nbc news:
heidi hutner is FEATURED at nbc news talking about clean and accessible water as a moral, civil and human right for all.
december 2017
Heidi Hutner, PhD, teaches, speaks, and writes about ecofeminism and environmental justice at Stony Brook University, where she is a professor. Until recently, Hutner was the director of the Sustainability Studies Program and Associate Dean in the School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences (for nearly six years).
Hutner is an active public speaker on environmental issues. She recently appeared on NBC News Think. She spoke about "Clean Water Rights."
Hutner gave her first TEDx talk, "Eco-Grief and Ecofeminism," in November 2015.
Hutner's writing has been featured at news outlets and magazines such as the New York Times, Ms. Magazine, Longreads, DAME, Tikkun, Spirituality and Health, Yes!, Common Dreams, Garnet News, and Proximity Magazine, as well as in academic journals, and books (Oxford University Press, University of Virginia Press, Palgrave, Rowman and Littlefield, and others). She has spoken on radio shows with Robin Morgan, The Green Divas, and Connect the Dots.
Hutner hosts the sustainability websisode: Coffee with Hx2. View her latest webisodes here.
Hutner is working on the environmental narrative nonfiction book, RADIOACTIVE.
Hutner is in production for a documentary film series based on RADIOACTIVE. To learn more about the documentary-progress, visit the website: RADIOACTIVE: The Women of Three Mile Island.
Her previous books include Colonial Women: Race and Culture in Stuart Drama (Oxford University Press, 2001) Rereading Aphra Behn (University of Virginia Press, 1993).





