Posted inClimate Change, Criminal Justice, Economic Development, Environmental Justice, Policing, Politics & Policy

Atlanta’s ‘Cop City’ Makes a Black Neighborhood a Testing Lab for AI Policing

This story was published in partnership with Counterstream Media for The AI issue of Peace & Riot. ATLANTA — When he drives through his neighborhood now, Brian Page passes rows of police cars and AI‑powered cameras that track nearly every movement. For most of his life, Page, who goes by “Scapegoat Jones,” felt safest in […]

Posted inBlack Migration, Climate Change, Economic Development, Environmental Justice, Housing, Politics & Policy

The Black Mecca’s Climate Plan Is Costing Black Atlanta Residents Their Homes

This is the first story in a series on “climate gentrification” in Black neighborhoods. Support for this series was provided by The Neal Peirce Foundation, a nonprofit organization dedicated to supporting journalism on ways to make cities and their larger regions work better for all people. ATLANTA — By the time Atlanta hosts a World Cup […]

Posted inClimate Change, Extreme Weather, Public Safety

A Storm Is Coming for the South’s Most Vulnerable Black Communities

For millions in the South, an impending storm could become unforgettable.​ “I can’t stop watching the forecasts,” said Shemekia Stringer, speaking by phone Thursday afternoon as she moved through near-empty aisles at a Walmart in Southaven, Mississippi, just outside of Memphis, Tennessee. “I’m trying to make sure we’re fully prepared. In my area, the map […]

Posted inClimate Change, Housing, Politics & Policy, Rural Issues, Wealth Gap

This Mississippi Delta Home Could Collapse Before Help Arrives

SIDON, Mississippi — Malissa Whitehead is known for making tea cakes and blueberry pies during the holidays — but as Christmas approaches, she’s uneasy about baking anything in the house she’s lived in for 40 years.  The kitchen ceiling wood is peeling, revealing small holes and chipped paint. On the outside, the roof is covered […]

Posted inClimate Change, Environmental Justice, Land Pollution, Unsafe Water

How Plastics and Fossil Fuels Are Making Black Communities Unlivable

Copyright © 2025 by Beyond Plastics. This excerpt originally appeared in The Problem with Plastic: How We Can Save Ourselves and Our Planet Before It’s Too Late, published by The New Press. Reprinted here with permission. Debra Ramirez lives at a place where survival and sacrifice meet. She knows the winding back roads that crisscross […]

Posted inAir Pollution, Climate Change, Environmental Justice, Extreme Weather

Pollution is Driving Climate Disasters And The Government Plans to Stop Tracking it

Homes in Jefferson County, Texas, still bear the scars of Hurricane Harvey: black and blue tarps cling to rooftops. Families in historically Black neighborhoods navigate a slow, unequal recovery from the 2017 storm, and in 2022, the federal government found that the state discriminated against Black and Hispanic residents when doling out flood mitigation funds.  […]

Posted inClimate Change, History, Rural Issues

The Army Took Their Land. Decades Later, This Black Community Still Wants It Back.

HARRIS NECK NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE, Ga. — Over the course of what was a scorching, yet typical May day across Coastal Georgia, Willie Moran made it a point to stop and take a deep breath at every sight of water.  Looking out across the estuaries and salt marshes teeming with wildlife, he repeatedly reminded his […]

Posted inClimate Change, Environmental Justice, Extreme Weather, Housing, Mental Health

20 Years After Katrina, Louisiana Residents Are Most Vulnerable to ‘Die of Despair’

This is the fourth story in our series chronicling the 20th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina. Trigger warning: This article contains descriptions of suicide, gun violence, and child deaths that may be distressing to some readers. As the 10th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina approached in 2015, Michelle McCullum, a 25-year-old mother of two, drove her children, […]

Posted inAir Pollution, Climate Change, Environmental Justice, Extreme Weather, Unsafe Water

Black Neighborhoods at Risk as U.S. Pushes to Cancel Important Climate Protection

As nearly two-thirds of the U.S. population sweltered under extreme heat advisories on Tuesday, news echoed through Black neighborhoods already scorched by the effects of climate change: the Trump administration was moving to tear the heart out of America’s climate protections.  In a decision that environmental activists say is one of the most severe blows […]

Posted inClimate Change, Environmental Justice, Extreme Weather, Partner Content

30 Years After Chicago’s Deadliest Heat Wave, Systemic Racism Is Still the Root Problem

Originally published by Inside Climate News CHICAGO — Cheryl Johnson was watching the news during the worst heat wave in her city’s history when she learned that a man she’d known since she was a child had been found dead on the steps of a church downtown. She’ll never forget the moment. Her friend — […]

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