The Hidden Life Beneath the Forest Floor
Beneath every healthy forest lies a fungal network that connects trees, moves nutrients, and shapes how woodland survives. Understanding it changes what conservation means in practice.
Beneath every healthy forest lies a fungal network that connects trees, moves nutrients, and shapes how woodland survives. Understanding it changes what conservation means in practice.
England and Wales are facing a biodiversity crisis that affects wildlife, communities, and the systems we rely on. Discover why nature recovery matters, what is driving biodiversity loss, and how we can build public support for protecting and restoring the natural world.
As Makerfield prepares for its 2026 by-election, voters face choices beyond a single parliamentary seat. Explore the rise of alternative politics, why some are looking beyond traditional parties, and how the Green Party presents a different vision centred on sustainability and long-term thinking.
Sustainability requires social justice. In Pride Month, GreenMeans explores the structural history of LGBTQ+ rights in Great Britain, from centuries of systemic criminalisation to the 1972 London march. Understanding this journey from Section 28 to full marriage equality is vital for true inclusion.
Ecosystem Journal & Insights
Most seed-saving advice tells you to choose the biggest fruit or the strongest plant. But if your goal is a garden that grows more resilient with every passing year, the plant worth saving from is the one that set seed when everything went wrong. Here's why the logic of resilience selection matters.
Social media algorithms quietly decide whose content gets seen and whose disappears. This guide explains how they work, what causes shadowbanning, and how to build a lasting, resilient digital presence.
From the closure of Britain's last coal plant to beavers returning to English rivers and white-tailed eagles raising chicks for the first time in 240 years, there is genuine environmental progress worth understanding.
All bat species in England and Wales are protected by law. This article explains what those protections cover, why they were introduced, and what they mean in practice for roosts, development, and conservation.
When a misleading claim crosses your feed, reacting fast is rarely the right move. This guide covers how to pause, use reliable UK fact-checking resources, and respond with evidence, walking through three widely shared claims as worked examples.
Hope is not a passive feeling. It is built through relationships, collective action, and the steady accumulation of community knowledge. This article explores what the evidence tells us about how ordinary people change things, and where to start.
Why does it matter who owns the railways, water pipes, and energy grid? This article examines the case for public ownership, exploring what decades of privatisation have produced, what different ownership models look like, and why accountability matters as much as economics.
The claim that the monarchy is essential for British tourism is often repeated, but does the evidence support it? This article examines the numbers, explores international comparisons, and asks whether Britain's historic attractions would remain popular regardless of its constitutional system.
Many countries have abandoned wealth taxes, citing complexity, avoidance, and low revenues. This article explores why those systems struggled, examines the Green Party's wealth tax proposal, and considers whether a targeted British model could avoid past pitfalls.