Resurgence & Ecologist magazine
Resurgence & Ecologist magazine addresses the environmental, social, and spiritual challenges and opportunities of our time. It provides a voice for change that is driven not by fear, but by a love of the Earth and its many life forms. Recognising the interconnectedness of the crises we face; it seeks to inform and inspire a just and thriving future for all.
This beautifully illustrated, trailblazing magazine connects readers with a diversity of visionaries, exploring nature and ecology, food and farming, spiritually and philosophy, social and environmental justice as well as ethical living, wellbeing, and the arts - an eclectic mix that cannot be found anywhere else. Past contributors include Vandana Shiva, Phillip Pullman, Caroline Lucas, Deepak Chopra, Mya-Rose Craig, Thich Nhat Hanh, Louisa Adjoa Parker, Michael Morpurgo, Polly Higgins, George Monbiot, Isabella Tree, Noam Chomsky, and Gail Bradbrook...the list goes on.
Each much-loved, bi-monthly issues provides positive, progressive and alternative perspectives on the most pressing issues of today, whilst offering visions of a regenerative and harmonious future for all life. Fostering connection between mind and body, self and community, society and nature, Resurgence & Ecologist is an essential resource for all those that believe a better world is possible.
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Featured articles from recent issues
Returning intelligence to the living world
With the extraordinary advances of artificial intelligence, a vital question is emerging: what kind of intelligence truly sustains life on Earth? Helena Norberg-Hodge argues that unless we transform the economic system underpinning technological development, AI will exponentially increase today's crises.
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Our right to roam
Suyin Haynes reviews Our Land, a timely documentary examining who owns England’s countryside, who gets to access it, and how campaigners are challenging centuries-old systems of exclusion in pursuit of a more equitable relationship with land.
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Arbour art
Lucy Shrimpton considers the message of hope in Echo Wood, Luke Jerram's living sculpture in Somerset, England. The artwork, described as a living Stonehenge, will take a century to emerge as the planted saplings grow into a perfectly circular woodland.
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Coming into relationship with Earth
Sui Searle invites us to reflect on the story of separation that runs through our culture. In recognising how language shapes our relationship with Earth, we can embrace a conversation about story, animacy and the possibility of living in deeper relationship.
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The giving imperative
Edward Davey considers the urgent role for philanthropy in the global effort to protect and restore the natural world and stabilise the climate. As government funding diminishes, there is a greater reliance on private funders to support this vital work.
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Voices in common
During a year-long artistic commission, Craig Jordan-Baker explored the lives of New Forest Commoners and the ways their language connects them to an ancient landscape. He discovered a use of language that opened doors to a richer, more complex place.
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