A river between us.
Material type: FilmPublisher number: 1201765 | KanopyPublisher: [San Francisco, California, USA] : Kanopy Streaming, 2016Description: 1 online resource (1 video file, approximately 91 min.) : digital, .flv file, soundContent type:- two-dimensional moving image
- computer
- online resource
- Klamath River Fisheries Restoration Program (U.S.)
- Watershed restoration -- Klamath River (Or. and Calif.)
- Watershed management -- Klamath River (Or. and Calif.)
- Fish habitat improvement -- Klamath River (Or. and Calif.)
- Hydroelectric power plants -- Environmental aspects -- Klamath River (Or. and Calif.)
- Dams -- Environmental aspects -- Klamath River (Or. and Calif.)
- Indians of North America -- Klamath River (Or. and Calif.)
- Dams -- Environmental aspects
- Ecology
- Fish habitat improvement
- Hydroelectric power plants -- Environmental aspects
- Indians of North America
- Water rights
- Watershed management
- Watershed restoration
- Klamath River (Or. and Calif.) -- Environmental conditions
- Klamath River (Or. and Calif.) -- Water rights
- United States -- Klamath River
- United States -- Klamath River Valley
Title from title frames.
Originally produced by Green Planet Films in 2015.
A RIVER BETWEEN US documents the largest river restoration project in American history. Nearly three hundred miles in length, flowing from southern Oregon to northern California, the vast communities of the Klamath River have been feuding over its water for generations, and as a result, bad blood has polluted their river and their relationships equally. The film examines the complicated history of this conflict: how anger, fear and distrust have undermined the Klamath’s communities for decades. Balancing the sheer beauty of the river’s surface with its underlying ills of injustice and inequality, the film focuses on the personal stories of a group of individuals who finally chose to put the past behind them and came together to create a historic water rights compromise for the good of all. Most importantly, this documentary provides the solution to ending this generations-old conflict: IN ORDER TO SAVE A RIVER, YOU MUST FIRST HEAL A PEOPLE.
Mode of access: World Wide Web.