Championing Environmental Justice
McCartney is majoring in Culture and Politics (CULP), where the interdisciplinary focus and emphasis on the intersection of power, knowledge, and culture has allowed him to focus on an issue he’s championed while at Georgetown: environmental justice. After taking AP Environmental Science in high school, he was intrigued by the intersection of politics, science, innovation, and society. During his first year at Georgetown, McCartney traveled to Nairobi, Kenya for a weeklong UN Environmental Programme conference with a group of Georgetown students and faculty. On campus, McCartney got involved with the Georgetown University Student Association’s Sustainability Policy Team where he worked with University administrators on Georgetown’s bold new clean energy plans. He also took on the task of reinvigorating a student sustainability network, the Georgetown Environmental Leaders (GEL). McCartney wants Georgetown students to know that anyone can get involved in sustainability. “You can be a policy wonk who focuses on environmental policy, a consultant for clean energy, a lawyer in environmental law, an entrepreneur in renewable technology. It’s such an important topic that really demands we integrate sustainable thinking into every part of our life.”
The flexibility that the CULP major provides allowed him to take a range of courses with a wide variety of subjects. Classes at Georgetown, he says, provide a behind-the-scenes perspective unique to Washington, D.C.
“I’ve taken environmental law courses with a professor who held office hours at her law practice and national security courses with a professor who was on a first name basis with Jim Comey and Bob Mueller.”