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In this episode of the Circular Economy Show, Marta Longhurst of the Ellen MacArthur Foundation discusses how a well-designed treaty can tackle the global plastic waste crisis. The Foundation is an international charity promoting a circular economy that eliminates waste and pollution, circulates materials, and regenerates nature.
Watch the full episode to learn more. Subscribe for insightful videos on the circular economy via the Ellen MacArthur Foundation YouTube channel. Find more information and follow us online through our website, Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn.
Jamie Farndale, General Manager Club Development & Sustainability at Hong Kong China Rugby, is pursuing a Master of Studies (MSt) in Sustainability Leadership at the University of Cambridge Institute for Sustainability Leadership (CISL).
He shares his experience studying one of CISL's postgraduate sustainable business programmes.
Learn more about CISL's postgraduate courses: www.cisl.cam.ac.uk/postgrad
Episode four of 'Redesigning Food: Behind the Scenes' examines sustainable packaging, asking how pioneers can avoid problematic materials while achieving circular economy goals. The Ellen MacArthur Foundation, an international charity, champions the circular economy – a system designed to eliminate waste, circulate products, and regenerate nature.
Watch the full episode to learn more. Subscribe to The Ellen MacArthur Foundation for insightful videos, and explore our work and connect with us online:
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Episode four spotlights packaging challenges, as pioneers strive to avoid problematic materials and achieve circular economy goals. Companies like Porcus, Spoon Cereals, Dunia Bora, and Agüita Divina explore innovative solutions for sustainable packaging and production.
The Ellen MacArthur Foundation, an international charity, champions the circular economy – a system designed to eliminate waste, circulate products, and regenerate nature. Subscribe for more insights and explore our work:
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Indigenous resistance, echoing through history from the 1969 Alcatraz occupation to contemporary fossil fuel fights across Canada and the U.S., embodies an activism rooted in a spiritual connection to the web of life and human community. This movement is illuminated by Julian Brave NoiseCat, Dr. LaNada War Jack, and Clayton Thomas-Müller.
Julian Brave NoiseCat (https://www.julianbravenoisecat.com/) is a polymath in journalism, policy, and activism. He serves Data for Progress (https://www.dataforprogress.org/) and the Natural History Museum (https://thenaturalhistorymuseum.org/) collective. Dr. LaNada War Jack is an enrolled member of the Shoshone Bannock Tribes (http://www.sbtribes.com/). Clayton Thomas-Müller, from the Mathias Colomb Cree Nation (https://swampycree.com/mathias-colomb-cree-nation-2/), is a campaigner with 350.org (https://350.org/).
This Giving Tuesday, December 3, join the urgent fight for our planet. The climate crisis is real, but hope lies with Indigenous peoples who hold essential knowledge and solutions to protect Earth's biodiversity and climate.
Your support amplifies their leadership, resilience, and pursuit of justice.
Make your impact: [amazonwatch.org/donate](https://amazonwatch.org/donate)
#ProtectTheAmazon #IndigenousRights #ClimateActionChef, entrepreneur, and activist Camilla Marcus discusses her cookbook, "My Regenerative Kitchen," which promotes regenerative agriculture, climate consciousness, and a zero-waste approach. Through simple recipes and thoughtful techniques, she encourages readers to reduce food waste and use every part of the vegetable.
Named one of Fast Company's Most Creative People, Marcus founded west~bourne, New York City's first zero-waste certified restaurant, and co-founded ROAR and the Independent Restaurant Coalition (IRC). Committed to cross-industry innovation, her endeavors range from championing regenerative farming to advocating for equitable childcare. She collaborates with various partners and celebrities, fostering a community-minded, sustainable approach to eating and planetary care. Watch the full video here.
The Just Transition: Indigenous Peoples’ Perspectives, Knowledge and Lived Experiences Summit convened in Geneva, Switzerland, from October 8-10. Indigenous activists from around the world attended, and Cultural Survival conducted interviews with several delegates.
These interviews were produced by Guadalupe Pastrana (Nahua), Marco Lara (Hñähñu descent), and Shaldon Ferris (Khoi/San). Interviewees included Adamou Amadou (Mbororo), Amina Amharech (Amazight), and Beaska Nillas (Sami).
Music featured in the interviews included "ES_Walk These Shoes STEMS MELODY 44100," "ES_Africa STEMS MELODY 44100 1," and "Burn your village to the ground" by Halluci Nation, used with permission.
Deep in the ocean, a variety of marine creatures are preparing for a substantial feast.
Driven by instinct, they await the perfect moment to satisfy their hunger with a significant meal.
Tomas Lamanauskas, Deputy Secretary-General of the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), spoke at a COP29 Press Conference.
The event occurred in Baku, Azerbaijan, on November 16, 2024.
Amid global crises—climate change, ecocide, declining biodiversity, social inequity, injustice, and political turmoil—Indigenous lifeways and values offer a path to a better future. Core Indigenous values like relationship, responsibility, reciprocity, and redistribution guide us to be good stewards of our communities and ecosystems. Birds, our feathered relatives, provide valuable insights into these principles. Join the conversation.
Our panelists are Aimee Roberson (Cultural Survival Executive Director), Ruben Flores (CS Bazaar Artist), Kim Tekwitha Spencer (CS Youth Fellow), and Israel Hernández López (KOEF Grant Partner). Interpretation is available: tinyurl.com/lifeways1120.
This episode of The Circular Economy Show explores Arda Biomaterials, a company transforming brewing waste into innovative leather alternatives. Co-founder Brett Cotten details their process, while Amy Tsang from The Mills Fabrica highlights the crucial role of investment in driving such circular innovations forward.
The Ellen MacArthur Foundation, an international charity, promotes a circular economy that eliminates waste, circulates materials, and regenerates nature. Support our mission by leaving a review or comment on Spotify or YouTube.
Subscribe for more videos: Ellen MacArthur Foundation YouTube. Learn more: ellenmacarthurfoundation.org. Follow us: Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn.
This episode of the Circular Economy Show discusses the Ellen MacArthur Foundation's publication, "The circular economy: A 'triple play' solution for achieving China's climate objectives." Lei Chen and Seb Egerton-Read highlight how circular economy principles offer three key benefits for China: reducing greenhouse gas emissions, securing critical raw materials for renewables/EVs, and increasing economic resilience.
The Ellen MacArthur Foundation is an international charity promoting a circular economy that eliminates waste, circulates materials, and regenerates nature. If you enjoyed this episode, please leave a review or comment to help us spread the word.
Subscribe for more: YouTube. Learn more: ellenmacarthurfoundation.org. Follow us: Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn.
This episode features Indigenous scholar and organizer Nick Estes (Kul Wicasa/Lower Brule Sioux), a Professor at the University of Minnesota and co-founder of The Red Nation. He explores how Indigenous land-based societies advance regenerative solutions to transform capitalism, advocating for Indigenous leadership to ensure a habitable planet.
Estes, a member of the Oak Lake Writers Society, authored Our History Is the Future and contributes to The Red Nation's bi-weekly newsletter, an organization dedicated to Native liberation.
Additional resources, including videos and publications like "The Red Deal," are available. This episode is from the Bioneers: Revolution from the Heart of Nature series. Learn more at the radio and podcast homepage.
At the United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP29) in Baku, Rising Nations Youth Delegate Grace Malie discussed the future of Tuvalu and other island nations.
She met with Valerie Hickey, Global Director of the Environment Department at the World Bank, to address the severe climate impacts facing these vulnerable regions.
Award-winning Oglala Lakota chef Sean Sherman discusses his James Beard Award-winning book, "The Sioux Chef's Indigenous Kitchen." He creates vibrant, healthful, and authentic indigenous cuisine, featuring ingredients like venison, trout, and wild rice. The book was recognized as one of the best cookbooks of 2017 by NPR, Smithsonian Magazine, and others.
Born in Pine Ridge, South Dakota, Sherman has cooked for 27 years. Through his business, The Sioux Chef, he works as a caterer and food educator, earning acclaim from National Public Radio and The New York Times.
Get the book here: https://goo.gle/3Ydj9CX. Moderated by Ida Shen.
High-integrity carbon markets, crucial for climate action and development, face a trust deficit. MIGA's 35+ years of guarantees build trust. Join the launch of MIGA's new letter of authorization template, a WBG Guarantee Platform public good, standardizing host government commitments and securing insurability rights. Learn more: http://wrld.bg/LhvV50U3qbW @MIGAWorldBank
The World Bank Group is committed to a livable planet with clean energy, resilient communities, and stronger economies, ensuring climate action supports development. Join us live in Baku at the World Bank Group Pavilion during COP29, or online. http://wrld.bg/hk5E50U3qi5 #cop29. As a leading source of funding and knowledge, the World Bank promotes poverty reduction, shared prosperity, and sustainable development. http://www.worldbank.org
The latest Cultural Survival Quarterly issue celebrates Indigenous educators and youth revitalizing knowledge systems, languages, and lifeways. Indigenous education honors Elders and youth as vital knowledge carriers, fostering their leadership and creativity for thriving communities.
Join the conversation with Indigenous educators, including panelists Aviut Rojas (Nahuat), Eli Wewentxu (Mapuche), Gloria Guadalupe Dzib Kumul (Maya), and Catalina Vergara Realpe (Nasa). Byron Tenesaca Guaman (Kañari Kichwa) will moderate.
Interpretation is available for English and Spanish speakers via tinyurl.com/indiged116.
Nineteen-year-old artist Austin Picinich founded Save Our Salmon through Art (SOS) in 2021. This nonprofit uses public art to educate and empower communities to protect local salmon-spawning streams, many of which are blocked by urban culverts. Picinich was inspired after only three salmon returned to spawn in Juanita Creek near his home.
SOS hosts interactive mural painting events. Picinich designs salmon-themed murals, which volunteers and attendees complete during "SOS Community Days." These events have engaged nearly 750 painters and over 3,000 attendees, raising more than $28,000 for stream restoration and reaching almost a million people through awareness efforts.
Amelia Southern-Uribe, 21, grew up in environmentally vulnerable Southern communities, recognizing early on that environmental justice is linked to the liberation of marginalized groups. In 2019, they founded Arkansas’s first Zero Hour chapter in Fayetteville, which became a model for climate activism across the state.
Addressing Arkansas’s educational disparities, which exacerbate injustice, Southern-Uribe co-founded Roots magazine in 2022. Roots amplifies BIPOC Southern voices and environmental knowledge, providing free art supplies to artists. In its pilot year, over $7,800 was raised to distribute the magazine statewide.
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The Thinking Game | Full documentary | Tribeca Film Festival official selection
“The Thinking Game” is the inside story of DeepMind's groundbreaking AI research, culminating in the Nobel Prize-winning AlphaFold breakthrough. Filmed over five years by the award-winning team behind "AlphaGo," this documentary explores co-founder Demis Hassabis's lifelong pursuit of artificial general intelligence and the rigorous scientific journey from mastering strategy games to solving the 50-year-old protein folding problem.
Following its world premiere at the Tribeca Festival, "The Thinking Game" is now available to watch for free. For those interested in hosting a screening for a classroom, community, or workplace, visit: rocofilms.com/films/the-thinking-game/.






















