Skip to main content

Char Miller

char-miller-kcet

Char Miller is the W.M. Keck Professor of Environmental Analysis and History at Pomona College, and among his most recent books are "Not So Golden State: Sustainability vs. the California Dream," "The Nature of Hope: Grassroots Organizing, Environmental Justice, and Political Change," "Public Lands, Public Debates: A Century of Controversy," and "Death Valley National Park: A History."

char-miller-kcet
Support Provided By
Opportunity, Montana Book Cover
Environmental injustice is easy to spot. It's harder to rectify.
Students from John Marshall High School remove invasive Smilo grass as part of the watershed restoration project in Big Tjunga Canyon. | Photo: Courtesy Edward Belden
The Angeles National Forest is L.A.'s biggest playground. We all need to pitch in to restore it.
meatless-monday-taco-recipe
How powerful is Big Ag on Capitol Hill? The Congressional Vegetarian Caucus would be glad to tell you.
Pueblo Bonito in Chaco Culture National Historic Park.
Our mad-dash rush to frack oil-and-gas threatens significant cultural resources.
Mike Taugher. | Photo: @miketaugher/Twitter
California lost a principled voice in support of environmental protection and open government.
Smoke from the Mountain Fire in the San Jacinto Mountains.
Creating defensible space around communities in fire zone seems a no-brainer.
Fern Lake. | Photo: Courtesy NPS
A fire in Rocky Mountain National Park raises questions about the U.S. firefighting policies.
Fighting the 1933 Griffith Park Fire
Yarnell Hill fire reminds that we don't need a new firefighting policy.
A section of the U.S.-Mexico border wall along the Imperial Dunes.
The U.S. Senate thinks the "Border Surge" will make the country more secure.
Protestors at a No on Keystone pipeline event in November 2012.
It took him awhile to get to the point, showing how tentative his proposals are, how carefully couched his prescriptions.
arches-national-park
How odd that in Moab one federal agency sought to preserve wild nature and another promoted the rapid exploitation of nature's rare-earth minerals to incinerate our enemies.
zion-national-park-virgin-river-bridge
Rocks, frogs, and humans find refuge in Zion National Park.
Active loading indicator