Margie Eugene-Richard

Margie Eugene-Richard is an American environmental activist. Richard had grown up in the middle of Cancer Alleywas. She is the first African-American to win the Goldman Environmental Prize in 2004, for her successful campaign for relocating people who lived in a community close to a chemical plant in Norco, Louisiana.[1] Eugene-Richard says: "you have to go out and command justice. Somebody has to ask God for the inner strength to be bold."

"Margie believes in the community leading the way," says Dr. Beverly Wright, director of the Deep South Center for Environmental Justice. But as Richard recognizes, community is an elusive thing in post-Katrina New Orleans. "I won't be knocking on doors," she says, "because there are no doors."[2]

References

  1. "North America 2004. Margie Eugene-Richard. United States. Toxic & Nuclear Contamination". Goldman Environmental Prize. Archived from the original on 22 October 2010. Retrieved 4 December 2010.
  2. Harkinson, Josh (Winter 2006). ""Life after Katrina: environmental activist Margie Eugene-Richard says: 'you have to go out and command justice'."". OnEarth: 10.


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