Addressing Outdoor Equity Myths About BIPOC Outdoors

Image featured photography from an outdoor program run by Pigtown Climbs - a community-driven organization in Southwest Baltimore that uses climbing and sustainable programming to promote equity, wellness, and connection to the outdoors. ​

Why Healing Everyday
Narratives Matter

This tool-kit was created in honor of Latino Conservation Week by Intersectional Environmentalist and Hispanic Access Foundation.

Researched by Diandra Marizet Esparza, Wen Li Yao, Karina Meza and Jessica Godinez
Designed by Lorenzo Jimenez

 

Key Summary

  • What is ‘Outdoor Equity’ and ‘The Nature Gap?’

  • Exploring if outdoor activities are easy to participate in

  • Exploring why we believe public lands are equitably accessible for all

  • Addressing why BIPOC find it challenging to find representation outdoors

  • How we need more representation influencing public land protection legislation

  • Shifting the narrative on modern science + conservation vs Indigenous wisdom

  • How to find orgs promoting Outdoor Equity near you

Diandra Marizet Esparza

Diandra Marizet Esparza is an environmental justice advocate, community cultivator, operational strategist and writer whose work resides where culture meets environmentalism to support equitable systems for people + planet. She is the Executive Director of Intersectional Environmentalist, and contributing writer to “The Intersectional Environmentalist: How to Dismantle Systems of Oppression to Protect People + Planet”.

https://diandramarizetesparza.com/
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An Intersectional Approach to Earth Day