
Storie di attivismo

As we make a transition to renewable sources of energy, let’s not renew the same old mistakes.

The South Pacific has a plastic problem. He had a truck.

Protecting the ocean is what friends are for.

Shawn Hayes conduce una vita di devozione. Per lui, la falconeria è più di un profondo legame con i rapaci: è il lavoro della sua vita.

Was It Worth It? captures the essence of a life committed to the wild and challenges readers to make certain that their answer to this universal question is yes.

First-generation Vietnamese American Mai Nguyen follows in the footsteps of their agrarian ancestors with a farm that grows numerous types of grains with a no-till, anti-fertilizer regenerative approach.

A crossing of Alaska’s Baranof Island.

A Yup’ik philosopher on culture, awareness and identity.

Why a logging protest has become Canada’s largest act of civil disobedience.

The communities of Cajón del Maipo, in Chile, are seeing their environment be threatened by an unnecessary hydroelectric project.

An Italian town began emptying out. Then its inhabitants turned to renewable energy to save it.

Seguiamo il trail runner e attivista Felipe Cancino in una corsa di 120 km attraverso la valle del fiume Maipo, durante la quale si evidenziano lungo il percorso gli impatti del progetto idroelettrico dell'Alto Maipo sull'ecosistema locale, sulle sue comunità e tradizioni, nonché la minaccia che rappresenta per l'approvvigionamento idrico dei 7,1 milioni di abitanti di Santiago.

A firekeeper caring for Indigenous land.

This marine sanctuary in the Gulf of Mexico is one of many biodiversity hotspots in the US that need more federal protection.

An excerpt from Toxic: The Rotting Underbelly of the Tasmanian Salmon Industry.

An interview with Gabo Benoit, trail advocate and mountain-bike mayor of Coyhaique, Chile.

Campaigning for clean air might be a marathon, but progress is finally being made for communities in UK city centers.

There’s so much. An interview with the co-editors of All We Can Save.

Childhood friends, Hayley Talbot and Dan Ross, are determined to save a mighty river.

As the old-growth logging crisis heats up in Canada, a photographer goes searching for trees to save them.

Not totally relating to some forms of climate activism, Josh Wharton found his own way to contribute.

Nearly every Wednesday, Courtney Reynolds can be found elbow-deep in a bin of someone else’s castoffs, searching for scraps of fabric and colorful quilts to deconstruct and sew into original clothing items for her three preschool-age kids, or to sell in her online shop, Napkin Apocalypse.

We’re entering Earth’s sixth mass extinction, but clues about this climate crisis could be right under our feet.

John Murray’s lifelong work to permanently protect the Badger-Two Medicine from oil and gas drilling.

An unlikely community, in the most unlikely location, has become an even more unlikely force for public lands conservation.

Coal built this ski town. Can the locals keep skiing without it?

The next nine years will be a time of resilience, rebuilding and reinvention.

For 16-year-old Bosnian Ali Sarajlić, living without the free-flowing Neretvica River is unimaginable. That’s why he has joined, and in many ways led, the continuing fight against damming it.

Sheep (and their poop) could help California’s climate-driven wildfires. One couple is ushering in this idea with a small flock and some supportive fire departments.

Ten years after the Fukushima nuclear disaster, Japanese communities are turning toward citizen-led renewable power.