: [email protected]. Running head: VEGANISM THROUGH A RACIAL LENS 1 Veganism Through a Racial Lens: Vegans of Color Navigating Mainstream Vegan Networks by Iman Chatila An undergraduate honors thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Bachelor of Science degree in University Honors and Psychology. Thesis Advisor: Charles Klein, PhD, Department of Anthropology Portland State University 2018 Contact: [email protected] VEGANISM THROUGH A RACIAL LENS 2 Table of Contents Abstract 3 Introduction 4 Background 5 Methods 7 Positionality 7 Research Questions 7 Interviews & Analysis 8 Results & Discussion 8 Demographics: Race, Age, Education, & Duration of Veganism 8 Social Norms of Vegan Communities 9 Leadership & Redefining Activism 13 Food
    [Show full text]
  • Executive Summary
    Mining’s Toxic Legacy An Initiative to Address Mining Toxins in the Sierra Nevada Executive Summary Published March 2008 by The Sierra Fund The Sierra Fund’s Initiative to address legacy mining pollution has been made possible by the support of: The California Endowment The Richard and Rhoda Goldman Fund and True North Foundation Executive Summary ________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________________ Is human health, water quality or the environment at risk from historic mining toxins? The Gold Rush changed California demographics as indigenous people were dislocated and mining towns appeared and disappeared across the Sierra Nevada Mountains. A less recognized consequence of the California Gold Rush was the massive environmental destruction that took place, which still plagues the Sierra today. Working with partners from state, federal, and tribal governments as well as from the academic, health, and environmental communities, The Sierra Fund’s report “Mining’s Toxic Legacy” is the first comprehen- sive evaluation of what happened during the Gold Rush, including: the cultural, health, and environmental impacts of this era; the obstacles that lie in the way of addressing these impacts; and a strategic plan for taking action on the longest neglected environmental problem in the Golden State of California. The California Gold Rush clawed out of the foothills of the Sierra Nevada considerable gold—93 tons or 2.7 million troy ounces in the peak year of 1853 alone... In the course of doing so, everything in the region and much downstream was ravaged. Wildlife was decimated. Trees were cut down to burn for domestic and industrial purposes and to build the huge mining infrastructure that was firmly in place by the 1870s.
    [Show full text]
  • Scoping Comments of the San Juan Ridge Taxpayers Association (SJRTA)
    COM MENTS OF THE SAN JUAN RIDGE TAXPAYERS ASSOCIATION ON THE PROPOSED SAN JUAN RIDGE MINE Submitted to the Nevada County Planning Department December 4, 2012 Sacramento Bee, December 31, 1997. TABLE OF CONTENTS I. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY .....................................................................................................1 II. BACKGROUND.....................................................................................................................4 III. OUR LOCAL ENVIRONMENT ........................................................................................8 A. SOCIAL ENVIRONMENT ........................................................................................................8 B. ECOLOGICAL ENVIRONMENT .............................................................................................10 IV. COMPLIANCE WITH CALIFORNIA ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY ACT .........14 A. THE EIR MUST CLEARLY DESCRIBE THE PROPOSED PROJECT; CEQA DEMANDS AN ACCURATE, STABLE AND FINITE PROJECT DEFINITION THAT ADDRESSES THE “WHOLE OF THE ACTION” UNDER REVIEW. ...........................................................................................................14 1. The Proposed Action Should Be Described in a Manner that Provides for Full Disclosure and Evaluation of Potentially Significant Impacts ..............................................15 2. Additional Information Is Needed ..................................................................................19 B. CEQA REQUIRES IDENTIFICATION OF POTENTIALLY “SIGNIFICANT EFFECTS
    [Show full text]
  • How Food Not Bombs Challenged Capitalism, Militarism, and Speciesism in Cambridge, MA Alessandra Seiter Vassar College, [email protected]
    Vassar College Digital Window @ Vassar Senior Capstone Projects 2016 Veganism of a different nature: how food not bombs challenged capitalism, militarism, and speciesism in Cambridge, MA Alessandra Seiter Vassar College, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalwindow.vassar.edu/senior_capstone Recommended Citation Seiter, Alessandra, "Veganism of a different nature: how food not bombs challenged capitalism, militarism, and speciesism in Cambridge, MA" (2016). Senior Capstone Projects. Paper 534. This Open Access is brought to you for free and open access by Digital Window @ Vassar. It has been accepted for inclusion in Senior Capstone Projects by an authorized administrator of Digital Window @ Vassar. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Veganism of a Different Nature How Food Not Bombs Challenged Capitalism, Militarism, and Speciesism in Cambridge, MA Alessandra Seiter May 2016 Senior Thesis Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Bachelor of Arts degree in Geography _______________________________________________ Adviser, Professor Yu Zhou Table of Contents Acknowledgements .............................................................................................................................. 2 Chapter 1: FNB’s Ideology of Anti-Militarism, Anti-Capitalism, and Anti-Speciesism ............ 3 Chapter 2: A Theoretical Framework for FNB’s Ideology .......................................................... 19 Chapter 3: Hypothesizing FNB’s Development
    [Show full text]