![]() ![]() You can read the latest coverage and learn more about Down the Earth here. ![]() The series kicks off with a feature on the “30 by 30” target - a global push to conserve 30 percent of Earth’s land and water by 2030 - and how the Biden administration could advance both national and international biodiversity goals, as well as an explainer on Montana’s new war on wolves. ![]() The goal is to reach and engage people interested in taking positive action, interested in Indigenous people’s knowledge, experience, and interested in holding corporations accountable for environmental destruction. With this project, Vox aims to bring new audiences into this critical conversation: people just beginning to connect with the natural world around them, whether they live in cities or not people curious about non-human species and our relationship with them, but who don’t necessarily identify as animal/wildlife/nature lovers and people interested in solutions to climate change and other global crises. Led by senior science editor Eliza Barclay, editor Brian Anderson, and reporter Benji Jones, Down to Earth will zero in on the “now what?” by spotlighting the biodiversity crisis, uncovering underlying causes, and defining what’s at stake.īuilding on Vox’s award-winning 2019 Supertrees project, which uncovered connections between the biodiversity crisis and political and corporate accountability, Down to Earth will reflect an orientation toward reckoning and responding to the biodiversity crisis, with an emphasis on the systemic causes and a future-forward analysis of what substantive and meaningful solutions could be. The new initiative, supported by the BAND foundation, sheds light on this underreported ecological catastrophe through Vox’s signature explanatory journalism. Down to Earth, a new reporting initiative on the global biodiversity crisis, launched today on Vox. ![]()
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