When Alice Morrison was growing up in suburban Louisville, Kentucky, her mother taught her to grow tomatoes in the garden. It was…
Nick Engelfried
From late November through early March of this year, visitors to the University of Washington Career Center in Seattle would have found…
On Monday, people across the Pacific Northwest convened online and at two in-person gatherings for a “people’s hearing” on what has become…
When I became a climate organizer in college in the early 2000s, the words “youth climate movement” referred more to something activists…
When over 40 Cambridge students and academics occupied the elite U.K. university’s BP Institute earlier this year, they were escalating one of…
Instead of succumbing to the challenges of the past few years, young climate activists are learning to adapt and build on their past actions
Simply teaching kids about the science of the climate crisis isn’t enough. To prevent feelings of disempowerment, they need to see how they can make a meaningful impact
Tired of waiting for progress as the world burns, climate activists are shaping the public narrative — through mass protest and targeted actions — to favor federal legislation.
With the Line 3 and Dakota Access pipelines threatening Indigenous land, youth from the Standing Rock and Cheyenne River Sioux tribes ran 2,000 miles to deliver a powerful message to the new administration
From frontline battles to large national mobilizations, tar sands resistance developed new tactics and organizing strategies