Rewilding Earth Podcast
A podcast by The Rewilding Institute - Fridays
116 Episodes
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Episode 44: John Laundré on Eastern Cougar Rewilding
Published: 4/8/2020 -
Episode 43: Gary Wockner – Life As A River Warrior
Published: 4/1/2020 -
Episode 42: Greta Anderson Western Watersheds Project
Published: 3/20/2020 -
Episode 41: Chance Cutrano On Correcting The Mismanagement of Point Reyes National Seashore
Published: 3/8/2020 -
Episode 40: Amy Lewis Protecting 50% of The Planet by 2030
Published: 2/17/2020 -
Episode 39: Kenneth Brower on Saving Point Reyes National Seashore
Published: 2/5/2020 -
Episode 38: Jan Van Boeckel Art, Deep Ecology, and Open Air Philosophy
Published: 1/19/2020 -
Episode 37: Kirk Robinson on State Wildlife Governance and the North American Model of Wildlife Conservation
Published: 1/11/2020 -
Episode 36: Michael Kellett on Establishing Hundreds of New National Parks
Published: 12/30/2019 -
Episode 35: Bruce Anderson Mapping 50 Years Of Wildlands Decline
Published: 12/17/2019 -
Episode 34: Kenyon Fields – Western Landowners Alliance
Published: 12/3/2019 -
Episode 33: Jason Mark On Patagonia’s 9 Million Acre Gift
Published: 10/11/2019 -
Episode 32: Andrew Thoms and Tongass National Forest
Published: 9/27/2019 -
Episode 31: Stuart Pimm Putting Conservation Back On The Offensive
Published: 9/16/2019 -
Episode 30: Dan Imhoff on Making Farming More Creaturely
Published: 8/23/2019 -
Episode 29: Kim Crumbo on Wolves, War, and Optimism
Published: 8/8/2019
Rewilding Earth podcast is produced by The Rewilding Institute and hosted by Jack Humphrey. Our guests range from activists to scientists to wildlands stewards and policy makers with whom we discuss wilderness recovery, species reintroduction, wildlands connectivity, and important work on the ground to restore wild nature to as much of the Earth as possible. Rewilding's mission is to develop and promote the ideas and strategies to advance continental-scale conservation in North America and beyond, particularly the need for large carnivores and a permeable landscape for their movement, and to offer a bold, scientifically-credible, practically achievable, and hopeful vision for the future of wild Nature and human civilization.