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We’ve saved you a perch … and a magazine Let us know if you’d like us to reserve your next copy of Resurgence & Ecologist by taking out a membership to The Resurgence Trust. We’ll send you six issues a year, direct to your door, plus you’ll receive access to the full 50+ year online archive. You'll save money and we'll send you a free book. Buy a whole year for just £30 (UK, incl. delivery) Call us on 01208 841824 (Mon–Thu) Join online at www.resurgence.org/membership Use code X46 for How to Grow Your Food. Illustration by Axel Scheffler Join the conversation Videos: vimeo.com/resurgencetrust Podcast: resurgence.podiant.co Online group: tinyurl.com/resurgencegroup Twitter: @Resurgence_mag  @the_ecologist
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WELCOME Give and take A woman in Rome stands amid a crowd of people dressed against the cold, watching a platform with speakers brandishing megaphones. On her placard, glowing in brilliant blue and green against the dreary winter day, are the words “I’m with her” and an arrow pointing to a picture of the Earth. She was among millions of people from 24 different countries across the world who took part in the Global Women’s March earlier this year, an annual event organised to defend women’s rights, with a large focus on climate justice. Why focus on women? In the words of Mary Robinson, climate justice is a feminist issue. As Oxfam America writes, when drought or other disasters strike, they hit the poorest first and hardest, and “since women make up an estimated 70% of those living below the poverty line, they are most likely to bear the heaviest burdens.” On the flip side, when women are involved in decision-making in their communities and at national level, they can help create solutions to the climate crisis that benefit everyone. On 8 March the world will celebrate International Women’s Day. Resurgence & Ecologist is marking the event with our first-ever women-only edition, including contributors and illustrators. Catherine Early digs into the efficacy of reforestation as a climate solution, and Zion Lights explores the emotional impact of deciding not to have children for the sake of the planet. In Arts we read about the unconventional upbringing of Irish painter Pauline Bewick and the influence of the landscape on her and her artist daughter Poppy Melia. In Keynotes, Skeena Rathor writes about faith and the sacred act of rebellion. In Undercurrents, we pick apart the meaning of ‘decolonisation’ with a look at museums – including an interview with some actor-vists who are planning an ‘epic’ protest at the British Museum – and Kara Moses confronts the darker side of rewilding. The daffodils and crocuses of early spring have already emerged. I even spotted some in December. It’s a bitter-sweet reminder of the chaos the climate crisis is causing, but we can still act. We can – as another poster at the Women’s March said – “be better than a bystander”. Marianne Brown Editor of Resurgence & Ecologist Issue 319 SIGN UP FOR RESURGENCE & ECOLOGIST IN PRINT & RECEIVE FREE iPAD ACCESS to the current issue and the Resurgence archive FREE DELIVERY of the printed magazine every two months Just £30 for six issues a year with a free gift for all new members. Find out more and join: www.resurgence.org/membership Resurgence & Ecologist is published by The Resurgence Trust, an educational charity. See inside back cover and our website www.resurgence.org for more information. Views expressed in these pages may not necessarily reflect those of the Trust. Resurgence & Ecologist 1

WELCOME

Give and take A

woman in Rome stands amid a crowd of people dressed against the cold, watching a platform with speakers brandishing megaphones. On her placard, glowing in brilliant blue and green against the dreary winter day, are the words “I’m with her” and an arrow pointing to a picture of the Earth. She was among millions of people from 24 different countries across the world who took part in the Global Women’s March earlier this year, an annual event organised to defend women’s rights, with a large focus on climate justice.

Why focus on women? In the words of Mary Robinson, climate justice is a feminist issue. As Oxfam America writes, when drought or other disasters strike, they hit the poorest first and hardest, and “since women make up an estimated 70% of those living below the poverty line, they are most likely to bear the heaviest burdens.” On the flip side, when women are involved in decision-making in their communities and at national level, they can help create solutions to the climate crisis that benefit everyone.

On 8 March the world will celebrate International Women’s Day. Resurgence & Ecologist is marking the event with our first-ever women-only edition, including contributors and illustrators. Catherine Early digs into the efficacy of reforestation as a climate solution, and Zion Lights explores the emotional impact of deciding not to have children for the sake of the planet. In Arts we read about the unconventional upbringing of Irish painter Pauline Bewick and the influence of the landscape on her and her artist daughter Poppy Melia. In Keynotes, Skeena Rathor writes about faith and the sacred act of rebellion.

In Undercurrents, we pick apart the meaning of ‘decolonisation’ with a look at museums – including an interview with some actor-vists who are planning an ‘epic’ protest at the British Museum – and Kara Moses confronts the darker side of rewilding.

The daffodils and crocuses of early spring have already emerged. I even spotted some in December. It’s a bitter-sweet reminder of the chaos the climate crisis is causing, but we can still act. We can – as another poster at the Women’s March said – “be better than a bystander”.

Marianne Brown Editor of Resurgence & Ecologist

Issue 319

SIGN UP FOR RESURGENCE & ECOLOGIST IN PRINT & RECEIVE FREE iPAD ACCESS to the current issue and the Resurgence archive FREE DELIVERY of the printed magazine every two months Just £30 for six issues a year with a free gift for all new members. Find out more and join: www.resurgence.org/membership

Resurgence & Ecologist is published by The Resurgence Trust, an educational charity. See inside back cover and our website www.resurgence.org for more information. Views expressed in these pages may not necessarily reflect those of the Trust.

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