Wild Service: Why Nature Needs You
By (Author) Nick Hayes
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
30th July 2024
25th April 2024
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
508.41
Hardback
304
Width 153mm, Height 234mm
A reckoning with our past and a vision for a new ecological future Amy-Jane Beer Seeks to undo the damage of exclusionary ownership through the transformative power of belonging Guy Shrubsole In May 2022, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences released a paper that measured fourteen European countries on three factors: biodiversity, wellbeing, and nature connectedness. Britain came last in every single category. The findings are clear. We are suffering, and nature is too. Enter Wild Service a visionary concept crafted by the pioneers of the Right to Roam campaign, which argues that humanitys loss and natures need are two sides of the same story. Blending science, nature writing and indigenous philosophy, this groundbreaking book calls for mass reconnection to the land and a commitment to its restoration. In Wild Service we meet Britains new nature defenders: an anarchic cast of guerilla guardians who neither own the places they protect, nor the permission to restore them. Still, theyre doing it anyway. This book is a celebration of their spirit and a call for you to join. So, whether you live in the countryside or the city, want to protect your local river or save our native flora, this is your invitation to rediscover the power in participation the sacred in your service.
A reckoning with our past and a vision for a new ecological future -- Amy-Jane Beer
Seeks to undo the damage of exclusionary ownership through the transformative power of belonging -- Guy Shrubsole
Nick Hayes is an author, illustrator, print-maker and political cartoonist. He has published four graphic novels and has worked for Time Out, the New Statesman and the Guardian, among others. He has exhibited across the country, including at the Hayward Gallery. Jon Moses is co-director of the Right to Roam campaign. He has a PhD in GeoHumanities from the University of London and has written essays, profiles and reportage for the Guardian, Businessweek and The Lead.