Emily Hunter, an environmental advocacy journalist from Canada, will discuss worldwide environmental concerns and the important role of today’s eco-activists when she visits Montgomery County Community College. This event will take place in the Science Center Theater, 340 DeKalb Pike, Blue Bell.
A simulcast of the presentation will be shown at the Pottstown campus in the Community Room of South Hall, 101 College Drive.
The community is invited to attend this free presentation. For information, call 215-641-6518 or visit www.mc3.edu. Following the presentation, a book signing will be held from 1:30-2 p.m. in the Science Center lobby in Blue Bell.
As the daughter of the late Robert Hunter, the first president of Greenpeace, and Bobbi Hunter, the first woman to save a whale by blocking a harpoon, Emily embraces the fight to protect the environment and works tirelessly for reform, seeking to inspire today’s young adults and encourage a new generation of eco-warriors.
During the past eight years, she hosted and co-produced four TV documentaries on MTV News Canada’s Impact and was a former eco-blogger for This Magazine. In 2011, she published her first book, The Next Eco-Warriors, which provides an inside view of frontline environmental youth activism.
Emily’s passion to protect the environmental has taken her around the globe from the seas of Antarctica to help the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society prevent illegal whale hunting to the Borneo rainforest to protest the deforestation and destruction of the oldest rainforest in the world. In Canada, she coordinated a Day of Action with 350.org for climate justice.
Most recently, Emily visits and speaks at college campuses in the United States and Canada to generate awareness and motivate the next generation of eco-leaders or what she refers to as “activism 2.0.”
As part of this recruitment effort, Emily plans to create a new documentary film featuring the eco-revolution of this second generation of activists. The film will feature economic and social justice, as well as environmental reforms.
Emily Hunter’s presentation is part of the ongoing Richard K. Bennett Distinguished Lectureship for Peace and Social Justice series, which was established at the College in 1981 with a grant from the William Penn Foundation. The lectureship reflects the ideals of Bennett, a Quaker who devoted his life work to accomplishing peace and justice through non-violent efforts.
Monday Feb 25, 2013
12:30 PM - 1:30 PM EST
Science Center Theater inside Montgomery County Community College
Printed courtesy of www.tricountyareachamber.com – Contact the TriCounty Area Chamber of Commerce for more information.
18 W Lightcap Rd, Pottstown, PA 19464 – (610) 326-2900 – harrison@tricountyareachamber.com