Regarding climate change, there has been a muddling of two primary issues by many critics: the first being that climate change is real and policy will have to be developed to react to the human cost of changing environments, the second that maybe we should do something about it by developing new forms of energy. This is a developing conversation being held on global transactional stages, in classrooms, and increasingly, in the arts. What has changed in the 21st century is that indigenous peoples have a voice in the discussion, and are offering real, and at times contentious, solutions about how to react to rising waters.
Sean Connelly is proof that one person can make a huge difference environmentally.
The 21st Annual Hawai‘i Conservation Conference, put on by the Hawai‘i Conservation Alliance, is scheduled for July 16-18 at the...
Images courtesy of Bon Appétit. Check out this beautiful 12-page feature in the June issue of Bon Appétit on how...
The 2nd Annual World Chee Huu Championships of World takes place this Thursday at Art & Flea, in celebration of...
This First Friday, July 5, Honolulu-based artist AJ Feducia will be showcasing an exhibit entitled Only Fools Trip on What...