For The Wild

  • Autor: Vários
  • Narrador: Vários
  • Editor: Podcast
  • Duración: 387:47:00
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Sinopsis

This weekly hour-long program is a forum for powerful conversations with the philosophers, scientists, activists, healers, artists and others who are leading the movements to restore our beleaguered planet to its natural balance. The show deals with the most urgent questions facing the next generation of Earth stewards. How do we reverse ecological damages and create a culture of regeneration? How do we confront the psychological challenges of an uncertain future, while healing the age-old wounds of alienation from nature?

Episodios

  • DUNE LANKARD on the Day the Water Died /86

    26/07/2018 Duración: 01h56s

    Dune Lankard has made a living demonstration of resource conservation over exploitation as better economics ~ to continue to catch fish means preserving what gives fish life. We cannot continue stealing from the future, and the bad economics of doing so are swiftly coming home to roost in climate change, environmental degradation, and the collapse of resources. Support the show

  • FAVIANNA RODRIGUEZ on Art & Migration Know No Borders/85

    19/07/2018 Duración: 59min

    Favianna invites us to explore the wisdom of nature and Earth relations as a lens through which to envision an alternative to the current immigration crisis. As climate change advances, the consequence of human migration will only become more pressing, Favianna invites us to explore the freedom in recognizing this beyond the extractive economical box.Support the show

  • ZAYAAN KHAN on the Place of Sweet Waters, Part 2 /84

    12/07/2018 Duración: 45min

    This week we are rejoined by Zayaan Khan to discuss water scarcity in South Africa. Local communities are experiencing a threshold being reached; a point of no return at which culture can change rapidly. Suddenly people become accustomed to the unthinkable —no showering! no laundry!— and they begin to ask, how could we have ever been so wasteful, so indulgent...Support the show

  • ZAYAAN KHAN on the Place of Sweet Waters, Part 1 /83

    05/07/2018 Duración: 55min

    Through discussion with Zayaan, we trace the ways that the white colonization of South Africa not only destroyed the complexities of the human-to-land relationship, but also continues to ignore the intricacies and connectivity of the landscape, leading to today’s dire drought. Further, we learn how South Africa is still living within the echo chamber of a shockingly repressive colonial system...Support the show

  • STEPHEN JENKINSON on Closing Time /82

    28/06/2018 Duración: 59min

    We are living through a time when there are more people, more creatures, more plants, more cultures, dying than ever before. The debts of generations past have accrued to us, but not the wisdom. Our inheritance of obligation, of reciprocity, has been broken and we are left with what is dying, but without any understanding of how to be with it...Support the show

  • ADRIENNE MAREE BROWN on Emergent Strategy⌠ENCORE⌡/68

    21/06/2018 Duración: 51min

    At the heart of Emergent Strategy is moving towards life and learning from the wisdom of nature to drive our social movements. Emergent Strategy asks us to think about spirituality and transformative justice as central to the resilient future we are imagining together. Support the show

  • JACINDA MACK on the Planetary Cost of Luxury /81

    14/06/2018 Duración: 01h17min

    Jacinda Mack, leader of First Nations Women Advocating Responsible Mining is a mother, water protector and Indigenous woman striving to promote environmentally sound mining exploration and development processes that respect First Nations rights and grant them full participation. Support the show

  • TOM GOLDTOOTH on Climate Change Capitalism /80

    07/06/2018 Duración: 01h02min

    This week on For The Wild podcast we are joined by Tom Goldtooth, an Indigenous rights leader in the climate and environmental justice movement. He advocates for building healthy and sustainable Indigenous communities based on traditional knowledge foundations, and works within tribal governments to develop Indigenous-based environmental protection infrastructures.Support the show

  • RON FINLEY on Cultivating the Garden of the Mind /79

    31/05/2018 Duración: 56min

    This week, we speak with Ron Finley, an artist, designer and a South LA "gangsta" gardener who made the change he wanted to see in his own neighborhood. Together, we learn about how people power and community agitation can facilitate change. Support the show

  • ALEXANDRA MORTON on the Virulence of Farmed Salmon /78

    24/05/2018 Duración: 01h18min

    This week’s episode centers around the devastating impacts of salmon farming on the Pacific coast of British Columbia. This week’s guest, Alexandra Morton, is an expert in salmon farming and the viruses perpetuated by this destructive aquaculture practice– she has written 26 papers on the topic alone and is a leader in the movement to halt salmon farming off the coast of British Columbia.Support the show

  • IAN McALLISTER on Ferocious Conservation for the Last Wild Wolves /77

    17/05/2018 Duración: 58min

    This week we’re joined by Ian McAllister, co-founder and Executive Director of Pacific Wild, a non-profit located in the heart of the Great Bear Rainforest. McAllister is committed to defending wildlife and their habitat on Canada’s Pacific Coast. Support the show

  • ULRICH EICHELMANN on Saving The Blue Heart of Europe /76

    10/05/2018 Duración: 01h07min

    Ulrich is a German ecologist and conservationist who has been living in Vienna, Austria for 29 years. He worked for the World Wildlife Fund Austria for more than 17 years until 2007, being primarily concerned with river conservation and restoration. He has been campaigning internationally against the construction of hydropower plants, such as dams along the Danube and the Ilisu Dam project... Support the show

  • MALIK YAKINI on a Food Sovereign Future in Detroit /75

    03/05/2018 Duración: 58min

    Malik Kenyatta Yakini is an activist and educator who is committed to freedom and justice for humanity. Yakini is co-founder and Executive Director of the Detroit Black Community Food Security Network (DBCFSN). DBCFSN operates a seven-acre urban farm and is spearheading the opening of a co-op grocery store in Detroit’s North End. Support the show

  • JUREK LUBINSKI on Protecting Europe's Last Primeval Forest /74

    26/04/2018 Duración: 58min

    Jurek is one of the activists camped out with Camp of the Forest-a non-hierarchic, grassroots, no-logo camp based on equality. Theirs is a movement for everyone: “It’s not a movement of some radical fighters. It’s not a movement of young men or young women or any specific social, economical, age group, or gender group. It’s open for anyone, from any country around the world, who wants to come...Support the show

  • JEREMY LENT on Depatterning Wetiko /73

    19/04/2018 Duración: 58min

    This week’s interview is with Jeremy Lent, an author whose writings investigate the patterns of thought that have led our civilization to its current crisis of sustainability. His book, The Patterning Instinct: A Cultural History of Humanity’s Search for Meaning, published last year, explores the way humans have made meaning from the cosmos from hunter-gatherer times to the present day.Support the show

  • LEAH PENNIMAN on Land Based Liberation /72

    12/04/2018 Duración: 58min

    This week we are honored to host activist, farmer and educator, Leah Penniman. Leah lives in steadfast dedication to her mission of weaving the vast and vital threads of honoring heritage, building relationship to land and ending racism and injustice in the food system.Support the show

  • JANINE BENYUS on Redesigning Society Based on Nature /71

    05/04/2018 Duración: 58min

    Support the show

  • DAVID SHEARER on Last-Ditch Climate Ingenuity /70

    23/03/2018 Duración: 01h01min

    The advent of modern technology within deeply misguided institutions and cultures has accelerated the near-demise of the biosphere. Our guest, Dr. David Shearer, argues that coupled with a deep awareness of ecological realities, visionary technology can benefit nature and society, and perhaps even help avert a worst-case climate disaster. Support the show

  • RUE MAPP on Nature as the Great Equalizer /69

    15/03/2018 Duración: 01h01min

    Rue Mapp is pioneering a movement of equity and justice in the outdoor recreation and environmental movement. Outdoor Afro has become the nation’s leading network that celebrates and inspires African American connections and leadership in nature, letting people know that they are welcome in the outdoors to build community and find healing. Support the show

  • ADRIENNE MAREE BROWN on Emergent Strategy /68

    08/03/2018 Duración: 50min

    At the heart of what brown calls Emergent Strategy, is moving towards life and learning from the wisdom of nature to drive our social movements. Emergent Strategy asks us to think about spirituality and transformative justice as central to the resilient future we are imagining together, urging us to really show up, for ourselves and one another...Support the show

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