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Climate Justice

In this week’s Climate Justice newsletter, we imagine the world anew. First, we continue our climate fiction offerings from Nonprofit Quarterly Magazine’s fall 2023 issue with a story about the restoring power of mycelium. Next, in another climate fiction story, we look to lessons of the past to create a blueprint for the future. Then, influencers encourage their social media followers to buy products—but what about deinfluencers? We trace the growing online anti-consumerism movement. Finally, amid a housing crisis, local officials must weigh whether it’s just or safe to build new homes in environmentally risky areas.


To My Gaea, a Letter You Will Never Read

 
“She grew rafts of mycelium that soaked up the water, expanding and enlarging until, slowly, they rose.” Read more…
 
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Elder Tek

 
“They knew which ecosystems needed tending at which times of year. They traveled the coastline doing this work, welcomed and celebrated by the communities that hosted them.” Read more…
 
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Deinfluencers Versus Climate Change

 
“Once fast fashion falls out of fashion—or falls apart—it ends up in landfills. And those cheap clothes are even worse for the environment than air travel.” Read more…
 


Should We Build New Homes in a Burning World?

 
“I don’t think developers and decision-makers are willing to acknowledge that we are living in a new era of extreme weather.” Read more…
 
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