Comic books are not new to legal education, but the Center for Urban Environmental Reform (CUER) at the City University of New York Law School is trailblazing. Among the fabulous contributions to the recently publishedThe Media Method (CAP), a book about popular culture in legal education, is a chapter by CUNY Law Professor Rebecca Bratspies and her artist-collaborators, including Charlie La Greca. They are using comic books to reach kids, and, well, me, to talk about environmental conservation and climate change. They made a video, too, about the project:
When I saw Professor Bratspies at the SEALS conference in July, she gave me a copy of her most recent creation, Book 2 in the Environmental Justice Chronicles!: Bina's Planet. Suffice to say, it's another hit. No spoilers, but I was hooked from page one, when heroine-everywoman and high-school-soccer-star-alumna Bina returned to her school-stadium pitch, where, implicitly, young women's soccer reigns supreme. She goes on to save the day with her colorful cohort, demonstrating en route best practices in youthful social activism à la Greta Thunberg or Xiuhtezcatl Martinez. I love that Bratspies elevated the tale to the planetary level, making it simultaneously descriptive of the supranational threat and artfully suggestive of trending science fiction by black women writers (see alsoTerra Nullius).
Bina's Planet is not yet online, but is available in paper
from CUER for public education projects. While you wait for mass
dissemination, catch up with Book 1, Mayah's Lot, available to download, or watch and listen online:
Incidentally, for a related CUNY workshop on the Freedom of Information Act in 2018, Bratspies, La Greca, et al., produced a pamphlet-sized special appearance of Mayah on the FOIA. I have a copy, but cannot find an image in circulation. I hope they'll put it online in the future.