Rio Tinto might be considering selling off its share of operations at a massive ilmenite mine in Madagascar this week. But will it walk away from its history of contaminations?
Our preconceptions are often challenged when we engage with people cross-culturally. What might we discover if we turn that same curiosity to the ancient past?
'Jane Goodall modelled a civic practice that the world urgently needs to scale: persistent, emotionally intelligent engagement with both science and society.'
Conservation must move beyond protection to kinship, restoring our reciprocal relationship with the living world to heal both people and our living planet.
Rio Tinto might be considering selling off its share of operations at a massive ilmenite mine in Madagascar this week. But will it walk away from its history of contaminations?
'Earth Songs' celebrates nature’s wonders, highlights the impacts of consumerism on ecosystems, and draws attention to the many crises facing the Global South.
David Finnegan has found a way to combine science and the arts to help climate researchers engage better with stakeholders and also create compelling drama.
Farmers and grassroots collectives are reviving traditional seeds to reclaim autonomy, rebuild the soil, and resist both ecological collapse and political violence in war-torn northeastern Syria.
The war between Lebanon and Israel has officially ended yet Israeli strikes continue. The unprecedented destruction poses risks to health and the environment.
Relentless Israeli bombardments have devastated Lebanon for over a year, killing more than 4,000 people. These attacks also inflict lasting damage on nature and farmland.
Sir Keir Starmer has presided over a government that so far has failed to address the climate emergency and social inequality. This is the last chance for course correction.
Engaged academics and high-level strategists from the climate movement met to discuss movement strategy during a European heatwave last June. They released their summary report today.
Book Review: The Green New Deal from Below: How Ordinary People are Building a Just Climate-Safe Economy, by Jeremy Brecher, University of Illinois Press, 2025.
The threat posed to nature and society by the massive expansion of industrial, fossil fuel economies was discussed by a generation of authors 60 years ago. What can they teach us today?
Wisdom only begins when we let in the grief and rage of understanding climate breakdown. Can we find radical hope in the face of social collapse around the world?