MEDIA RELEASE | Mexican Wolf Recovery Plan Revision Draws Mixed Reviews from Wildlife Advocates
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE – OCTOBER 5, 2022 Mexican Wolf Recovery Plan Revision Draws Mixed Reviews from Wildlife Advocates TUCSON, Ariz. – Wildlife advocates expressed mixed feelings about the Mexican Wolf Recovery Plan, Second Revision that was released by the...For all beings: Part 2
In my prior blog entry, after introducing myself, I touched on both Euro-North American and Ojibwe worldviews, specifically in relation to wolves. The objective was to highlight how worldviews influence our values and motives, including those guiding science. Therefore, science will always be partial to worldviews, which suggests the foundational discussion within conservation should be about worldviews. In that entry, I suggested that Ojibwe views of wolves were more accurate, caring and respectful than those of Euro-North American managers when assessed from who we know wolves are. Yet, the Ojibwe and other Indigenous worldviews are not the only ones who consider wolves as persons with whom we should cultivate caring and respectful relationships.
Media Advisory | Bold New Initiative to Rewild the Midwest
SEPTEMBER 19, 2022 Bold New Initiative to Rewild the Midwest Heartland Rewilding, a new coalition of environmental groups, launches a series of bold rewilding initiatives throughout the Mississippi River watershed to restore and protect nature and promote coexistence...For all beings part 1
I’m very much an immigrant: to the Midwest, to science and to rewilding. And yet, as with coyotes in the eastern U.S., I feel at home. I was born and raised in San Juan, Puerto Rico. I was a working-class city kid that did not spend much time out in nature, except for the occasional beach trip.