Carl Anthony
Carl Anthony (born February 8, 1939) is a social and environmental justice leader, is an American architect, regional planner, and author. He is the founding director of Urban Habitat which primarily focused on the environmental movement to confront issues of race and class structure.[1] In addition, He is the founder and co-director of Breakthrough Communities, a project dedicated to building multiracial leadership for sustainable communities in California and the rest of the nation[2] and was the former President of the Earth Island Institute.[3]
Carl Anthony was born in a predominantly African American neighborhood, Kingsessing, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. His parents, Lewis Anthony (born William Edwards) and Mildred Anthony (née Cokine), sent Carl and his older brother Lewie to B.B. Comegys, an integrated elementary school in which only about a dozen of the 300 students were African American, rather than the neighborhood school called Alexander Wilson, which was only a block away from their home. They later went on to attend Dobbins Vocational School, where Anthony was enrolled in the carpentry and cabinet-making shop. His teachers were impressed by his drawings and suggested that he transfer to the architectural drafting homeroom, where he fostered his interest in architecture.[4]
Education
[edit]Anthony received a professional degree in architecture at Columbia University in 1969 to gain an understanding of architecture and ways to implement projects.[5] Upon his graduation, he was awarded the William Kinne Fellowship, a grant to enrich students' education through travel. Anthony visited traditional towns and villages in West Africa, studying the ways in which people utilized their few resources to shape their environments.[6] He returned from Africa in 1971 where he was offered a position as an assistant professor at California-Berkley College of Natural Resources where he resided for ten years.[5] After leaving Berkeley college, Anthony developed the Urban Habitat program.[5]
Urban Habitat (1989–2000)
[edit]Anthony served as President of Earth Island Institute from 1991 to 1998. In spring 1996, he was an appointed fellow at the Institute of Politics, housed within the John F. Kennedy School of Government, at Harvard University.[7] Alongside his colleague Luke Cole at the California Rural Legal Assistance Foundation, Anthony founded and published the Race, Poverty, and the Environmental Journal,[8] which was the United States’ first environmental justice periodical.[9] In 1989, Anthony founded Earth Island Institute's Urban Habitat Program with David Bower and Karl Linn,[10] the mission of which is to combine education with advocacy and coalition building to advance environmental and social justice in low-income communities in the Bay Area. He served as the initiative's Executive Director until 2000.[11] Anthony directed various projects of Urban Habitat which worked to promote environmental leadership in communities consisting of primarily people of color to challenge environmental stability throughout the lens of race and poverty.[5] Here are some examples:
- Bay Area Justice and Sustainability Project: developed and promoted a regional agenda for justice and sustainability while addressing planning policies that lead to inner city abandonment.
- Leadership Institute for Sustainable Communities: leadership training program for land use policies and practices.
- Transportation and Environmental Justice Project: advocated for changing the priorities of the Metropolitan Transportation Commission (MTC) and the Bay Area Air Quality Management District toward addressing the transit needs of low-income communities of color.
- Brownfields Community Leadership Project: worked with leaders of low-income communities of color in the Bay Area to ensure Brownfields redevelopment addressed their needs.
- Hunter's Point Environmental Health Project: trained residents and community leaders in Bayview Hunter's Point in environmental health, justice issues, and laws. Partnership with the Southeast Alliance for Environmental Justice and Golden Gate University Environmental Law and Justice Clinic.
- Parks and Open Space for All People: worked toward revitalizing San Francisco Parks System by focusing on the needs of low-income communities of color, ensuring that a diverse range of people could have access to the parks.[6]
Ford Foundation (2001–2008)
[edit]In 2001, Carl Anthony was selected to direct the Sustainable Metropolitan Communities Initiative (SMCI) which was a program created to give opportunity for disadvantaged communities. The Ford Foundation invested in community development corporations focusing primarily on predominantly lower-class African American neighborhoods. Anthony worked to reduce patterns of concentrated poverty in the United States while promoting conservation of natural resources by creating strategies to connect guarantees in a collaborative environment and have a community-based national learning network. In 2004, Carl Anthony was appointed the director of Ford Foundation’s Community Resources Development Union but left in 2008.[12]
Breakthrough Communities (2008–)
[edit]In 2008, Anthony co-founded Breakthrough Communities, a project of Earth House Center,[13] an advocacy nonprofit for regional equity and environmental and climate justice and is serving as the co-director.[14] Anthony also founded Six Wins, an initiative in the Bay Area addressing the mitigation of carbon dioxide emissions.[15]
The Earth, the City, and the Hidden Narrative of Race (2017)
[edit]Anthony's memoir, The Earth, the City, and the Hidden Narrative of Race, is a mix of personal, historical, and political ideals. Anthony included personal experiences as an architect/planner, environmentalist, and Black American with urban history, racial justice, cosmology, and the challenge of healing the environment from past damages.[16]. The memoir includes personal stories from living in Philadelphia post World War 2, his time as a student and civil rights activist in the 1960s, being a traveling student of West African architecture and culture, and pioneering environmental justice advocacy. He also discusses his experiences during the Civil Rights movement and how he became focused on environmental movement and social justice. His main points of focus are on architecture, agriculture, black towns, and urban housing. The memoir also provides insight into his research on the African Slave trade, civil rights movement, environmental degradation, urban gentrification, and grassroots organizations.[17]
Boards, commissions, and awards
[edit]- 1991–1997: President, Earth Island Institute[3]
- 1991–1993: President, City of Berkeley, Planning Commission[18]
- 1993–1995: Founder, President, EDGE, Alliance of Ethnic and Environmental Organizations of California
- 1993–1996: Chair and Principal Administrative Officer, East Bay Conversion and Reinvestment Commission
- 1995: KQED, Honoree, Black History Month
- 1995: San Francisco Foundation, Humanitarian Award
- 1996: Fellow, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University
- 1996–1997: President, Board of Directors, Alameda Center for Environmental Technology
- 1997: Josephine and Frank Duveneck Humanitarian Award
- 1999–2001: Co-chair, Community Capital Initiative of the Bay Area Alliance for Sustainable Development
- 2014: Certificate of Special Congressional Recognition by Congresswoman Barbara Lee
- 2015: UC Davis Community Engagement Award
- 2015: Trailblazer Award from the Sierra Club
References
[edit]- ^ "About Carl Anthony Architect, Environmentalist, Climate Justice Advocate". Retrieved 2024-10-29.
- ^ "Carl Anthony: Earth Day and Environmental Justice - Then and Now". www.reimaginerpe.org. Archived from the original on 2018-01-21. Retrieved 2017-07-10.
- ^ a b "UC Davis Center for Regional Change - Carl Anthony". UC Davis. Retrieved November 21, 2024.
- ^ Anthony, Carl. "Justice, Equity, Diversity, and Sustainability Initiative". Yale School of the Environment. Retrieved 2024-11-19.
- ^ a b c d Anthony, Carl. "Justice, Equity, Diversity, and Sustainability Initiative". environmental-professionals-of-color.yale.edu. Retrieved 2024-11-16.
- ^ a b "CARL ANTHONY / The head of the Earth Island Institute's Urban Habitat Program is an environmentalist who strives to interweave the traditions of Martin Luther King Jr. and John Muir". SFGate. Archived from the original on 2016-03-07. Retrieved 2017-07-10.
- ^ "Carl Anthony: The Institute of Politics at Harvard University". iop.harvard.edu. Retrieved 2017-07-06.
- ^ "Carl Anthony - Mesa Refuge". Mesa Refuge. Archived from the original on 2016-11-05. Retrieved 2017-07-10.
- ^ NA, NA (2016-04-30). Activists Speak Out: Reflections on the Pursuit of Change in America. Springer. ISBN 9781349627592.
- ^ Yuen, Eddie; Bunin, Lisa J.; Stroshane, Tim (1997-09-01). "Multicultural ecology: An interview with Carl Anthony". Capitalism Nature Socialism. 8 (3): 41–62. doi:10.1080/10455759709358748. ISSN 1045-5752.
- ^ "Finding Aid to the Urban Habitat Program Records, 1970-2001". www.oac.cdlib.org. Retrieved 2017-07-10.
- ^ Anthony, Carl (2017). The Earth, the City, and the Hidden Narrative of Race. New Village Press.
- ^ "Carl Anthony: Earth Day and EJ Reimagine!". www.reimaginerpe.org. Archived from the original on 2024-06-08. Retrieved 2017-07-10.
- ^ "Board of Directors: Urban Habitat". www.urbanhabitat.org. Archived from the original on 2017-08-01. Retrieved 2017-07-06.
- ^ "6 Wins for Social Equity Network Urban Habitat". www.urbanhabitat.org. Archived from the original on 2017-07-30. Retrieved 2017-07-10.
- ^ "The Earth, the City, and the Hidden Narrative of Race". Mesa Refuge. Retrieved 2024-11-21.
- ^ Helfand, Judy (2020). "The Earth, the city, and the Hidden Narrative of Race". Racial Justice Allies.
- ^ "Carl Anthony has spent decades as pioneering activist". SFGate. Archived from the original on 2016-09-28. Retrieved 2017-07-10.
- African-American architects
- 1939 births
- American urban planners
- American male non-fiction writers
- Columbia Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation alumni
- Living people
- African-American activists
- Writers about activism and social change
- 21st-century African-American writers
- 20th-century African-American people