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We Are Eating Ourselves to Extinction
The risks of a boring diet, discovering forgotten crops and more with Professor Marta Vasconcelos...
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Interviews
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How To Beat The Heat?
Nadja Kabisch on nature-based solutions, urban heat mortality and the justice questions hiding in our city maps...
Jun 18
3
Are We Slowly Poisoning Ourselves?
Jeanne Nel on the false choice between agriculture and human wellbeing, nature finance and the power many don't know we have...
Jun 11
2
1
It's Overproduction, Not Overpopulation
Timothée Parrique on what food production looks like inside a global economy that respects its own limits...
Jun 5
1
3
We Warned Them in 2000. They Didn't Listen.
Pim Martens on the delay between science and action, the limits of evidence and why our economic paradigms are obstacles to change...
May 20
6
4
6
Why Policymakers Should Spend Four Nights in the Jungle
Conor Kretsch on what our relationship to nature means for health outcomes...
May 12
1
3
2
On the Ground
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I Remember the River: how to grow food in a European desert?
In southern Spain, farmers and scientists are working to restore life to a desertifying landscape. Can they reverse decades of damage before tipping…
Feb 24
3
1
A Clean Plate: where have all the insects gone?
In north-east Scotland, a group of farmers are trying to figure out how to restore missing insects and birdlife on their land...
Feb 17
2
1
A Future of Forbidden Fruit?
In southern France, a group of growers are exploring ways to save historic apple orchards from a changing climate and changing rules. Can science and…
Feb 10
1
1
What Happens When Nature is Manmade?
Can Dutch farmers establish a new relationship with nature on land reclaimed from the sea?
Feb 3
2
2
Food for Thought
David Attenborough is an Anthropologist. And that’s ok.
On his 100th birthday we explore how the celebrated and criticised naturalist has actually transformed our view of nature, by looking at it like it's…
May 8
1
2
Sustainable Farming Needs Landscapes
Five reasons why people are beginning to take a bird’s eye view…
Apr 21
4
5
The Iran War Food Shock is Coming. What Will We Learn From It?
Five impacts of the crisis and what they're revealing about how we feed ourselves...
Mar 31
2
3
From the frontiers of sustainable food.
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Recent posts
View all
How To Beat The Heat?
Nadja Kabisch on nature-based solutions, urban heat mortality and the justice questions hiding in our city maps...
Jun 18
3
Are We Slowly Poisoning Ourselves?
Jeanne Nel on the false choice between agriculture and human wellbeing, nature finance and the power many don't know we have...
Jun 11
2
1
It's Overproduction, Not Overpopulation
Timothée Parrique on what food production looks like inside a global economy that respects its own limits...
Jun 5
1
3
We Warned Them in 2000. They Didn't Listen.
Pim Martens on the delay between science and action, the limits of evidence and why our economic paradigms are obstacles to change...
May 20
6
4
6
Why Policymakers Should Spend Four Nights in the Jungle
Conor Kretsch on what our relationship to nature means for health outcomes...
May 12
1
3
2
David Attenborough is an Anthropologist. And that’s ok.
On his 100th birthday we explore how the celebrated and criticised naturalist has actually transformed our view of nature, by looking at it like it's…
May 8
1
2
Sustainable Farming Needs Landscapes
Five reasons why people are beginning to take a bird’s eye view…
Apr 21
4
5
From Mayans to Modernity: the challenge of sustainable food is older than we think
Biogeochemist Julia LeNoe on the hidden factors shaping our food system...
Apr 15
1
2
The Iran War Food Shock is Coming. What Will We Learn From It?
Five impacts of the crisis and what they're revealing about how we feed ourselves...
Mar 31
2
3
"We Have Become a Geological Superpower": Mark Maslin on the Anthropocene, Food and the Future
The climate scientist and author on why farmers are custodians of our land, the power of talking about climate change, and why the future isn't…
Mar 24
3
3
What Farmers Know: Ethnobotany and the Value of Local Knowledge
Dr Christoph Schunko on wild plants, participatory research, and why scientists need to listen to farmers
Mar 17
2
Systems Change Is as Big as It Sounds!
An interview with Dr Caroline van Leenders, on bridging the gap between managing nature on the ground and within financial structures.
Mar 10
1
1
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