ECONOTES : Leaders Who Go for the Green
- Share via
Six grass-roots heroes have been named Goldman Environmental Prize winners and will receive trophies and $60,000 in ceremonies today in San Francisco. The awards, founded five years ago by the Goldman Environmental Foundation, are the world’s largest for environmental work. The winners:
* North America: Matthew Coon Come, 38, the Grand Chief of Canada’s Cree Tribe who has led an international struggle against the James Bay hydro-electric dam project that would have destroyed the Cree’s way of life.
* Europe: Ildiko Schucking, 34, a German primatologist who leads an effort to redirect World Bank policies toward sustainable development.
* Island Nations: Andrew Simmons, 34, a teacher on St. Vincent in the Caribbean, who founded a community organization that involves youth in protecting natural resources.
* Africa: Laila Kamel, 46, of Cairo, volunteer director of an environmental organization whose work with large-scale recycling programs has provided both income and educational opportunities for unskilled workers.
* South America: Luis Macas, 43, a Quechua Indian from the Andean highlands who, in 1992, negotiated a land transfer of 3 million rain forest acres back to indigenous control.
* Asia: Tuenjai Deetes, 42, a Thai woman who worked with minority hill tribes to develop self-sustaining communities while restoring a major watershed.
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.