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Features
The Grammar of Being
How our use of language can define our relationship with the natural world.
— Issue #7 -
Features
Life’s Resilience: the Perspective of Deep Time
A palaeontologist reflects on historic extinction events and what we might learn from them today.
— Issue #8 -
Features
Future Proof
As climate change-induced extreme weather events ravage countries across the world, governments and planners are having to rethink infrastructure alongside cutting carbon emissions.
— Issue #8 -
Features
No Planet B
It’s December 2022, and the UN Biodiversity Conference, COP15, is finally happening.
— Issue #8 -
Features
Bathed in Light
The healing properties of the sun, thought to be a cure for tuberculosis, influenced Modernist medicine, literature and architecture.
— Issue #8 -
Features
Ancient Knowledge, Future Farming
The book, Country: Future Fire, Future Farming is a unified clarion call from two very different minds: Bill Gammage and Bruce Pascoe.
— Issue #9 -
Features
Conservation Politics
An international group of scuba divers and conservationists established a 43-hectare marine sanctuary at Danjugan Island in the Philippine archipelago.
— Issue #9 -
Features
Slow Fruit
Over the centuries we have lost an estimated 13,000 varieties of apple, along with countless family orchards.
— Issue #9 -
Features
Edible Education
The benefits of nutritious free school meals can impact and elevate whole communities
— Issue #9 -
Features
Biodynamic by Nature
André Tranquilini is the estate manager at Waltham Place, a 220 acre organic and biodynamic farm and garden in Berkshire, UK. He is a founding member of the biodynamic seed company, Living Seeds.
— Issue #9 -
Features
Occupation Kitchen
How the kitchen of an occupied building in São Paulo, Brazil, became part of a social justice movement to provide food, shelter, cultural activities and job opportunities.
— Issue #9 -
Features
No Word for Nature
Forced off their land and bearing the brunt of climate change, Inuit people are fighting to maintain their cultural traditions.
— Issue #10 -
Features
Nature in the Digital Age
Modern technology promises to bring us closer to each other and to nature, but is this an illusion?
— Issue #10 -
Features
Understanding Antarctica
As the polar regions reach record temperatures, two young climate justice activists head to Antarctica to experience the changes first hand.
— Issue #10 -
Features
The Sámi Narrative
Sámi people have an ancient reciprocal relationship with reindeer and the landscapes of the European Arctic. Against the backdrop of a warming world, their way of life is under threat.
— Issue #10 -
Features
Portal to the Past
Fewer than 20 people speak Yakuunte. With the help of her centenarian grandfather, Juliana Lorisho is determined to keep the tribal language and traditions of the Yaaku people alive.
— Issue #10 -
Features
Wild Arrows
An ongoing series of films combines Indigenous knowledge with western scientific and philosophical perspectives to show the wonder of the interconnected world.
— Issue #11