Fall 2019 & Summer 2019 Internships with Carolina Peace

The Carolina Peace Resource Center is offering Fall  2019 Organizing Internships and Summer 2019 Organizing Internships. Interested in learning all the angles of an activist non-profit organization?  Want to work on cutting the military budget, mideast peace or nuclear issues?  Do you have a passion for non-violent social change?  Then this internship is for you.  USC Students can earn 3 credit hours for a semester-long internship.  We are specifically looking for interns to work on Refugee/Immigration Issues and Environmental Issues.  Carolina Peace offers internships in the Fall and Spring and possibly summer.

PRIORITY DEADLINE TO APPLY:
SUNDAY March 31, 2019.

Applications considered on a rolling basis thereafter. Continue reading “Fall 2019 & Summer 2019 Internships with Carolina Peace”

July 13 Telebriefing on EPA Proposal to Increase Levels of Radiation Allowed in Water

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has quietly proposed to raise the allowable levels of radioactivity in drinking water a nuclear incident to hundreds of times their current limits. If this guidance goes through, EPA’s action will allow people to drink water with concentrations of radioactivity at vastly higher levels. — Read more

Fall 2016 Internships with Carolina Peace: Deadline Extended

The Carolina Peace Resource Center is offering Fall 2016 Organizing Internships. Interested in learning all the angles of an activist non-profit organization?  Want to work on cutting the military budget, mideast peace or nuclear issues?  Do you have a passion for non-violent social change?  Then this internship is for you.  USC Students can earn 3 credit hours for a semester-long internship.  We are specifically looking for: Nuclear/Environmental Issues, Mideast Peace, Social Justice. Continue reading “Fall 2016 Internships with Carolina Peace: Deadline Extended”

ChevronToxico | The Campaign for Justice in Ecuador

 

WHEN CHEVRON TURNS A PROFIT,
WHO REALLY PAYS?

Over three decades of oil drilling in the Ecuadorian Amazon, Chevron dumped more than 18 billion gallons of toxic wastewater into the rainforest, leaving local people suffering a wave of cancers, miscarriages and birth defects.

Now, with the support of an international campaign for justice, the communities affected by Chevron’s negligence are holding one of the world’s largest oil companies to account.

ChevronToxico | The Campaign for Justice in Ecuador