Following a classroom study of the Flint water crisis, Meredith Brown meets and shares the stories of Flint residents at the Water Infrastructure Conference in Flint, Michigan in March 2017.
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Aqueduct-walking in the Mojave Desert
Sayd Randle hikes with a filmmaker along the Los Angeles Aqueduct as they meet the communities impacted by the water consumption of Los Angeles, California.
Where the River Fairies Are: A Quest on the Amazon River with the Pink Dolphins
Yiyuan Jasmine Qin traces the journey of the Amazon river dolphin, or the Boto, along the Amazon River as it winds through complex, intertwining stories of scientific research and conservation efforts, threats from overfishing and indigenous community development.
Leaving Paradise Behind
The dream of living on a remote, tropical island nearly killed Tom Moody. But in the end, it also saved him.
Salmon People
Who will the Salmon People of the Pacific Northwest be when there aren’t any salmon?
Searching for the ghost cat in Tajikistan: Part Three
Tara Meyer and her team conclude their search for the snow leopard in Tajikistan’s Hissar Mountains.
A Gurgle Beneath the Roar: The Grand Canyon’s Hidden Water
When it comes to water in the arid landscape, Laurel Hamers says we should be concerned about more than just the Colorado.
How a Southern Gentleman Became a Respected Environmental Leader and Radical
Gus Speth’s new memoir encourages a younger generation to pursue a more radical environmentalism.
Good Evening, Dasho Benji!
Hilary Faxon, second place winner of our 2014 Emerging Environmental Writers Contest, profiles the life and activism of a Bhutanese conservationist.
Nature Compensates
SAGE Magazine sits down with Peter Kareiva, Chief Scientist of The Nature Conservancy, to discuss why he see nature as resilient, not fragile. Photo by Kike Calvo.
Litterati: A 21st Century Solution to Litter
Inspired by his 4-year-old daughter, a Bay Area writer creates a virtual landfill with the vision of cleaner streets for us all.
Shutdown: Ignored
Ben Goldfarb (Yale FES ’13 and former SAGE Editor-in-Chief) finds that it takes more than a “Closed” sign to keep him out of National Parks during the government shutdown.