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Arts

A Maine Folk Band Finds Its Voice in a Warming World

GoldenOak’s music turns floods, forest loss and climate anxiety into folk songs rooted in Maine and shaped by activism.

By Ryan Krugman

Zak and Lena Kendall perform onstage during GoldenOak’s album release show at Portland House of Music and Events. Credit: Ryan Flanagan
The Passaic River flows through downtown Newark, N.J. Credit: Marli Miller/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

The Passaic River Stars in a Short Drama About Its Life as a Superfund Site

By Anna Mattson

Mira Shah, who recently started a student-run climate economics journal, at her father’s office in Dublin, Calif. Credit: Liza Gross/Inside Climate News

California Teen Starts an Online Journal on the Power of Economics to Confront Climate Change

By Liza Gross

Adam Met talks about the connections between climate action, music and fan building. Credit: Shervin Lainez

How a Rock Band Bassist Is Remixing Climate Activism

By Ryan Krugman

Erik Jon Olson makes decorative quilts out of single use plastic. Credit: Courtesy of Erik Jon Olson

The Unexpected Beauty and Deep Meaning of Plastic-Waste Art

Interview by Jenni Doering, Living on Earth

Artist Ernesto Valle (top left, bottom right) contributed two pieces highlighting toxic water conditions at Stateville Correctional Center, called "My Water is Toxic" and "The Kitchen Well." Credit: Keerti Gopal/Inside Climate News

In Chicago, Artists Imagine a World Without Prisons or Environmental Hazards

By Keerti Gopal

Aïcha Kossoko as Tanzania, Kwong Loke as China, and Andrea Gatchalian as Kiribati standing at their seats and leaning forward in objection.

Climate Change Is Must-See Theater in London. Meet the Playwrights Behind “Kyoto”

By Christine Spolar

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