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In this quarterly reflection, Maurice Brungardt examines Louisiana’s coastal crisis and the recent Supreme Court ruling involving Chevron through a lens rarely applied to environmental litigation: culture as institutional infrastructure. Drawing from conversations with diplomats, artists, military leaders, educators, and civic figures featured on Brungardt Law’s Lagniappe, this episode explores how wetlands, fisheries, neighborhoods, rituals, music, food, and collective memory form part of the social architecture that sustains communities over generations.
Rather than approaching the Chevron litigation solely as a legal or environmental dispute, this reflection asks a broader question: what happens when extraction outpaces stewardship? Through insights shared by guests including Jamar Pierre, Raelle Myrick Hodges, Sophia Riggio, Ambassador Luis Moreno, Tim Davis, Harry Thomas, Linda Taglialatela, and others, the discussion examines how culture preserves resilience, identity, institutional trust, and civic continuity in times of disruption.
This reflection discusses the intersection of environmental degradation, institutional legitimacy, economic development, leadership, and long-term societal resilience. It considers how strong societies depend not only on physical infrastructure, but also on preserving the human relationships and cultural systems rooted in place.
By Maurice A. Brungardt"Send a text sharing your thoughts about the episode."
In this quarterly reflection, Maurice Brungardt examines Louisiana’s coastal crisis and the recent Supreme Court ruling involving Chevron through a lens rarely applied to environmental litigation: culture as institutional infrastructure. Drawing from conversations with diplomats, artists, military leaders, educators, and civic figures featured on Brungardt Law’s Lagniappe, this episode explores how wetlands, fisheries, neighborhoods, rituals, music, food, and collective memory form part of the social architecture that sustains communities over generations.
Rather than approaching the Chevron litigation solely as a legal or environmental dispute, this reflection asks a broader question: what happens when extraction outpaces stewardship? Through insights shared by guests including Jamar Pierre, Raelle Myrick Hodges, Sophia Riggio, Ambassador Luis Moreno, Tim Davis, Harry Thomas, Linda Taglialatela, and others, the discussion examines how culture preserves resilience, identity, institutional trust, and civic continuity in times of disruption.
This reflection discusses the intersection of environmental degradation, institutional legitimacy, economic development, leadership, and long-term societal resilience. It considers how strong societies depend not only on physical infrastructure, but also on preserving the human relationships and cultural systems rooted in place.