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Green Collar Jobs: Working in the New Northwest

by Alan Thein Durning

Jun 1, 1999
  • Community and Economic Development
  • Employment and Labor
  • Energy and Environment

  • DESCRIPTION

The typical job in the Pacific Northwest is gentler to nature than at any time in decades, thanks to the region's swift uncoupling from timber, mining, and other resource industries. But while jobs are greener, this new economy has a dark side: the gap between rich and poor has widened, and rising consumption is eroding the region's environmental gains. From Ketchikan, AK to Bend, OR to Boonville, CA, the question resonates: If we do what's right for the environment, what is everyone going to do for a living? Green-Collar Jobs takes a close look at timber towns in the Northwest--ground zero in the perceived battle between jobs and the environment.

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Green Collar Jobs: Working in the New Northwest

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WHAT TO READ NEXT

  • Green Speak: A Glossary of Terms used in Green Business
  • From Protest to Progress: Addressing Labor and Environmental Conditions Through Freer Trade - Executive Summary
  • Job Jolt: The Economic Impacts of Repowering the Midwest:

Published By

  • Sightline Institute (formerly Northwest Environment Watch)

Funded By

  • Ford Foundation
  • Brainerd Foundation
  • Northwest Environment Watch

Copyright

  • Copyright 1999 by Sightline Institute (formerly Northwest Environment Watch). All rights reserved.

Document Type

  • Text

Language

  • English
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Title: Green Collar Jobs: Working in the New Northwest
Publication date 1999-06-01
Publication Year 1999
Authors Alan Thein Durning
Copyright holder(s) Sightline Institute (formerly Northwest Environment Watch)
Document type Text
Language English
URL: https://www.issuelab.org/resource/green-collar-jobs-working-in-the-new-northwest.html
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