Resurgence & Ecologist magazine Issue 357 • July/August 2026
The inner work of liberation

issue cover 357

In this issue we consider the inner work of liberation and what we mean by inner, what comes from within, and where that ‘within’ is.

Lyla June considers the intention we bring to every act – arguing that this inner work is the foundation for disciplined, loving, alliance-building organising. Helena Norberg-Hodge locates us in community, arguing that technology amplifies the values of the economic system it emerges from. The inner work she points to is collective: the restoration of intergenerational, place-rooted ways of being that the global system has steadily dismantled. Nani Jansen Reventlow places us inside the systems themselves – insisting that climate justice, reparations, digital rights and racial equality are all threads in the same tapestry. Liberation then is perhaps not a destination, but a practice.

In The Slow Read, an extract from Selah by Báyò Akómoláfé acts as a necessary friction – questioning whether even our inner work can become a form of what he calls “oughtism”: a rush towards familiar and tidy solutions.

Elsewhere, Herbert Girardet examines the deepening clash between the biosphere and the technosphere, Satish Kumar meets House of Hackney’s Frieda Gormley, and Anna Souter considers the life and work of artist Ana Mendieta.

Lucia Pietroiusti reflects on dropping her phone in the Mediterranean and what the following days revealed about the genuine complexity of our longing to unplug. Among the callings to garden our inner landscapes, to sit with our wounds, and to tend the cracks from which new ways of being might emerge, there is also, quite simply, a phone in a bowl of rice – and the unexpected freedom that followed.

Featured articles

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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Images from Resurgence and Ecologist Magazine issue 357

Inside this issue

Article is free for all to view

Welcome

The work beneath the work

What lies within?

Regulars

Noticeboard

Highlighting stories for change

The inner work of liberation

The garden and the fire

Tending to our inner landscape may be the most urgent work of our time

Returning intelligence to the living world

The vital question emerging from advances in artificial intelligence

Overcoming the overwhelm

Human rights lawyer Nani Jansen Reventlow on the roles we can each play in activism

The slow read

Selah: a series of ecstatic irruptions

Exploring the philosophical musings from Selah: A Báyò Akómoláfé Reader

Ecologist

Counting the cost

Examining the clash between the biosphere and the technospere

Earth's green miners

New possibilities for ecological restoration through the power of plants

Connected life

Soil: the thread that weaves

Cycling across three continents to champion healthy soils

From blueprint to greenprint

Frieda Gormley speaks to Satish Kumar about business models based on regenerative practice

Wisdom and wellbeing

The witch wound and the ecology of fear

Unpacking an inheritance of fear shaped by centuries of persecution

Your phone, in rice

Reflecting on our longing to return simpler ways of living

Art and culture

Harmony and violence / body and earth

How artist Ana Mendieta fused body, land and ritual into a radical vision of belonging to the Earth

Arbour art

Considering the message of hope within Luke Jerram's living sculpture Echo Wood

The poet as shapeshifter &

Pascale Petit draws on Amazonian myth, animal consciousness and the living presence of the rainforest

Reviews

Ecocivilisation in motion

Review of Ecocivilization: Making a World that Works for All 

The shifting global order

Review of Elemental: The New Geography of Climate Change and How We Survive It 

Our children's changing future

Review of Think Like a Forest: Letters to My Children from a Changing Planet 

Our right to roam

Review of Our Land

A promise of alchemy

Review of The Apothecary by the Sea: A Year in an Orkney Garden 

A timeless symbol of rebirth and connection

Review of Wildest Dream: An Imagined History of the Green Man