APIEL serves as both a legal forum and space for collective visioning
KNOXVILLE — Now in its 16th year, the Appalachian Public Interest and Environmental Law Conference continues to be critical for environmental and public interest advocates across the Southeast. It is hosted annually at the University of Tennessee College of Law, and brings together lawyers, students, grassroots organizers, scientists, and policy experts to address some of the most urgent challenges facing Appalachia and beyond.
This year’s APIEL conference, set for Oct. 25-26, is free and open to the public and features a wide range of panels and workshops centered on environmental justice struggles that expose the interlocking systems of racial, ecological, and economic harm. One focus is the ongoing resistance to a proposed AI data center in Memphis, which threatens historically Black neighborhoods with toxic waste and unsustainable water usage.
Other highlights include a panel on the lasting effects of the Trump administration on the National Park Service and public land policy, a discussion of emerging “climate-washing” litigation targeting corporations making false sustainability claims, and a groundbreaking session titled “Abolition is Ecological.” This panel will explore how justice systems contribute to environmental violence, and how community defense strategies in places like Appalachia are reimagining what true public safety and ecological care could look like.
APIEL has long been rooted in the struggles of Appalachia — from the legal fights against mountaintop removal mining to the protection of clean water and air for rural communities. But the conference also continues to evolve, reflecting the region’s deepening connection to broader national and global concerns and movements. With an emphasis on interdisciplinary collaboration, APIEL serves as both a legal forum and a space for collective visioning, where solidarity is built not just across sectors, but across generations and geographies.
As the climate crisis accelerates and political divisions deepen, the 16th annual APIEL conference stands as a testament to the enduring power of community-led advocacy and place-based resistance. It remains a space to inspire, inform, and collaborate.
Admission is free and open to the general public. Attorneys seeking CLE credit will need to register and pay a fee.