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Areas of Focus
Indigenous Lands
(1199 people) | Logging
(297 people) | Forestry Law and Policy
(365 people) | Water Rights
(906 people) | Renewable Energy
(3926 people) | Environmental Justice
(1981 people) | Indigenous Rights
(1681 people) | Plantations
(282 people) | Global Wood Products Industry
(294 people) | Conservation Policy
(746 people) | Photography
(1709 people) | Precautionary Principle
(459 people) | Biodiversity Conservation
(3181 people) | Biotechnology
(603 people) | Indigenous Peoples and Cultures
(2794 people) | Climate Change
(4730 people) | Climate Justice
(1202 people) | Media and Communication
(2712 people) | Journalism and the Press
(1497 people) | Arts Activism
(2150 people)
About
The mission of Global Justice Ecology Project is to build local, national and international alliances with action to address the common root causes of social injustice, economic domination and environmental destruction.
We have two programs:
• The STOP GE Trees Campaign: the goal of this campaign is a global ban on the release of genetically engineered trees into the environment.
• The Connections Program: What differentiates Global Justice Ecology Project from most groups is our holistic approach to organizing. We believe that the compartmentalization of issues is enabling corporations and conservative forces to keep movements for change divided and powerless. We strive to identify and address the common roots to the issues of social injustice, ecological destruction and economic domination as a means to achieve a fundamental transformation toward a society based on egalitarian ideals and grounded in ecology.
We have two programs:
• The STOP GE Trees Campaign: the goal of this campaign is a global ban on the release of genetically engineered trees into the environment.
• The Connections Program: What differentiates Global Justice Ecology Project from most groups is our holistic approach to organizing. We believe that the compartmentalization of issues is enabling corporations and conservative forces to keep movements for change divided and powerless. We strive to identify and address the common roots to the issues of social injustice, ecological destruction and economic domination as a means to achieve a fundamental transformation toward a society based on egalitarian ideals and grounded in ecology.



