Restorative Justice, Nuclear Impacts on Indigenous Communities & The Future of New Mexico in Focus
This week on New Mexico in Focus, executive producer Jeff Proctor talks with Trip Jennings, executive director of New Mexico In Depth, and Emma Green, program coordinator with the state’s Public Education Department, about a pilot program aimed at reducing student expulsions. Jeff asks how the plan takes a new approach to school discipline and is rooted in a philosophy called “restorative justice.”
In Focus correspondent Antonia Gonzales speaks with Navajo anti-nuclear activist Leona Morgan to discuss how the state’s history of uranium mining and nuclear testing has caused irreparable damage to Indigenous communities across New Mexico. Morgan also talks about her thoughts on Christopher Nolan’s film, “Oppenheimer,” and how it ignores that history.
In a segment we first aired in December, Our Land Senior Producer Laura Paskus and Mike Eisenfeld of the San Juan Citizens Alliance showcase how industrialization near the Chaco Park area persists — even with the federal government’s decision in June to put in some protections for a 10-mile zone around the park.
Finally, Jeff and senior producer Lou DiVizio talk about the future of New Mexico in Focus as the show moves forward following the departure of host Gene Grant.
Host: Lou DiVizio
Segments:
NM Public Schools Continue Restorative Justice Pilot Program
Correspondent: Jeff Proctor
Guests: Trip Jennings, executive director, New Mexico In Depth
Emma Green, program coordinator, New Mexico Public Education Department
Nuclear Impacts on Indigenous Communities in NM
Correspondent: Antonia Gonzales
Guest: Leona Morgan (Diné), anti-nuclear activist
Beyond the Park: Industrialization of the Greater Chaco Landscape
Correspondent: Laura Paskus
Guest: Mike Eisenfeld, Energy and Climate Program Manager, San Juan Citizens Alliance
Looking Ahead Toward the Future of New Mexico in Focus
Correspondents: Lou DiVizio & Jeff Proctor