Aaron Swartz took his own life at the age of 26, after years of legal trouble over academic articles he downloaded and intended to share. He leaves behind a legacy of thinking about the power of the internet to shape our political lives.
Color like a butterfly, eat like an ancient healer, and other ways to rediscover your inner wildness.
Models for a healthy down-to-earth economy are all around us.
Sometimes Shannon Hayes finds herself missing the days before she was a mother. But the circle of familial give-and-take love makes the trade-off worth it.
Like growing vegetables from seed to harvest, overhauling the country's food system takes time.
Speakers at an Idle No 麻豆社事件 event in Seattle drew comparisons between spiritual and political struggles, making the movement seem closer to Civil Rights than Occupy.
Teachers at two Seattle high schools violated district policy and their union contracts by refusing to administer a mandatory test. And signs abound that teachers around the nation are ready to stand up, too.
This 16-year-old is building himself a future free from mortgage payments, not to mention college accommodations that are a bit homier than your average dorm room.
150 years after the Emancipation Proclamation, it's time to recognize domestic labor as real work that should be protected.
The corporate push to construct tar-sands pipelines is transforming the environmental movement across North America by increasing the involvement of local residents and normalizing the use of direct action.
Unitierra has no classrooms, no teachers, and no formal curriculum. Yet the school has successfully helped local people learn practical skills for years.
Bill McKibben on the tradition of environmental activism he鈥檚 seen among members of First Nations, and the unique role of the Idle No 麻豆社事件 movement in the fight against climate change.
According to new research, empathy is a habit we can cultivate to improve the quality of our own lives. But what is empathy? And how can you expand your own empathetic potential?
In an urgent pursuit for environmental justice and basic human rights, First Nations gather across North America under the banner of Idle No 麻豆社事件.
Idle No 麻豆社事件 has organized the largest mass mobilizations of indigenous people in recent history. What sparked it off and what鈥檚 coming next?
Chris Moore, who co-produced 鈥淕ood Will Hunting,鈥 has a new film starring Matt Damon as a corporate salesman trying to open up a small town to fracking. Here, YES! publisher Fran Korten gets Moore鈥檚 take on the ideas behind the film.
If we the people want the sort of security in emergencies that is available to the owners of Wall Street banks, we need to own some banks ourselves.
Whether you鈥檙e looking for ways to save a few bucks or to be kinder to the environment, these are some fun tips to fight the cold.
Hundreds of supporters of the Idle No 麻豆社事件 movement performed a Round Dance flash mob, one of many similar actions around the world to fight for indigenous land rights.
What鈥檚 better than turning a profit by selling your work? Filmmakers, cafe owners, and even corporations like Panera Bread point to the satisfaction that comes with giving it away.
Last year鈥檚 most surprising, provocative, and inspiring findings on the science of living a meaningful life.
Is it possible that the human future depends upon a new sacred story鈥攁 story that gives us a reason to care? Could it be a story already embraced by a majority, although it has neither institutional support nor a place in the public conversation? David Korten suggests that this may be the case and invites you to join an already active conversation.
Aquaponics takes advantage of nature鈥檚 processes to fill Americans鈥 growing appetite for fish鈥攚ithout overfishing or destructive farming.
How to create a world where people fly, salamanders text, and trash is useful.
Every flush of a standard toilet creates a several-gallon problem. Instead of wasting water, plants and animals can transform human waste into water rated pure enough to drink.
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