• Donate
  • About
  • Sign Up
Radio Cafe
  • Home
  • Down to Earth
  • Archive
    • ASU
    • Santa Fe New Mexican
    • Congresswoman
Select Page
Systems thinking: Coordinating after, during, and before disasters

Systems thinking: Coordinating after, during, and before disasters

by radiocafe | Mar 28, 2023 | Down to Earth, Environment, Food & agriculture, New Mexico, Science & health

Many entities, public and private, are working to help agrarians whose livelihoods are disrupted. But what do they do, how do they coordinate…and what are the sticky points?

Learn more …

Technology-assisted regeneration—a new vision for ecological agriculture

Technology-assisted regeneration—a new vision for ecological agriculture

by radiocafe | Mar 14, 2023 | Activism, Books, Down to Earth, Environment, Food & agriculture

Industrial agriculture imposes a simplified model onto complex ecosystems––with dire consequences. A new book shows how technology is now able to capture nature’s intricacies––and help to grow food more ecologically and more profitably.

Learn more …

Wolves in the West: Finding common ground

Wolves in the West: Finding common ground

by radiocafe | Feb 28, 2023 | Down to Earth, Environment, Food & agriculture

After being driven almost to extinction, wolves are back in some of their natural habitat. A new podcast explores how ranchers, conservationists, and others are coming together to find paths toward peaceful co-habitation.

Learn more …

De-commodifying land: Challenging your inner capitalist

De-commodifying land: Challenging your inner capitalist

by radiocafe | Feb 14, 2023 | Activism, Down to Earth, Food & agriculture, Native & indigenous, Race/class/gender

As land prices and development pressures rise, agrarians and land stewards have a hard time buying and staying on land. Neil Thapar and Mariela Cedeño talk about strategies to convert land from a commodity to what it really is––habitat, ecosystems, and where we grow our food.

Learn more …

Healing Grounds: The enduring cultures of regenerative agriculture

Healing Grounds: The enduring cultures of regenerative agriculture

by radiocafe | Jan 31, 2023 | Activism, Books, Down to Earth, Environment, Food & agriculture, Native & indigenous, Race/class/gender

In her new book Liz Carlisle explores rich food traditions from the Americas, Asia, and Africa that have survived and thrived in the U.S.—and how they are helping to restore land and climate, and bring about a more just and humane world.

Learn more …

Innovative approaches to regeneration on a California ranch

Innovative approaches to regeneration on a California ranch

by radiocafe | Jan 17, 2023 | Down to Earth, Environment, Food & agriculture, Science & health

TomKat Ranch manager Mark Biaggi talks about dealing with winter floods, summer droughts, and degraded landscapes––and the process of continual experimentation that leads to dramatic regeneration of damaged land.

Learn more …

Giant bison, mammoths, and eagles: a deep history of the American continent

Giant bison, mammoths, and eagles: a deep history of the American continent

by radiocafe | Dec 15, 2022 | Books, Down to Earth, Environment, Food & agriculture, Native & indigenous, New Mexico

The land and its creatures looked very different when the first people arrived on this continent. Dan Flores‘ book Wild New World traces human impact up to the present––and the choices we’re looking at now.

Learn more …

Sustainable development, climate mitigation, and biochar

Sustainable development, climate mitigation, and biochar

by radiocafe | Nov 30, 2022 | Activism, Down to Earth, Environment, Food & agriculture, Native & indigenous, Science & health

For decades Brando Crespi has been working in communities damaged by extractive industries. He makes the case that biochar can and should be part of a global strategy do reverse climate change and grow more food with less water.

Learn more …

Bringing dead land back to life: a filmmaker’s perspective

Bringing dead land back to life: a filmmaker’s perspective

by radiocafe | Nov 15, 2022 | Activism, Arts & films, Down to Earth, Environment, Food & agriculture, Science & health

In 1995 John Liu began documenting the Loess Plateau in China, a landscape ruined by poor agriculture practices. Over decades he documented its return to vibrant life, and filmed many other restoration projects worldwide.

Learn more …

Desert wisdom: sustaining Southwest agriculture using old ways––and new

Desert wisdom: sustaining Southwest agriculture using old ways––and new

by radiocafe | Nov 1, 2022 | Books, Down to Earth, Food & agriculture, Native & indigenous, Science & health

Gary Paul Nabhan, know as the “father of the local food movement,” knows how to grow food that’s healthy and profitable––even during times of drought and climate disruption.

Learn more …

Page 6 of 49«First«2345678910112025303540»Last»

EXPLORE

  • Activism
  • Arts & films
  • ASU
  • Books
  • Down to Earth
  • Education
  • Environment
  • Food & agriculture
  • Native & indigenous
  • New Mexico
  • Politics
  • Race/class/gender
  • Santa Fe New Mexican
  • Science & health
  • Spirituality & religion
  • Teresa

Search

  • Home
  • Down to Earth
  • Archive
  • About
  • Contact
  • Get Updates
  • Donate
©2023 RadioCafe
Join us for coffee and great conversations
  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.