Some things are beyond measure and beyond price. No amount of money is enough to compensate for the loss of the sacred.
The pace of reaction to the global climate emergency is increasing, and vulnerable states in the global south are often in the lead.
Calling the natural world ‘it’ absolves us of moral responsibility and opens the door to exploitation.
State politicians are governed by check-writers in the energy and telecommunications businesses, but cities are pushing back.
Unless we act to prevent it, we are likely to have genetically modified food on our supermarket shelves, soon.
The people of Sarayaku are a leading force in 21st century indigenous resistance, engaging the western world politically, legally and philosophically.
Artists from Egypt to Rwanda are working together to protect the Nile River Basin.
Climate change is set to trigger dangerously soaring temperatures this century, forcing many of humankind’s most vulnerable to migrate to survive. Yet the growing global obsession with border security will stifle their safe movement.
Those who come after us will wonder at how we were so blinkered, at why we took so long to change.
On the occasion of Global Divestment Day, a message that the climate movement is alive and well. People around the world are fighting for an economy that serves rather than hinders action on climate change.