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The Joy Issue
Joy can strengthen our resolve, help us unlock creativity, and bolster our resilience. In this issue, we explore the importance and power of finding joy in the face of grief, anger, and a changing climate.
Recent
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Laughter is the ultimate unifier. Can it work for climate action?
Research shows that humor can help get climate messaging across. Activists and comedians alike are starting to take notice.
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Through the eyes of children
Kids approach the world with a sense of play and wonder. How would the climate crisis be different if we did, too?
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What the rich inner lives of dolphins can teach us about climate solutions
Knowing that the charismatic cetaceans express joy, compassion, and other “human” emotions can inform and inspire our own climate work.
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Dallas Goldtooth on the liberation of laughter and the power of joy in organizing
The "Reservation Dogs" actor, comedian, and organizer believes “if we can laugh at our oppressors, it takes away the power of our oppressors.”
Topics
Fix combines creative storytelling with network-building and events.
Opinion
Pollution
Special Series: Grist 50
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Who’s building the green cities of the future? These 5 people — and a whole lot of others.
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The best thing my mentor ever taught me
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We feed you: Meet 5 Fixers who put food on your table
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These environmental justice leaders are creating the spaces they wish they’d had
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Finally feeling social again? Meet 4 Fixers who will uplift your feed
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Happy Climate is on a mission to show what we gain from climate action
The project focuses on how taking small steps to reduce your carbon footprint can mean more time, more connection, and greater happiness.
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What can you do for the climate? (Not everything, but start here.)
How to find joy in mitigating climate change.
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Being a climate steward has a side benefit: joy
When hopelessness creeps in, I go to my garden.
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Our university gave us $1 million to invest. We bought (some nominal) shares in Chevron.
At Arizona State University, our student group is greening the endowment from the inside, by becoming shareholders.
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Public banks can help make real climate progress. Why is there only one in the U.S.?
These nonprofit entities invest tax dollars in local projects and entrepreneurs that have been historically denied loans — and they don’t answer to shareholders.
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Tax dollars are going toward rebuilding homes without climate resiliency. Federal standards can help.
Many U.S. communities have outdated or nonexistent building codes.
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Foraging New York City’s wild, edible margins with Journei Bimwala
The expert forager explains how to get started and details the many benefits that she says make it well worth the effort.
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A Bible written from an Indigenous perspective could reframe Christians’ connection to the earth
The First Nations Version of the New Testament places humans within, rather than above, the natural world.