by Amy Lewis | Sep 8, 2020
In the 1960s South Africa of Apartheid, when non-white people were segregated and subjugated, our founders (Magqubu Ntombela and Ian Player) worked together in the wilderness and, with a team of many races and cultures, saved the white rhino from extinction.
by Amy Lewis | Jul 9, 2020
The danger now is that we merely try to get back on track and restore business as usual. What we ought to restore instead is wild nature and our respect for the natural world.
by Amy Lewis | Jul 1, 2020
by Amy Lewis | Jul 1, 2020
by Amy Lewis | Jun 26, 2020
The coronavirus pandemic is now sweeping across the Amazon. With no modern healthcare for this modern disease outbreak, the Yawanawá Tribes’ vulnerability increases daily. If we are to end the many environmental emergencies that we now confront, we must take care of nature’s best guardians.
by Amy Lewis | Jun 9, 2020
In the 1960s South Africa of Apartheid, when non-white people were segregated and subjugated, our founders (Magqubu Ntombela and Ian Player) worked together in the wilderness and, with a team of many races and cultures, saved the white rhino from extinction.
by Amy Lewis | Jun 9, 2020
Environmental justice depends on human justice. You cannot have a world that protects nature without protecting its people first. Black Lives Matter.
by Amy Lewis | Apr 22, 2020
Our backyards and neighborhoods are teeming with wildlife, whether you know it or not.
by Amy Lewis | Apr 13, 2020
There is a critical message trying to cut through the tragedy and turmoil of the pandemic, a message that needs to go viral
by Vance Martin | Mar 30, 2020
We have a Nature Emergency like never before experienced…we need a Survival Revolution like never before imagined.
by Amy Lewis | Mar 13, 2020
WILD Foundation’s COVID-19 Response At the WILD Foundation we work to keep Earth wild because we care about the health of both our planet and people. And that is why we are taking serious measures to respond to COVID-19. Earlier in March we made the difficult...
by Amy Lewis | Mar 2, 2020
The safety of our delegates and the larger community is our prevailing concern as the world confronts the emerging COVID-19 pandemic; with that in mind, we are postponing WILD11, the 11th World Wilderness Congress, which was scheduled to take place in March 2020.
by SusanCanney | Dec 11, 2019
by Crista Valentino | Nov 15, 2019
When we believe in something, it gains energy – but when we go to work on something, it gains power.
by Amy Lewis | Oct 25, 2019
Rapidly dwindling opportunities to act in time to end the Sixth Extinction and address the climate crisis leave many of us torn between what we think is likely about the future and what we think is possible.
by Daniel Meyer | Oct 16, 2019
There are many other ways to help support organisations and efforts that you care about, and sometimes they may actually bring you closer to the cause. We spoke with a few of our 2019 CoalitionWILD Ambassadors to collect their thoughts on ways to give that just might be more valuable than money.
by Amy Lewis | Jul 16, 2019
Announcing a new opportunity for the public to influence and take part in a growing international movement to defend Earth’s remaining wilderness: WILD11.
by Amy Lewis | May 9, 2019
Feel free to share this inforgraphic, Links to the left. Read Next Ceramics is a feminine spirit Blog, Featured, Talking WILDWILD’s Yawanawá Cultural Liaison Intern, Luna Rosa Soriano Yawanawá, took us behind the scenes of the ceramic pots creation process in her...
by Amy Lewis | May 9, 2019
This month, scientists working alongside the Nature Needs Half Network called for a Global Deal for Nature to help end the Sixth Mass Extinction. How is the WILD Foundation helping to make this international call-to-action an on-the-ground conservation reality?
by Geoff Tennent | May 9, 2019
Notorious G.I.B. Once, the Great Indian Bustard was an impressive sight throughout India and Pakistan. Standing around a meter tall, and one of the heaviest birds capable of taking flight, it commanded the attention of all who beheld it. It’s magnificence and ubiquity...