Transformations - Fall ‘20

Dear Reader,

Today I gathered all of The Planet’s printed issues that I have dutifully collected over the years into a pile. I searched the pages for tidbits of wisdom, words of inspiration, reminiscing over my time with the magazine. I had to laugh when I flipped open to the first page of the Conservation Issue where my predecessors had mulled over the eventual day when The Planet would switch from print to pixel.

I laughed because in the end, the decision wasn’t in the name of conservation or the environmental movement like they had expected, but rather events that forced our hand. As the pandemic shut down the world around us this spring, confining us to virtual classrooms, the decision to move the publication online felt like the only one. The Planet adapted because it was necessary for us to adapt. I believe that is a narrative everyone has faced in one way or another this year.

Transformation can be a subtle thing. You don’t always realize change is occurring, the world warping and reforming around you, until things have settled again, the dust cleared, and everything is different. It can also be a powerful tool for progress. People can usher in change with purposeful action, guiding society into uncharted territory. With all that has happened this year, it is easy to focus on how difficult the process of change was, over what it achieved.

This issue challenged our team to find these stories of transformation — of people adapting, learning, growing. You will read about a conservative farmer challenging conceived notions about what it takes to be an environmentalist. You’ll join researchers trekking across remote alpine ridges to spy elusive wolverines, persisting in spite of a changing landscape. You will witness the resilience of communities, adapting to the pandemic that threatened the security of our food systems.

One of our greatest abilities is that of transformation, and we are responsible for knowing when change is necessary and for making it happen.

Olivia Marsh

Editor-in-Chief

Stories

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Relationships - Winter '21

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Hope (The Coronavirus Issue) - Spring '20