‘What am I gonna go home to? Water?’: The climate refugees settling in America’s heartland

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Editor’s note: This is the final chapter of a three-part multimedia project that spotlights the daily lives of Marshall Islands residents. Kim Wall, Coleen Jose, and Jan Hendrik Hinzel reported from the Marshall Islands and Arkansas in 2014 and 2015.

Ages, figures, and situations related to each character are tied to the on-the-ground reporting. However, some general information has been updated with dates noted in the text where necessary. Wall worked on this series until her untimely death on August 11, 2017. 

Even outside the factory gates, the smell of poultry is inescapable. In Springdale, Arkansas, never-ending truck convoys carry live chickens and turkeys by the thousands into factories to be plucked, butchered, and packaged for consumers nationwide. In one of those factories, Ferdinand Muller hangs the live birds by their feet onto a conveyor belt — one by one, 40 panicking pounds at a time, 400 times every 15 minutes, for 10 hours every day except Sunday. Read more...

More about Environment, Climate Change, Marshall Islands, Nuclear Justice, and Science

COntributer : Mashable http://ift.tt/2orvguV

‘What am I gonna go home to? Water?’: The climate refugees settling in America’s heartland ‘What am I gonna go home to? Water?’: The climate refugees settling in America’s heartland Reviewed by mimisabreena on Monday, February 26, 2018 Rating: 5

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