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    Meeting the Moment: Lessons from the 'Once in a Lifetime' Investment of the Biden Administration in Environmental Justice.

    Law Lounge, Level 1, Room 113
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    Event description

    In one of its earliest moves, the Biden administration made a historic commitment to advancing environmental justice, significantly increasing federal programs, funding, and public awareness on the issue. This bold approach has been heralded as a "once in a lifetime" investment, creating new pathways for justice, equity, and environmental sustainability. 

    But four years later, what has been the outcome? How have these expansive policies impacted the communities they were designed to serve? What are the successes, challenges, and ongoing barriers in this unprecedented investment? 

    Join us for an in-depth conversation with Kyle Whyte, a distinguished scholar, and practitioner of environmental justice. Drawing on his direct service to the Biden administration, environmental justice organizations, and Tribal nations, Kyle will share his insights into how these groups have navigated the complex landscape of new federal environmental justice policies. This event will offer a unique window into the lived experiences of these communities and the transformative potential—and limitations—of the Biden administration’s environmental justice agenda. 

    This event is brought to you by the University of Sydney Indigenous Research Network and the Sydney Environment Institute. 

    Speakers

    Kyle Whyte 

    Kyle Whyte is a faculty member at the University of Michigan where he is George Willis Pack Professor in the School for Environment and Sustainability, University Diversity and Social Transformation Professor, and Professor of Philosophy in the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts. Kyle teaches in the SEAS environmental justice specialization. He is founding Faculty Director of the Tishman Center for Social Justice and the Environment, Faculty co-Director of the Energy Equity Project, co-Principal Investigator of SEAS' Global Center for Understanding Climate Change Impacts on Transboundary Waters, Faculty Associate of Native American Studies, and Senior Fellow in the Michigan Society of Fellows. His research addresses environmental justice, focusing on moral and political issues concerning climate policy and Indigenous peoples, the ethics of cooperative relationships between Indigenous peoples and science organizations, and problems of Indigenous justice in public and academic discussions of food sovereignty, environmental justice, and the anthropocene. He is an enrolled member of the Citizen Potawatomi Nation. 

    David Schlosberg 

    David Schlosberg is Professor of Environmental Politics and Director of the Sydney Environment Institute. His work focuses on environmental, ecological, and climate justice; environment and everyday life; and climate adaptation planning and policy. Professor Schlosberg has worked extensively with local and state governments on just adaptation and resilience planning, the social impacts of climate change, and community-based food systems and policy. At SEI, he is one of the Research Leads on Creating Just Food and Energy Policy, Self organising systems to minimise future disaster risk, Concepts and practices of multispecies justice, and Grounded Imaginaries. 

    Jakelin Troy

    Jaky’s research interest are currently focussed on documenting, describing and reviving Indigenous languages. She has a new focus on the Indigenous languages of Pakistan, including Saraiki of the Punjab and Torwali of Swat. Jaky has two Australian Research Council Discovery Projects- one on the history of Aboriginal missions and reserves in Eastern Australia, and the other about the practise of 'corroboree' by Aboriginal people in the mid-20th century in Australia. Jaky is interested in the use of Indigenous research methodologies and community engaged research practises. Jaky is Aboriginal Australian and her community is Ngarigu of the Snowy Mountains in South Eastern Australia.

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