climate justice

Trainer/Speaker: Clayton Thomas-Muller

Clayton Thomas Muller's picture
Average: 3 (2 votes)

Clayton Thomas-Muller, of the Mathais Colomb Cree Nation (Pukatawagan) in Northern Manitoba, Canada, is an activist for Indigenous Rights and Environmental Justice.

For ten years as organizer Clayton has gained vast experience in grassroots movement building, organizational development (fund raising), and strategic campaign planning and policy development. With his roots in the inner city of Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, Clayton’s humble beginnings came from fighting against disparities in the Aboriginal community as a result of poverty and Winnipeg's youth gang epidemic. He co-founded the youth organization known as Aboriginal Youth with Initiative (AYII) and served as the organizations executive director for two years. The Manitoba Aboriginal Youth Achievement Awards recognized Clayton’s leadership skills and his devotion to community development in 1997, when he was presented with the Senior Community Volunteer Award.

Clayton went on to achieve many accomplishments as a youth leader in the Aboriginal community. He was cofounder of the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs Youth council as well as the architect behind the National Assembly of First Nations National Youth Advisory Council. As youth spokes person for the Assembly of First Nations he chaired the AFN National Youth Conference in Ottawa, Ontario Canada in 1999, were the first elections of the National First Nation Youth Council were held. As national youth spokes person of the Assembly of First Nations, Clayton was instrumental in the development and design of initiatives such as the Urban Aboriginal Youth Multi Purpose Center Initiative (UMAYC), a fund that to this day is sponsoring hundreds of Aboriginal youth initiatives across Canada.

Clayton’s work has taken him to five continents across our Mother Earth. Some highlights are:

UN ministers responsible for youth conference, Lisbon, Portugal First Nations youth representative on Canadian youth delegation with Minister Pettigrew and Minister Blondin (8-12 August, 1998)

5th World Indigenous Youth Conference in Waitangi, New Zealand; Coordinator of national Aboriginal delegation of Indigenous youth of Canada. (1999)

International training for Indigenous activists, Taos, New Mexico, USA Non-Indigenous Youth Alliance Network. (INIYA) Coordinator (2002)

International training for Indigenous activists, Rio Bronco, Acre, Brazil. Non-Indigenous Youth Alliance Network. (INIYA) Coordinator (2002)

Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues (2003) New York City, New York, USA Delegate (2003)

3rd prep-com of the WSSD in New York City, New York, USA Coordinator of Indigenous Peoples Delegation (2003)

4th Prep-com of the WSSD in Bali, Indonesia, Coordinator of Indigenous Peoples delegation (2004)
World Indigenous Peoples Pre-Summit on Sustainable Development, Kimberly, South Africa Coordinator of North American Indigenous Peoples delegation (2004)

World Summit on Sustainable Development, Johannesburg, South Africa. Coordinator of North American Indigenous Peoples Delegation (2004)

Social Forum of the Americas Quito, Ecuador, Delegate (2005)

COP/MOP 11 UN Framework on Climate Change, Montreal, Canada, Coordinator of North American IEN delegation, Indigenous Peoples Caucus and World Indigenous Peoples day celebration. (2005)

Until recently, he served as the Native Energy organizer for the Indigenous Environmental Network. Clayton has been on the front lines of stopping industrial society's assault on Indigenous Peoples lands to extract resources and to dump toxic wastes. He has worked across Canada, Alaska and the lower 48 states with grassroots indigenous communities to defend their Inherit, Treaty and environmental rights against unsustainable energy policies and transnational energy corporations.

Clayton is also a gifted poet and spoken-word performer. He is happily married and has recently become a father. Perhaps the most remarkable thing about Clayton is that he’s just getting going. He’s been recognized by Utne magazine as one of the Top 30 under-30 young activists in the United StateClayton Thomas Muller

Bali Principles of Climate Justice

Joanne Panchana's picture
No votes yet

Representatives of the people's movement and activist organizations working for social and environmental justice have developed core principles to begin to build on international movement of all peoples for climate justice.

http://www.ejnet.org/ej/bali.pdf

10 Principles for Just Climate Change Policies in the U.S.

Joanne Panchana's picture
No votes yet

The Environmental Justice movement has demonstrated that pollution's effects often fall disproportionately on the health of people of color, Indigenous Peoples, and low-income communities. These groups are the first to experience negative climate change impacts like heat death and illness, respiratory illness, infectious disease, and economic and cultural displacement. These 10 Principles for Just Climate Change Policies in the United States will ensure that climate policy protects our most vulnerable communities.

www.ejnet.org

http://www.ejnet.org/ej/climatejustice.pdf

Changing The Social Climate

Joanne Panchana's picture
No votes yet

How global warming affects economic justice, the future of the progressive movement, and whether your child walks to school. A conversation between Michel Gelobter of Redefining Progress and Catherine Lerza of Tides Foundation.

A publication of TIDES Foundation

http://www.redefiningprogress.org/newpubs/2006/Changing-the-Social-Climate.pdf

Apply for the Climate Justice Corps!

Josh Lynch's picture
No votes yet

Send your completed application to ejccdirector@gmail.com by May 29th, 2007.

The Climate Justice Corps Fellowship Program

 A subset of the Climate Justice Corps (CJC) Institute, the CJC Fellowship Program is a project of the Environmental Justice and Climate Change Initiative (EJCC). It is a campaign to provide leadership development for young activists, organizers, and researchers from disproportionately affected communities and to invigorate a new constituency for climate action. CJC Fellows comprise a group of young activists and researchers who are chosen by and housed at different EJCC member organizations and affiliates during the summer. Fellows come together at the beginning of their residency for an intensive training in organizing, communications, and the health and environmental dimensions of climate justice issues. They then spend the next ten weeks learning from and working with their host organizations. Due to the start date of the internship, if students must return to campus, we will work with you to either complete your final weeks in your school state or plug into programming on your campuses. Once in the field, Fellows will, depending on the needs of their host organizations, develop strategies for grassroots actions and media events, write issue and policy briefs on key local dimensions of climate and health problems, and support existing organizing. In the year after their placement, CJC Fellows are also required to organize one direct action centered on climate justice either on their college campus or within their community.

CJC Fellows receive a taxable stipend of $2500 (about $1000 per month), travel to and from their training and host site, and a materials stipend.


Eligibility and Qualifications

CJC Fellows must be between ages 18 to 28. Applicants under the age of 18 will be considered if: 1) they have graduated high school in the spring before their internship, 2) they will turn 18 during the summer of their internship, 3) they will work in their home community with an organization with which they have a previous relationship. Although it is not a requirement, strong applicants will have experience working in communities of color and in either organizing or relevant environmental or social justice-oriented academic research. The ideal candidate will be able to quickly orient themselves to the field of climate justice and be both strategic and creative in their approach to climate justice work. Because of the leadership component of this program, applicants will be expected to demonstrate strong potential for leadership on environmental justice and climate change issues in the future.

For more information about the EJCC, CJC Fellows, or Climate Justice,
please visit our website at www.ejcc.org

Send your completed application to ejccdirector@gmail.com by May 29th, 2007. 

Environmental Justice Principles, various

Matt Reitman's picture
No votes yet

The Principles of Working Together, the Principles of Environmental Justice, the Bali Principles of Climate Justice, 10 Principles for Just Climate Change Policies in the U.S.

Fossil Fuels and Impacts to Native Peoples

Matt Reitman's picture
No votes yet

A resource from the Indigenous Environmental Network.

Climate Change and Environmental Justice

Matt Reitman's picture
No votes yet

a fact sheet from the Environmental Justice and Climate Change Initiative

Air of Injustice: How Power Plant Pollution Affects the Health of Hispanics and Latinos

Josh Lynch's picture
No votes yet

The League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC), with the support of Clear the Air, issued this report, which found that more than 7 out of 10 Hispanic Americans are breathing air that violates federal pollution standards. Hispanic Americans face a threat 16 percent greater than the overall population.

http://www.cleartheair.org/proactive/newsroom/release.vtml?id=25660

Syndicate content