The Center for Humans and Nature publishes stories and ideas online and in print that explore our relationships and responsibilities to nature and provide in-depth and diverse perspectives related to arts, humanity, and nature.
Stories & Ideas The Center for Humans and Nature's online digital publications are housed under Stories & Ideas. These “Stories & Ideas” are featured in a diversity of forms—essays, art, interviews, poems, reviews, and videos—with a variety of contributors sharing their diverse perspectives on themes such as: Animals & Plants, Care, Climate Change, Community, Cosmos, Culture, Healing, Justice, Land & Water, Language, Practice, Reciprocity, Sacred, Sovereignty, and Urban Nature. Contributors have included
Rebecca Solnit,
adrienne maree brown,
Tommy Orange,
Mary Midgley,
David Sloan Wilson,
Benjamin Barber,
Robin Kimmerer,
David Abram,
Maude Barlow,
Herman Daly,
Bill McKibben,
Sharon Olds,
Nalini Nadkarni,
Hans Joachim Schellnhuber,
Vandana Shiva, and
James Gustave Speth, among others.
Minding Nature The Center publishes
Minding Nature, formerly a tri-annual journal (2008–2021), and currently an annual journal that “explores ecological responsibilities, values, and practices.”
Center for Humans and Nature Press The Center for Humans and Nature Press is the Center's independent publishing wing—exploring themes of human interconnection with nature and human responsibilities to the whole community of life. The Center for Humans and Nature Press print publications include the five-volume book series,
Kinship: Belonging in a World Relations. Edited by Gavin Van Horn,
Robin Wall Kimmerer, and John Hausdoerffer,
Kinship is a five-book anthology that explores humanity's deep interconnections with the living world. The five Kinship volumes—Planet, Place, Partners, Persons, Practice—offer essays, interviews, poetry, and stories that highlight the interdependence that exists between humans and nonhuman beings. The Kinship book series is part of a larger project that also includes the Making Kin online art exhibition and the Kinship with the More-Than–Human World podcast in partnership with To the Best of Our Knowledge. ==References==