Large-scale protection of nature is needed to address the ecological crisis. Big animals are connected with this mandate: They are threatened worldwide; they play important ecological roles; and the vast areas they require support a host of lifeforms. But visionary conservation is not only a pragmatic necessity. It is an ethical imperative, for comprehensive nature protection and restoration that supports the good life for all. The story of Asian elephants is part of this bigger story. We must find compassionate ways to free captive elephants and restore a world in which they, and countless others, may live free and flourish
No one knows exactly where the elephants are going, or why. But two things are clear: the elephants ...
Habitat loss and climate change are displacing animals at alarming rates. In response, authors in th...
Theory of Change (ToC) and Social Return of Investment (SROI) are planning tools that help projects ...
Culling seems to be a cruel method of human interference in the lives of elephants. The method of cu...
Thailand has fewer than 10,000 elephants left. More of them are living in captivity to serve the tou...
Elephants have played a key role shaping land and life in South Asia, bound up with human enterprise...
Baker and Winkler (2020) advocate a rehabilitation program that would end the oppression of elephant...
The real role of zoos in the conservation of threatened animals is increasingly coming under public ...
Baker & Winkler (2020) propose restoring elephants to a state of “wildness” and a “life worth living...
If humans may indeed legitimately intervene in conservation areas to let nature be and to protect th...
Loss of habitat is one of the most significant problems facing elephants worldwide, leading to clash...
Technological advances over the next few decades will mean that every cubic meter of the planet will...
Baker & Winkler’s critique of Asian elephant tourism and conservation in Thailand has convinced me t...
In the late 1980s there were two campaigns to save African elephants. One banned international trade...
The current extinction crisis is leaving us increasingly reliant on captive populations to maintain ...
No one knows exactly where the elephants are going, or why. But two things are clear: the elephants ...
Habitat loss and climate change are displacing animals at alarming rates. In response, authors in th...
Theory of Change (ToC) and Social Return of Investment (SROI) are planning tools that help projects ...
Culling seems to be a cruel method of human interference in the lives of elephants. The method of cu...
Thailand has fewer than 10,000 elephants left. More of them are living in captivity to serve the tou...
Elephants have played a key role shaping land and life in South Asia, bound up with human enterprise...
Baker and Winkler (2020) advocate a rehabilitation program that would end the oppression of elephant...
The real role of zoos in the conservation of threatened animals is increasingly coming under public ...
Baker & Winkler (2020) propose restoring elephants to a state of “wildness” and a “life worth living...
If humans may indeed legitimately intervene in conservation areas to let nature be and to protect th...
Loss of habitat is one of the most significant problems facing elephants worldwide, leading to clash...
Technological advances over the next few decades will mean that every cubic meter of the planet will...
Baker & Winkler’s critique of Asian elephant tourism and conservation in Thailand has convinced me t...
In the late 1980s there were two campaigns to save African elephants. One banned international trade...
The current extinction crisis is leaving us increasingly reliant on captive populations to maintain ...
No one knows exactly where the elephants are going, or why. But two things are clear: the elephants ...
Habitat loss and climate change are displacing animals at alarming rates. In response, authors in th...
Theory of Change (ToC) and Social Return of Investment (SROI) are planning tools that help projects ...