
Keridwen Cornelius
Journalist and Editor at Freelance
Journalist/editor. Science, environment, travel, food. Words: @nytimes @SAPIENS_org @SciAm @ScienceMagazine @TheAtlantic @Medscape @BBC_Travel @outsidemagazine
Articles
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Jan 9, 2025 |
mwg.aaa.com | Keridwen Cornelius
If gray skies and biting cold have left you feeling blah, escape to places where “winter wonderland” means sunny skies and hiking through snow-free mountains in shorts. Desert destinations that hibernate in summer come alive this season, while coastal locales bask in crowd-free quietude.
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Dec 31, 2024 |
euro2day.gr | Keridwen Cornelius
Η Kate Raworth, που µεγάλωσε βλέποντας στην τηλεόραση πετρελαιοκηλίδες, καταστροφή του όζοντος και πείνα, βάλθηκε να σπουδάσει οικονοµικά για να συνεισφέρει στην εξάλειψη της φτώχειας και της περιβαλλοντικής καταστροφής. Όσο κατακτούσε το ένα πτυχίο µετά το άλλο στο Πανεπιστήµιο της Οξφόρδης, διαπίστωνε µε απόγνωση ότι η ευηµερία του πλανήτη θεωρούνταν συνυφασµένη µε την οικονοµική θεωρία που ερµήνευε ως µόνη πρόοδο τον ακατάπαυστα ανοδικό δείκτη του Ακαθάριστου Εγχώριου Προϊόντος (ΑΕΠ).
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Nov 27, 2024 |
clarin.com | Keridwen Cornelius
Kate Raworth, que creció viendo imágenes televisivas de derrames de petróleo, agotamiento de la capa de ozono y hambruna, dijo que estaba decidida a estudiar economía para ayudar a terminar con la pobreza y la destrucción del medio ambiente. Pero mientras estudiaba en la Universidad de Oxford, se sintió frustrada porque el bienestar planetario se consideraba tangencial a la teoría económica, que imaginaba el progreso como una flecha ascendente sin fin del producto interno bruto.
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Nov 25, 2024 |
nytimes.com | Keridwen Cornelius
Growing up watching TV images of oil spills, ozone depletion and famine, Kate Raworth said she was determined to study economics to help end poverty and environmental destruction. But while earning degrees at Oxford University, she became frustrated that planetary well-being was considered tangential to economic theory, which envisioned progress as an endlessly rising arrow of gross domestic product. Ms. Raworth likens it to an airplane that can never be allowed to land.
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Nov 25, 2024 |
nytimes.com | Keridwen Cornelius
The daughter of activists in the American Indian Movement and a member of the Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation in Canada, Eriel TchekwieDeranger grew up immersed in her community's fight to protect their lands and the animals they consider kin - caribou, bison, moose, water birds and fish. Her family camped in the boreal forest near the Peace-Athabasca Delta in Alberta.
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I wrote about ecofeminist art for the New York Times! It was a joy to talk to interesting women who have been working for decades toward a more peaceful, more eco-friendly, less patriarchal world. https://t.co/90DpsEql3R

Proud to spotlight Eriel Deranger of Indigenous Climate Action – which works to decolonize climate policy, support Indigenous-led climate justice, & listen to what the land needs – in the New York Times! https://t.co/rP2TEQ9M5V

Proud to spotlight Helena Norberg-Hodge of Local Futures – which aims to end the destructive insanity of the global trade system and strengthen local food communities – in the New York Times! https://t.co/HNmZxI9epV