Mike Brune
Michael Brune is Executive Director of the Sierra Club, an organization formally allied with 350.org. Brune]] received special permission from his board to be arrested in a celebrity civil disobedience campaign at the White House in 2013. [1]
Previously he "joined the Old Growth Team at Rainforest Action Network (RAN) in 1998 to work on the Home Depot campaign. At that time, "old growth free" and "endangered forest free" were far from household terms in America. One year later, Home Depot, the world's largest home improvement retailer, became the world's first to make a public commitment to stop sourcing wood from old growth forests. Time magazine heralded it as the #1 environmental story of 1999. Subsequently, Michael negotiated old growth free agreements with lumber retailers including Lowe's and Menards and homebuilders including Centex Homes and KB Home.
"After his promotion to campaign director, Michael became the driving force behind RAN's campaigns to lead more companies like Kinko's and Boise Cascade out of old growth and endangered forests. His leadership has helped support the rights of indigenous communities from South America to Southeast Asia, preserve the Great Bear Rainforest of British Columbia and stop Citigroup from funding rainforest destruction.
"Prior to joining RAN, Michael worked as a campaigner for the Coast Rainforest Coalition and public outreach director for Greenpeace in San Francisco. He received a B.S. in accounting and finance from Westchester University." [2]
- Former Executive Director, Rainforest Action Network
- Steering Committee, Environmentalists Against War
- Selection Committee, 11th Annual Brower Youth Award [3]
Quotes
"I sometimes like to think of RAN as "hopeful skeptics"; we believe that corporations and governments can transform themselves, and can actually play an important role in slowing down climate change and protecting forests and the rights of their inhabitants. At the same time, we won't be fooled by double-speak and false promises of future action. This attitude is the motivation behind much of our work." [4]
Resources and articles
Related Sourcewatch articles
References
- ↑ Jeffrey St. Clair, The Post-Modern Protest Blues, Designer Protests and Vanity Arrests in DC, CounterPunch, April 12, 2013.
- ↑ Michael Brune, Policy Innovations, accessed October 18, 2009.
- ↑ Brower Youth Award Selection Process, organizational web page, accessed April 19, 2012.
- ↑ Interview, accessed October 18, 2009.