3 Leaders Who Spoke Up For Nature & What Happened After They Took A Stand
Most leaders need substantial societal support to take ambitious action for the environment. Here’s our list of trailblazers who are helping to pave the way for others.
2020 (bio)Diversity Interview Series: Rewilding Alliance
We asked WILD’s program directors to share with us their biggest hopes for our future and the obstacles they face. This week, we feature Magnus Sylvén and Karl Wagner.
The (Logging) Grinch that Stole Christmas and the Reindeer Forest
An existential threat looms over Sweden’s last old-growth forests, the reindeer that live in them, and the Indigenous Sámi people, whose culture and way of life are inexorably linked to forest and reindeer alike.
2020 (bio)Diversity Interview Series: Crista Valentino
We asked WILD’s program directors to share with us their biggest hopes for our future and the obstacles they face. This week, we feature Crista Valentino.
2020 (bio)Diversity Interview Series: Melanie Hill
We asked WILD’s program directors to share with us their biggest hopes for our future and the obstacles they face. This week, we feature Melanie Hill.
2020 (bio)Diversity Interview Series: Susan Canney
We asked WILD’s program directors to share with us their biggest hopes for our future and the obstacles they face. This week, we feature Susan Canney.
2020 (bio)Diversity Interview Series: Vance Martin
We asked WILD’s program directors to share with us their biggest hopes for our future and the obstacles they face. This week, we feature Vance Martin.
2020 (bio)Diversity Interview Series: Amy Lewis
We asked WILD’s program directors to share with us their biggest hopes for our future and the obstacles they face. This week, we feature Amy Lewis.
The Story for Our Future
The Story for Our Future, the 11th World Wilderness Congress’ primary policy recommendation, is based on the guidance of leaders from all sectors of society and dozens of countries around the world, and is the latest and most detailed product of this global process.
EarthToday helps unite consumers with an Indigenous community to protect the Amazon
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.
The world needs to unite around ambitious targets to address the climate, extinction, & pandemic emergencies
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.
Protected: Protecting nature to foster local solutions to global challenges
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Protected: New Biosphere Reserve in Mali Becomes One of the Largest Protected Areas in the World
There is no excerpt because this is a protected post.
Defending Rainforests Starts by Defending People
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.
The worms do not care the color of your skin…
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.
We Stand with #BlackLivesMatter
Environmental justice depends on human justice. You cannot have a world that protects nature without protecting its people first. Black Lives Matter.
Do you know who your neighbors are?
Our backyards and neighborhoods are teeming with wildlife, whether you know it or not.
What do the commercialization of wildlife, climate change, and this pandemic have in common?
There is a critical message trying to cut through the tragedy and turmoil of the pandemic, a message that needs to go viral
What’s love got to do with it?
We have a Nature Emergency like never before experienced…we need a Survival Revolution like never before imagined.
11th World Wilderness Congress (WILD11) Postponement
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.