This week, we’re bringing you an episode from another podcast we think you might enjoy, Broken Ground from the Southern Environmental Law Center. Broken Ground digs  up environmental stories in the South that don’t always get the attention they deserve, and giving voice to the people bringing those stories to light. While the show focuses on […]

This week, we’re bringing you an episode from another podcast we think you might enjoy, Broken Ground from the Southern Environmental Law Center.


Broken Ground digs  up environmental stories in the South that don’t always get the attention they deserve, and giving voice to the people bringing those stories to light. While the show focuses on the South, the conversations — including the one in this episode — resonate far beyond the region’s confines.


In the latest season, the podcast explores how Southerners living along the coast are navigating sea level rise as they race against the clock. How will people on the front lines protect themselves from the immediate and impending threats of rising tides?


This episode features a conversation with Dr. Robert Bullard, widely considered the father of environmental justice. He talks with Broken Ground host about the inequality of pollution and climate change. Bullard was scheduled to visit Penn State in April and organizers are hopeful that he’ll be able to make the trip in April 2021.


If you enjoy this episode, check out Broken Ground wherever you listen to podcasts.


Additional Information

Broken Ground website


Dr. Bullard’s website


Southern Environmental Law Center


Related Episodes

Michael Mann’s journey through the climate wars


Changing the climate conversation


The ongoing struggle for civil rights