Knowledge, wisdom, and insight from a gathering of communities, movements, and entities that protect and restore the living world and its cultures.
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Scientists just opened the world’s first Deep Soil Ecotron at the University of Idaho, where they haul up intact cores from as deep as 10 feet to study layers that most researchers have long ignored. These ancient soils store 30 to 60 percent of global soil organic carbon in a remarkably stable form, along with unique microbes, hidden nitrogen, and water reserves that could help crops survive droughts, heat waves, and wild weather swings. By cranking up simulated storms and dry spells inside massive steel cylinders, the team is learning how to keep that carbon locked away and give farmers smarter tools for a warmer future.
Courtesy of Land Art Generator Initiative (LAGI)
In the Yasawa Islands of Fiji, Marou Village is powering ahead with its own solar future. The community-led “The O” pavilion will generate clean electricity for all 67 households and harvest rainwater. Selected through the Land Art Generator Initiative competition, this innovative design doubles as an economic and cultural hub. With construction starting in early 2027, the village is shaping a sustainable, self-reliant tomorrow that blends modern technology with traditional values.
In Madagascar’s remote coastal villages, women with little formal schooling are becoming solar technicians through Barefoot College’s four-month program, backed by WWF and local partners. They’ve already wired up hundreds of homes, swapping risky candles and pricey batteries for clean light. Kids now study after dark, families prep more fish for market, and communities feel safer and more prosperous. It’s a shining success story of empowerment, education, and real economic wins.
robertharding | Alamy
Thirty years after Booderee National Park was handed back to its traditional owners, the Wreck Bay Aboriginal Community Council is ready to take full control. Come May 2028, they will manage the Jervis Bay gem independently of Parks Australia, becoming the first of Australia’s three jointly run Indigenous parks to go solo. Announced amid cultural celebrations featuring dances, a smoking ceremony, and a new oral history book, this marks a triumphant step toward self-determination.
Black and Indigenous communities across the United States are establishing intentional ecovillages to reclaim land and foster self-reliance. In California the Black to the Land project stewards nearly 190 acres of off-grid farmland for healing and cultural connection. In Alabama, the Mvskoke people have reacquired thousands of acres of ancestral territory to revive traditional practices and language. These efforts counter gentrification, promote sustainability, and create spaces for intergenerational wellness.
In Kenya, where more than 85 percent of the population identifies as Christian, faith is emerging as a significant force for environmental protection. This commentary challenges long held narratives blaming Christianity for ecological harm, such as impacts on Maasai sacred forests. It spotlights positive efforts by groups like A Rocha Kenya safeguarding the Dakatcha Woodland and Creation Stewards International promoting sustainable livelihoods, alongside the Anglican Church naming 2026 the year of care for the environment.
Helen Sessions / Alamy
Interior Salish women in British Columbia are reclaiming traditional cultural burning practices to manage wildfires and protect their homelands. Leaders including Jaci Gilbert, Sheresa Brown, and Leona Antoine are integrating Indigenous knowledge into modern firefighting, overcoming gender barriers, and advocating through the Salish Fire Keepers Society. Recent gatherings and legal changes support their efforts to restore fire-dependent ecosystems and preserve culturally modified trees for future generations.
Image Courtesy of Luis Arranz
Spanish conservationist Luis Arranz has embraced what he calls an impossible mission as he works to turn around the fortunes of Salonga National Park in the Democratic Republic of Congo. At age 70, the veteran leader is promoting ecotourism and sustainable agriculture to reduce hunting pressure in Africa’s largest tropical rainforest park, home to bonobos and forest elephants. His efforts include building infrastructure and habituating great apes to visitors while supporting local communities.
Network
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The Osprey Foundation
Sub-Saharan AfricaSupports market-based approaches that advance clean cooking solutions in underserved communities, particularly sub-Saharan Africa. -
The Oxygen Project
Is a non-profit on a mission to ignite a global community of nature champions and drive collective action through campaigns, education, and storytelling. -
The Path to Freedom
Solidarity economy exchange to black women and entrepreneurs. -
The Path to Scale
The Path to Scale is an informal initiative that aims to scale-up global ambition to legally recognize the land and resource rights of Indigenous Peoples, local communities and Afro-descendant Peoples — particularly women — at least to a level necessary to achieve the 2030 global climate and biodiversity targets. -
The Pesticide Data Program (PDP)
The Pesticide Data Program (PDP) is a national pesticide residue monitoring program and produces the most comprehensive pesticide residue database in the U.S. The Monitoring Programs Division administers PDP activities, including the sampling, testing, and reporting of pesticide residues on agricultural commodities in the U.S. food supply, with an emphasis on those commodities highly consumed by infants and children. The program is implemented through cooperation with State agriculture departments and other Federal agencies. -
The Place of Wolves: Haíɫzaqv Wolf and Biodiversity Project
The Haíɫzaqv Wolf and Biodiversity Project is a collaboration between the Heiltsuk Integrated Resource Management Department (HIRMD) and State University of New York College of Environmental Sciences and Forestry (SUNY ESF), with support from the Woodland Park Zoo and Living with Wolves. The project studies the ecology, behaviour, and biocultural context of coastal wolves to inform conservation and governance in Haíɫzaqv territory and broadly. -
The Plant a Billion Trees Campaign (by The Nature Conservancy
InternationalA major forest restoration program with the goal of restoring and protecting forests across the planet to slow the connected crises of climate change and biodiversity loss. -
The Quivira Coalition
Works in coalition with ranchers, farmers, government agencies, and land stewards to foster resilience on working lands. -
The Ramsar Convention on Wetlands
InternationalIs the oldest of the modern global intergovernmental environmental agreements. -
The Regenesis Institute for Regenerative Practice
Offers transformational programs and support systems for practitioners working to create regenerative systems change, with a global community that is striving to bring human activities back into alignment with the ecological systems that source us.
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