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Address Climate Change to Limit Natural Disasters sfdsdf

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Title: 
Address Climate Change to Limit Natural Disasters
Authors: 
Ralph B. Everett, Esq.
Publication Date: 
November 26, 2012
Body: 

Watching Ken Burns’s film on the Dust Bowl recently, I wondered whether we could learn anything from the government’s response to that earlier environmental disaster. President Franklin D. Roosevelt was counseled by some advisers to abandon much of the Dust Bowl region; they argued that it was never meant to be farmed or settled. Ultimately some areas were restored to their natural grassland state. But Roosevelt also envisioned families staying on the land, and he moved quickly and decisively to confront the causes of the topsoil erosion: he sent crews to plant millions of trees as windbreaks and began coaxing reluctant farmers toward fundamental changes in the ways they worked their fields.

Hurricane Sandy has presented us with an opportunity to take stock of what kind of communities are viable and sustainable along a fragile stretch of coast. And the best route may very well be to rebuild in some communities while restoring other land to its natural state in order to create a shield against future catastrophes.

 

Read more at The New York Times.

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Institutes: 
Energy and Environment
Topics: 
Climate Change
Environment
Environmental Policy
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Looking Ahead to 2012 sfdsdf

Content
Title: 
Looking Ahead to 2012
Authors: 
Ralph B. Everett, Esq.
Publication Date: 
December 29, 2011
Body: 

Elections are about opportunity. And with so many critical issues hanging in the balance at present, 2012 will be an especially important time for Americans themselves to influence the direction of our country.

With the recovery just beginning to pick up the pace, 2011 was a challenging year for most everyone, regardless of their race, across nearly all economic indicators – jobs, net worth, home values. And while it is true that black unemployment runs almost twice that of the general population – at more than 16 percent – some studies now show that as a direct result of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, some 6.9 million Americans were kept above the poverty line, including 1.3 million African Americans.

It is also true that President Obama inherited an economy that was in almost unprecedented free-fall and acted quickly to stop the hemorrhaging and began to rebuild. He has been working to help create the economic conditions for employment growth through efforts to rebuild critical infrastructure and our public education system.

And while current economic conditions point to job creation and economic recovery as the premier issue for the 2012 campaign, the past year has not been devoid of hope and the outlook is not without considerable promise for the African American community.

For example, at the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies we have been encouraged by our progress in directing greater focus under the new health care law toward addressing longstanding racial disparities in health outcomes and access to health services.

 

Read more at The Washington Informer.

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Civic Engagement & Governance
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Ralph B. Everett, Esq. sfdsdf

Expert Information
Display Name: 
Ralph B. Everett, Esq.
First Name: 
Ralph
Middle Name: 
B.
Last Name: 
Everett
Job Title: 
President and CEO
Biography
Short Biography: 

Ralph B. Everett is President and CEO of the Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, widely acknowledged as the nation’s leading think tank for policy analysis and research on issues of concern to African Americans and other people of color. Mr. Everett was appointed President and CEO of the Joint Center on January 1, 2007. His visionary plan of action has been centered on launching four new Institutes. The Media & Technology and Civic Engagement & Governance Institutes were launched in 2010 and 2011, respectively. The Energy & Environment Program and Education Policy & Opportunity Institute  will be designed to strengthen the effectiveness and visibility of the Joint Center’s work.   


 

Full Biography: 

Mr. Everett's full biography can be found here.

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Contact Phone Number: 
(202) 789-3512
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Civic Engagement & Governance
Topics: 
Civic Engagement
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