Articles

  • Dec 6, 2024 | theunion.com | Susan Clark

    It’s funny how all the Trumpers now want to be friends with the liberals that they have denounced for so many years. I for one am not going to sit around the campfire and sing Kumbaya with you, Terry. I’ve eliminated every person from my personal life who likes Trump. I don’t miss them. If you voted for Trump, you don’t care about people I love being unsafe; you don’t care about women and you don’t care about minorities. You don’t care about the climate or the earth.

  • Nov 14, 2024 | myemail.constantcontact.com | SATISH KUMAR |Satish KUmar |Vandana Shiva |Susan Clark

    As we approach the festive season, we invite you to reflect on the give and take of Nature, the nature of giving, and the giving of Nature. We revisit articles from the Resurgence archive on Satish Kumar's 8,000-mile pilgrimage, where he relied on the kindness and giving of others for food, shelter and hospitality. In light of these themes, Resurgence is thrilled to share a special festive offer for the ultimate Christmas gift.

  • Oct 23, 2024 | resurgence.org | Susan Clark |Yasmin Dahnoun |Jan Goodey |Beth Parkes

    In this issue of Resurgence & Ecologist, we explore the meaning and experience of deep listening. The more we listen, the more we learn from the stories we hear back. We introduce the pioneering work of Pauline Oliveros who recorded the ambient sounds around her deep in a cave, and who coined the term ‘Deep Listening’ as a practice.

  • Aug 23, 2024 | resurgence.org | Susan Clark |Yasmin Dahnoun |Roman Goergen |Natalie Bennett

    In this issue of Resurgence & Ecologist, we explore the myriad ways we are learning from Nature, and how much we still have to discover. Stephanie Boxall asks whether the built environment can ever be seen as part of Nature, in her brilliant Connected Life article ‘Building a relationship with Nature’. Opening our theme, leadership coach Nicki Davey shares how Nature and its teachings have become firmly and permanently embedded in her offerings to clients.

  • Jun 21, 2024 | resurgence.org | Susan Clark

    Although the ocean has helped slow climate change by absorbing heat and carbon, these changes are also hurting ocean life. The added heat changes the currents of the ocean and how the surface mixes with deeper water. This in turn affects how well nutrients move, which affects phytoplankton and all the life that depends on it.

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