Solving America's Energy Crisis (1973)
Purchase a PDF copy of "Solving America's Energy Crisis"Image: Excerpt from the introduction: Volume and Number: VOL. 1, NO. 3 read more
View ArticleAmerica's Best Music (1974)
Purchase a PDF copy of "America's Best Music"Image: This issue of Southern Exposure marks the beginning of our second year of existence, a fact that may come as a surprise to even our most enthusiastic...
View ArticleWho Owns Appalachia? (1982)
Purchase a PDF copy of "Who Owns Appalachia?"Image: Excerpt from our feature story:The people of Appalachia know they are poor, and for along time a lot of them have thought they knew why: they don't...
View ArticleAs black lung rises among Appalachian coal miners, industry and regulators...
After years of decline, the number of U.S. coal miners suffering from dreaded black lung disease appears to be rising again -- and the increase seems to be especially dramatic in southern Appalachia,...
View ArticleTransparency project aims to keep Appalachia honest
Inspired by Wikileaks, Honest Appalachia wants to help the region's whistleblowers expose government and corporate corruption and misconduct -- and to encourage similar efforts elsewhere.Image: Facing...
View ArticleVOICES: Strip mining Black History Month
Few realize Black History Month's ties to the history of coal miners in West Virginia. And as mountaintop removal mining continues there, that history is in danger of being erased.Image: Facing South...
View ArticleMapping the health toll of mountaintop removal
A new mapping tool helps illustrate the serious health impacts of a particularly destructive form of coal mining.Image: Facing South Appreciate this post? Please donate & share below. Donate »...
View ArticleINSTITUTE INDEX: The real obscenity of mountaintop removal
Mountaintop removal activist Maria Gunnoe of West Virginia was questioned about child porn by U.S. Capitol Police after submitting a photo of a child bathing in mine-polluted water to a House committee...
View ArticleAnti-mining protests heat up in West Virginia as evidence of damage builds
Twenty people were arrested over the weekend while blocking the largest mountaintop removal operation in West Virginia. Meanwhile, scientific evidence of the human and environmental health damages...
View ArticleVideo documents miner, state police harassment of mountaintop removal...
Activists are calling for a federal investigation of alleged police brutality and harassment of mountaintop removal protesters following a nonviolent action at a West Virginia mine last week. Image:...
View ArticleOn Appalachia Solidarity Day, remembering a mountain hero
Larry Gibson, a leader in the campaign to end mountaintop removal coal mining, died Sunday on the West Virginia mountain he fought so hard to protect. Today, his fellow activists will gather at the...
View ArticleLife after coal: Does Wales point the way?
Declining coal production is hurting Appalachia's economy, which was already in rough shape. Scholars are looking at Wales, which lost its coal economy in the 1980s, for examples for how Appalachia...
View ArticleA turning point on mountaintop removal?
There were two big developments this week in the fight to end mountaintop removal, with a federal appeals court upholding the EPA's authority to revoke permits for such coal mining operations, and a...
View ArticleUN human rights group calls for investigation of mountaintop removal mining...
The United Nations Working Group on Business and Human Rights recently visited West Virginia communities affected by the controversial mining practice and said allegations of health damage, water...
View ArticleCarrying water for an end to mountaintop removal
Activists hauled polluted water from Appalachia to Washington, D.C. this week to draw attention to the plight of communities affected by mountaintop removal coal mining. The action comes as legislation...
View ArticleINSTITUTE INDEX: Promoting the myth of 'sustainable coal'
A group of prominent Democrats has launched a project to promote the idea that coal is part of a sustainable U.S. energy future -- even as new evidence emerges showing just how environmentally...
View ArticleWV water contamination exposes chemical hazards of coal power
Most Americans are aware of the pollution hazards associated with the mining and burning of coal. The water contamination disaster unfolding in West Virginia highlights another hazard inherent in coal...
View ArticleCoal ash polluting NC river was once Appalachian mountaintops
Before its coal-fired units were shuttered in 2012, Duke Energy's Dan River plant burned coal from mountaintop removal mines in Appalachia. The reality that the arsenic-laden ash now contaminating a...
View ArticleEarth Day: What are we fighting for?
The Mary Reynolds Babcock Foundation has launched a "Southern Voices" oral history project to capture the stories of Southern leaders working for social and economic justice. This special Earth Day...
View ArticleSustainability and hope
The Mary Reynolds Babcock Foundation has launched a "Southern Voices" oral history project to capture the stories of Southern leaders working for social and economic justice. This installment focuses...
View ArticleRemembering Appalachian folksinging legend Jean Ritchie
Born into a renowned Kentucky ballad-singing family, Ritchie went on to earn fame for preserving old songs and composing original tunes protesting the destructiveness of coal mining. She died earlier...
View ArticleFeeding a new economy: Local food systems in the South
From Appalachia to the Deep South, organizations are building local and regional food systems to boost rural economies and improve community health.Image: Works is underway across the South to use...
View ArticlePowering Appalachia's brighter future
An initiative to help states affected by the coal industry's decline has announced its first round of grants valued at $14.5 million. The bulk of the money is going to Kentucky and West Virginia, which...
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