The International System That Pits Foreign Investors Against Indigenous Communities By Katie Surma, Nicholas Kusnetz
A Proposed Nevada Lithium Mine Could Destroy Critical Habitat for an Endangered Wildflower Found Nowhere Else in the World By Wyatt Myskow
In New York, Attorney General Letitia James’ Narrow View of the State’s Green Amendment By Peter Mantius
A German Climate Activist Won’t End His Hunger Strike, Even With the Risk of Death Looming By Keerti Gopal
Congress Pushes Forward With Bill Expanding the Rights of Mining Companies on Federal Land By Esther Frances, Megija Medne and Phillip Powell
To Incinerate Or Not To Incinerate: Maryland Hospitals Grapple With Question With Big Public Health Implications By Aman Azhar
Significant Environmental and Climate Impacts Are Impinging on Human Rights in Every Country, a New Report Finds By Katie Surma
How the Drug War and Energy Transition Are Changing Ecuadorians’ Fight For The Rights of Nature By Katie Surma
Forgotten Keepers of the Rio Grande Delta: a Native Elder Fights Fossil Fuel Companies in Texas Story and photos by Dylan Baddour
How Alabama Turned to Restrictive Deed Covenants to Ward Off Flooding Claims From Black Residents By Lee Hedgepeth
In Louisiana’s ‘Cancer Alley,’ Excitement Over New Emissions Rules Is Tempered By a Legal Challenge to Federal Environmental Justice Efforts By Victoria St. Martin
Twenty-Five Years After Maryland Deregulated Its Retail Energy Market, a Huge Win Looms For Energy Justice Advocates By Aman Azhar
Investor Nuns’ Shareholder Resolutions Aim to Stop Wall Street Financing of Fossil Fuel Development on Indigenous Lands By Keerti Gopal
Oregon’s Owyhee Canyonlands Is the Biggest Conservation Opportunity Left in the West. If Congress Won’t Protect it, Should Biden Step in? By Wyatt Myskow