Wild Earth 2, no. 3
Wild Earth 2, no. 3 about the Endangered Species Act, saving the Lynx, bioregionalism, and America’s last woodland caribou.
Wild Earth 2, no. 3 about the Endangered Species Act, saving the Lynx, bioregionalism, and America’s last woodland caribou.
Conservation areas within the Korean demilitarized zone generate new “natures” that are deeply political and enmeshed in evolving relations among humans and nonhumans, as seen using the example of migratory cranes.
This article looks at the proposed global biodiversity census, which aims to take inventory of every species on earth as a response to anthropogenic species extinction.
This paper suggests that the contribution of Buddhism to the issue of species conservation should be part of the conservation discourse.
This article looks at whether biocultural diversity be developed as a more totalising idea that is useful for historians.
Should environmental philosophers—or practical conservationists—focus their attentions on particular living creatures, or on the community of which they, and we, are part?
Eben Kirksey on how diverging values and obligations shape relationships in multi-species worlds.
The state of Western Australian makes its first serious attempt to protect its indigenous flora.
Between 1915 and 1961 a state-run trawling industry operated on the South-east Australian shelf targeting tiger flathead (Neoplatycephalus richardsoni) as its principal species…
There is an urgency and a fracture to Australian environmental history…