Stories

 News

See More

Analysis

See More

Voices

See More

Podcast

See More

Announcements

See More

Events

See More

All Stories

News, Voices Alessandro Marangelli News, Voices Alessandro Marangelli

Rights of Nature: The Vision of the Younger Generation in the North Country

“The younger generation is often framed as the ‘procrastinator.’ We are the ‘kids’ who only care about social media. Yet, in the face of the Climate Crisis, our generation is mobilizing to demand change. Here in the Haudenosaunee territory (the North Country), people of all ages believe in the ideas that the concept of Rights of Nature encompasses. We believe nature deserves further legal protection in the form of recognition as a living entity with legal standing. We want to preserve and prosper with our Mother Earth. This is why young people from the St. Lawrence River watershed are working together to organize an international symposium which will take place on March 22, International Water Day. During the North Country Rights of Nature Symposium, community members will join to discuss how best to protect the region’s waterways.”

Read More
News Weave News News Weave News

International Critical Media Literacy Conference Features Weave News Projects

Four members of the Weave News team presented their work at the 2021 Critical Media Literacy Conference of the Americas (CMLCA), held virtually from October 15-17, 2021. With sessions in English, Portuguese, and Spanish, the conference celebrated the life and work of the Brazilian scholar-activist Paulo Freire (1921-1997), widely considered the “father of critical pedagogy.”

Read More
News, Analysis Phiwa T. News, Analysis Phiwa T.

#ProofOfLife: Eswatini Protests and the Power of Digital Activism

As ordinary people in Eswatini/Swaziland take to the streets to protest in favor of human rights and democracy, digital activism is playing an important role. Weave News contributor Phiwa T. argues that instead of dismissing such efforts, we should recognize that forms of digital protest can work hand in hand with traditional forms of street-level activism.

Read More
News, Voices Amanda Salgueiro News, Voices Amanda Salgueiro

A Vigil in Solidarity With Palestinians

In response to the ongoing Israeli violence against Palestinians in Sheikh Jarrah, Gaza, and elsewhere, several dozen St. Lawrence University students, faculty and alumni gathered on May 15 for a Vigil in Solidarity With Palestinians.

Read More
Voices, News Talking Wings Voices, News Talking Wings

Art From the Frontlines of a Threatened Mountainside

In a follow up to “Coatepec: The Fight for the Cloud Forest”, a Forest Guardian from Movimiento por la Defensa de la Sierra describes the impact of art on their movement. The artists in question are children, and the young Earth Guardians are inspiring their community to rise up and protect their forests.

Read More
News, Voices Talking Wings News, Voices Talking Wings

The River Says NO

On January 20, 2015, the PUCARL Collective (United Communities of the Antigua Watershed for Free Rivers) blocked the entrance to the Río Pescados (River of Fishes), halting the construction of a dam that was threatening the entire region. The 43 communities along the Rio Pescados are the first to defeat Odebrecht, thus protecting their waterways for the generations to come.

Read More
News, Voices Alejandro Beltran Cordero News, Voices Alejandro Beltran Cordero

¡Sí a La Vida, No a La Mina! (Yes to Life, No to the Mine!)

A new gold mine in Veracruz, Mexico, will be the first one in the world to be opened only two miles away from a nuclear reactor and from many pipelines - all in the middle of a densely populated, touristic area that is also the most important migratory route in North America. These are some of the main reasons why local activists are strongly opposing the project.

Read More
Uncategorized, News, Voices Nicole Roché Uncategorized, News, Voices Nicole Roché

"My COVID Summer" : Students Share Experiences, Hopes for the Future

St. Lawrence University students, like students everywhere, have faced a range of issues connected to the global pandemic. Weave contributor and editor Nicole Roché reached out to former students from all over the country—and all over the world—asking them to share their experiences from this difficult summer.

Here are their stories.

Read More
Stories, News, Analysis Gabriela Paz Ferreyra Barrientos Stories, News, Analysis Gabriela Paz Ferreyra Barrientos

Bolivia Faces a Double Battle

The effects of the coronavirus pandemic intersect with the effects of other social, political, and environmental problems throughout the world. Reporting from Bolivia, Gabriela Paz Ferreyra Barrientos explores how Bolivian society finds itself caught between ongoing political instability and a public health emergency: “Violence and confrontation in Bolivia require an urgent democratic election, yet the health of Bolivians is crying out for them to stay home and take care of themselves.”

Read More
Stories, News, Voices, Analysis Ali Abusheikh Stories, News, Voices, Analysis Ali Abusheikh

If the Gaza blockade was a virus, would the world react differently?

Ali Abusheikh writes from Doha, Qatar amidst the COVID-19 crisis, but he is also thinking of his home - Gaza. ““I sympathize with the world. I understand people's fear. Why wouldn't I? I already know what it is like to be stuck at home for weeks when it is not safe to go out. (And in the case of Gaza, staying at home isn't enough to protect you; Israeli missiles can just as easily find you there.) I already know how it feels to unexpectedly have to cancel weddings and other special occasions. I grew up being unable to travel.”

Read More