Poetry
Articles and Prose
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Tess Croner in Rwanda
Hi FES! I’m writing after my first week in Rwanda, where I’ll be spending the summer—first as part of a study tour led by Amy…
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Ben Friedman in the City
Wednesday At Tempelhof ere I am at Tempelhof Airport in Berlin, Germany, one week after turning in my final Environmental Campaigns paper in New Haven.…
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New Haven Mayor Candidates Respond to Social Justice Questions at Public Debate
Six would-be mayors speak on wages, affordable housing, and other social concerns. But did environmental justice get short shrift?
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School of Forestry & Environmental Studies Summer Blog ’13
Every summer a small army of researchers and interns from the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies filters out into the world. This year…
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Cross of Gold: A Mining Company Arrives, and Guatemalans Fight Back
Adedana Ashebir sits down with filmmakers JT Haines and Andrew Sherburne during the world premiere of their documentary “Gold Fever.”
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A Very Human Struggle: The Making of a Different Kind of Documentary
Noah Sokol sits down with one of the co-directors of the new documentary ELEMENTAL, which screened recently at the Environmental Film Festival at Yale. They…
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Kiln Ground: Industry and Injury in Nepal
A profusion of industrial kilns in the Kathmandu Valley is driving migration, polluting air and rivers, and posing a range of health risks, especially to…
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A River Changes Course: An Interview with EFFY Filmmaker Kalyanee Mam
Kalyanee Mam, creator of the documentary “A River Changes Course,” sits down with Sage to discuss the global forces that are disrupting life in Cambodia.
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Review: Musicwood
Naomi Heindel reviews the opening night of the Environmental Film Festival at Yale.
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Testing the Elements
This is some dummy copy. You’re not really supposed to read this dummy copy, it is just a place holder for people who need some…
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Announcing Sage’s Second Annual Young Environmental Writers Contest
Hear ye, hear ye: send us your best environmental writing by April 19. Glory and riches may be yours!
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The Greatest Migration: As Rainfall Changes, Humans Pack Their Bags
When droughts and floods force subsistence farmers to migrate, what happens to the families who stay behind? An interview with Koko Warner, a United Nations…