• Home
  • Random
  • Nearby
  • Log in
  • Settings
Donate Now If Wikipedia is useful to you, please give today.
  • About Wikipedia
  • Disclaimers
Wikipedia

Jacqui Katona

  • Article
  • Talk
  • Language
  • Watch
  • Edit

Jacqui Katona is a western-educated Aboriginal Australian woman who led the campaign to stop the Jabiluka uranium mine in the Northern Territory. In 1998 the Mirrar Aboriginal people, together with environmental groups, used peaceful on-site civil disobedience to create one of the largest blockades in Australia's history. Katona won the 1999 U.S. Goldman Environmental Prize, with Yvonne Margarula, in recognition of efforts to protect their country and culture against uranium mining.[1][2][3]

See also

edit
  • Energy Resources of Australia
  • List of Australian inquiries into uranium mining
  • Uranium mining in Kakadu National Park
  • Uranium in the environment
  • Women and the environment through history

References

edit
  1. ↑ Echoes from the Poisoned Well
  2. ↑ The Long Journey Home
  3. ↑ Wisdom Interviews: Jacqui Katona

External links

edit
  • Yes to land rights! No to uranium mining!
  • Anti-nuke protests
  • Indigenous Leaders Call For End To Uranium Mining


Stub icon

This article about an environmental activist or conservationist is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by adding missing information.

  • v
  • t
  • e
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Jacqui_Katona&oldid=1297282337"