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A conservation market could incentivize global ocean protection

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The system might make it easier for countries to meet 30×30 conservation targets

Peer-Reviewed Publication

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA – SANTA BARBARA

Ocean collage
IMAGE: COLLAGE OF OCEANIC ORGANISMSview more 

CREDIT: HARRISON TASSOF

(Santa Barbara, Calif.) — The countries of the world agreed: Our planet needs more protection from human activity. And with the globe facing an assortment of environmental crises, they realized the plan needed to be ambitious. Thirty-by-thirty was their proposal: protect 30% of the planet by 2030. But while conservation is popular in principle, the costs of actually enacting it often stall even the most earnest efforts.

Three researchers at UC Santa Barbara have proposed a market-based approach to achieving the 30×30 targets in the ocean. They tested whether a system that allowed countries to trade conservation credits could reduce costs, incentivizing nations to actually meet their goals. Allowing voluntary trade always reduced the cost of conservation, sometimes by more than 90%. The study, published in Science, is the first to draft and analyze a conservation market for achieving 30×30 targets in the ocean.

The 30×30 initiative is one aspect of the Convention on Biological Diversity, a multilateral treaty developed in the early 1990s. In fact, it’s target No. 3 of the larger Global Biodiversity Framework (GBF) adopted by the 196 countries that convened for the UN Biodiversity Conference in 2022. It calls for the effective protection and management of 30% of the world’s terrestrial, freshwater, coastal and marine areas by the year 2030 — a goal that many scientists say humanity must achieve to secure our planet’s long-term health. And while the GBF requires countries to commit to conservation targets, it does not outline which areas should be protected, how to do so inclusively or how to pay for it.

“This project started just over four years ago,” said co-author Juan Carlos Villaseñor-Derbez, who completed his doctorate at UCSB’s Bren School of Environmental Science & Management. At this point, countries were falling short of the 10% protection benchmark as they drafted plans for 30% protection. “It seemed like most nations were genuinely committed to marine conservation, but that the costs of conserving were preventing some from engaging in it at all.

“At the same time,” he added, “a lot of research had already shown that if you could get nations to cooperate around conservation, you could substantially reduce the costs of conserving.” He and his co-authors realized the world needed an institution, policy or framework that could support this.

Uneven costs and benefits

The cost of protecting acres of ocean is not the only aspect that differs from place to place. The ecological benefits of conservation also vary based on location. Achieving 30×30 in the ocean will require coastal nations to consider potential trade-offs associated with these protections. Because high-value fisheries can coincide with important marine ecosystems — such as coral reefs, seagrass meadows and kelp forests — meeting the obligation could come at a high cost for some nations but not others. “Without an innovative policy solution, the cost of conservation for many nations could stall progress toward 30×30,” said Villasenor-Derbez.

This variability means that trade could incentivize additional gains. Instead of investing in areas with high conservation costs, or low benefits, nations could exchange their duties to double down on regions where protection yields higher returns.

Environmental economists and scientists at UC Santa Barbara’s Environmental Markets Lab (emLab) wondered if a conservation credit system could help meet 30×30 targets in the ocean. They devised a system whereby nations could trade their conservation obligation with other nations through a “transferable conservation market” policy built around ecological principles.

“Like existing mandates, this approach requires every country to protect a certain fraction (say 30%) of its marine habitat,” said Distinguished Professor Christopher Costello, emLab’s director. “But unlike other approaches, we allow those obligations to be traded across countries, within strict ecological constraints.” In this way, countries with higher conservation costs pay others to increase their conservation efforts. This study estimates the potential global cost savings under various trading constraints.

“For example, Norway, which has valuable fisheries, might pay Palau, a country that has already invested significantly in coastal conservation, to conserve additional areas on Norway’s behalf,” Costello said. This enables Norway to fulfill its conservation obligations in another part of the world.

Achieving 30×30 in the ocean

Costello, Villaseñor-Derbez and co-author Professor Andrew Plantinga developed a model to estimate the potential costs and benefits that could be achieved through a conservation market like this. They combined distribution data for 23,699 marine species with fisheries revenue data to build conservation supply curves for the world’s coastal nations.

They then defined “trade bubbles” based on biological and geographic factors. A country could trade conservation credits only with other nations within these predefined bubbles in order to ensure conservation was equitably spread across Earth’s different marine habitats. The authors examined five bubble policies that allow nations to trade within hemispheres, biogeographic realms, provinces, ecoregions, or globally, to determine potential costs.

Regardless of how they tweaked this setup, a market for marine conservation always reduced the costs of conservation. The model estimated savings could range from 37.4% all the way to 98% under the 30×30 target.

“It just highlighted how inefficient it is to require uniform conservation obligations from each nation,” Villaseñor-Derbez said. “After all, national boundaries don’t really overlap or line-up with the distribution patterns of marine biodiversity.”

Savings were highest in a global market, where every nation stands to gain from trade. But a global market could inadvertently focus conservation efforts on only a single type of habitat, neglecting others. That was precisely why the team introduced the trade bubble constraint.

“When nations facing large costs are allowed to trade, they can ask themselves ‘should I conserve in my waters at this high cost, or can I find someone in my bubble that has habitat just as good as mine but at a lower price?’” Villaseñor-Derbez said. The same would be true for a selling nation. They could decide whether to conserve more than they are required depending on the trading price.

Of course, a country could always go it alone, fulfilling their conservation obligations (and theirs alone) entirely within their own territory. Indeed, this is precisely how the 30×30 initiative currently looks. But the authors’ analysis suggests that very few countries will. Most find it far more economical to either buy or sell conservation obligations.

Conservation colonialism vs fair compensation

If a market system were established, some might wonder what would prevent wealthy nations from simply “paying off” their conservation obligations and offloading them onto poorer nations. For Costello, Villaseñor-Derbez and Plantinga, the market itself offers a solution. “All such exchanges are purely voluntary,” said Plantinga, who heads emLab’s Productive Landscapes Group. “The selling nation (the poor country in this example) only engages in trade if they find it advantageous.”

In fact, the market could be a boon for developing nations. The current 30×30 scheme requires even a cash-poor country with high conservation to conserve 30% of their territorial waters.  The market approach offers a degree of flexibility: The country can weigh their finances against their conservation costs. They can then decide how much of their obligation to fulfill within their own waters, how much to buy from another nation, and how much to offer up for sale. This flexibility is not possible under the current approach to 30×30.

This system could also incentivize habitat restoration, target No. 2 of the GBF. Nations that tend to specialize in exploiting marine resources could compensate those who specialize in conserving marine biodiversity.  “Our approach provides an explicit payment for conserving marine ecosystems,” Costello said. “Under the current system, there is rarely a payment to conserve.”

Lowering costs incentivizes action. This measurable effect is a central tenet of economics employed by governments, companies and industries across sectors and countries. So why not harness this principle for conservation? According to the authors, these savings could be redirected towards solving other pressing issues.

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Activism

Nonviolent resistance in the age of authoritarianism

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From the US to Palestine and beyond, people are standing up to power — with strategy, courage and solidarity.

Peaceful movements are rising: from Hebron to Harvard, from feminist foreign policy to frontline protests. Authoritarianism is gaining ground, fuelled by rhetoric like that of Donald Trump and echoed by global copycats.

But so is nonviolent resistance.

This isn’t your usual Q&A. It’s a real talk on how nonviolent resistance is evolving — and where it’s heading next.

Join us for a conversation about what it really takes to resist — and endure — in a time of shrinking civic space.

Featuring: 

  • Jamila Raqib, Executive Director of the Albert Einstein Institution and legacy holder of 2012 hashtag#RightLivelihood
  • Laureate Gene Sharp, the world’s leading thinker on strategic nonviolent action. 
  • Kerstin Bergeå, Chair of Svenska Freds, Sweden’s largest and the world’s oldest peace organisation.
  • Hosted by Juanita Esguerra Rezk, PhD. of Right Livelihood.

 

We’ll dive into: 

  • How resistance survives under repression 
  • The power of unlikely alliances
  • What changes when women lead 
  • Staying resilient when the pressure hits

Courtesy of Right Livelihood

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Activism

How Ethical Community Leaders Are Driving Systemic Change Around the World

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Mobilized News Editorial Feature

At a time when cynicism toward politics is high and global systems appear rigged against the most vulnerable, a new kind of leadership is taking root—not in the corridors of power, but in the streets, villages, neighborhoods, and digital commons.

These leaders don’t wear suits or sit on high stages. They are midwives, farmers, youth mentors, solar tech trainers, community organizers, and elders. They listen more than they speak. They build with others, not for others. And they are rewriting the very definition of what it means to lead in the 21st century.

This is the story of ethical community leadership—a global groundswell of people committed to systemic change, rooted in justice, accountability, care, and regeneration. And it’s working.

Mobilized News Editorial Feature

 A Shift from Top-Down to Bottom-Up

In India’s Maharashtra state, a women-led collective called Swayam Shikshan Prayog has empowered over 100,000 rural women to lead in climate-resilient farming, health, and education. Their model? Train women farmers as decision-makers—not beneficiaries—while restoring ecological health.

In Colombia, the Guardians of the Atrato River, a court-recognized legal entity composed of Indigenous and Afro-descendant community leaders, have been granted rights to represent the river in court—a historic case of environmental personhood anchored in ancestral leadership and ecological stewardship.

In Jackson, Mississippi, Cooperation Jackson is building a community-controlled network of cooperatives, housing, and alternative education, rooted in Black liberation and economic democracy. Their People’s Assembly is a living example of participatory governance done right.

In Nairobi’s Mukuru informal settlement, Muungano wa Wanavijiji—a grassroots federation of the urban poor—is redefining slum upgrading by organizing communities to map their own infrastructure, negotiate land rights, and plan their own future.

 What Makes Ethical Community Leadership Different?

Ethical leadership isn’t just about transparency or good intentions. It’s a practice rooted in core values and systems literacy. These leaders:

  • Lead by listening: They don’t impose solutions—they co-create them.
  • Center the most affected: They trust the wisdom of the marginalized.
  • Build institutions of care: From food sovereignty networks to mutual aid funds, they organize safety nets from the ground up.
  • Disrupt extractive systems: Whether confronting colonized land systems, corrupt governance, or ecological destruction, they take aim at root causes—not just symptoms.
  • Regenerate, not replicate: They don’t scale at the cost of soul. They grow like a forest—locally resilient, globally connected.

This is not nonprofit reformism or political branding. It’s a radical act of public trust-building.

 Real Systems Change in Action

Health: Community First

In Rwanda, community health workers—trained by and from their own villages—have helped reduce child mortality by more than 60% in just over a decade. These leaders don’t wait for the state to catch up; they move with their people.

Food Systems: Sovereignty Over Charity

In Hawai’i, the Hoʻoulu ʻĀina initiative is reconnecting communities to ancestral agroforestry, healing land while feeding families. In Brazil’s favelas, food delivery networks are run by residents, for residents—creating not just meals, but food dignity.

Justice: Accountability from the Ground Up

In Minneapolis, post-George Floyd, Black-led initiatives like Reclaim the Block and MPD150 have pushed for alternatives to policing rooted in care and prevention. Their strategy? Community investment, youth outreach, and trauma healing as public safety.

Climate: Regeneration Through Trust

In Vanuatu, traditional leaders and youth climate organizers sit together in councils to manage marine protected areas, combining indigenous law with modern resilience science.

 Lessons for the World

  1. The Global South Leads: Many of the most effective, transformative models are being pioneered outside the Western gaze—by communities long overlooked.
  2. Solutions Don’t Need to Be Scaled to Be Powerful: Replication is not always the goal. What matters is depth, not just breadth.
  3. Leadership Is a Practice, Not a Position: Ethical leaders are often invisible to media and policy circles—but central to movements that actually work.
  4. Narrative Is a Tool of Liberation: These leaders know that changing the story changes the system. They reclaim history, identity, and imagination.

Who Are Some of Today’s Ethical Leaders?

  • Alicia Wallace – Activist from the Bahamas blending gender justice and climate action.
  • Bayo Akomolafe – Nigerian philosopher reframing leadership as “becoming fugitive” from oppressive norms.
  • Naomi Klein – Author and organizer exposing the intersections of capitalism, climate, and colonialism.
  • Rowan White – Mohawk seedkeeper restoring Indigenous seed sovereignty across Turtle Island.
  • Raj Patel – Economist and activist co-building food justice networks that dismantle corporate agriculture.

These voices—and countless more unnamed—form the invisible architecture of a better future.

What Comes Next?

If ethical leadership teaches us anything, it’s this:

Change doesn’t come from permission. It comes from community.

To support ethical community leadership where you are:

  • Invest in grassroots organizations, not just polished NGOs.
  • Create spaces for youth and elders to lead together.
  • Shift from “impact metrics” to long-term trust and resilience.
  • Design funding systems that support depth over speed.
  • Follow the leadership of those most impacted—not just those most credentialed.

A New Ethic for Our Times

In every region, on every continent, ethical community leaders are showing what is possible when power is relational, not transactional. When decisions are made in circles, not pyramids. When justice is lived, not theorized.

They are not waiting for permission.
They are not waiting for the system to fix itself.
They are building new systems—right now.

And the world is watching.   Now it’s our turn to follow their lead.

“If you want to go fast, go alone. If you want to go far, go together. If you want to go deeper, build trust first.”
— Ancestral proverb, carried by ethical leaders everywhere

 

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Activism

Understanding the Benefits of Slow Fashion

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A Mobilized News Feature


“Fast fashion isn’t free. The environment pays the price.”

This simple truth has sparked a powerful global awakening—and given rise to a quiet revolution: slow fashion.

In an era defined by mass consumption, quick turnarounds, and microtrends that vanish faster than they arrive, the slow fashion movement offers something radical: intentionality. Not just in what we wear—but in how we live, how we value resources, and how we care for the Earth.

The Cost of Fast Fashion

The rise of fast fashion—characterized by cheaply made, disposable clothing—has turned our closets into landfills in waiting. Today, the fashion industry is responsible for:

  • 10% of global carbon emissions
  • 20% of global wastewater production
  • The equivalent of a garbage truck full of textiles dumped every second

From excessive water usage in cotton farming to toxic dyes that poison rivers and polyester microfibers that flood our oceans, fast fashion’s environmental footprint is immense and deeply unsustainable.

And the human toll? Garment workers often endure unsafe working conditions and earn far below living wages. Entire communities are sacrificed for the low price tags seen on global shelves.

What Is Slow Fashion?

Slow fashion is more than just a trend—it’s a philosophy. It prioritizes quality over quantity, ethics over exploitation, and regeneration over extraction.

Key principles include:

  • Locally made or regionally sourced garments
  • Natural or recycled fibers instead of synthetics
  • Durable design that outlasts seasonal trends
  • Transparent supply chains that honor people and the planet
  • Repair, reuse, and upcycling as core practices

The movement calls for a return to conscious consumption, where clothing is viewed not as disposable, but as a long-term companion.

Environmental Impact of Going Slow

Slow fashion offers real and measurable benefits for the planet:

Reduced Waste

By encouraging fewer purchases and longer-lasting garments, slow fashion drastically cuts textile waste. Some brands even take back used items to refurbish or recycle them.

Water Conservation

Organic fabrics like hemp, linen, and rain-fed cotton require far less water than conventional cotton. Natural dyes and closed-loop dyeing systems prevent waterway pollution.

Lower Carbon Emissions

Small-scale, local production eliminates long global shipping routes. Many slow fashion brands are also investing in renewable energy and carbon offsets.

Circular Economy Integration

Repair workshops, clothing swaps, and buy-back programs promote reuse. Deadstock materials and post-consumer waste are repurposed into new garments.

Designing a Better World: Brands Leading the Way

From small local ateliers to global pioneers, these are just a few brands making waves in slow fashion:

  • Reformation (USA): Uses eco-friendly materials and tracks its environmental footprint for each product.
  • Tonlé (Cambodia): A zero-waste fashion company that transforms leftover textiles into beautiful garments.
  • Eileen Fisher (USA): Runs a take-back program and resale shop, offering customers store credit for returning worn clothing.
  • Antidote (Miami): A boutique leading South Florida’s slow fashion scene with vegan, ethical, and upcycled brands.

But beyond brands, the true revolution is in the consumer mindset. More people are asking: Who made my clothes? And what impact does my wardrobe have on the Earth?

A Cultural Shift in the Making

Slow fashion is also a cultural act—an antidote to hyper-consumerism. It challenges the idea that status is found in accumulation. Instead, it finds beauty in craftsmanship, story, and connection.

In Indigenous communities, garments are often sacred—woven with memory, identity, and ceremony. The slow fashion movement honors this wisdom and seeks to decolonize the fashion system, bringing dignity back to makers and materials alike.

How You Can Join the Movement

You don’t need to overhaul your closet overnight. Start small:

  • Buy less, choose well
  • Support local designers and ethical brands
  • Learn to mend your clothes
  • Host a clothing swap
  • Buy vintage or secondhand
  • Ask brands about their labor practices and material sourcing

Slow fashion is about building a wardrobe that tells a story—a story of care, justice, and regeneration.

From Threads to Transformation

In a time of ecological breakdown and social disconnection, the clothes we wear can be a statement of resistance, healing, and hope.

By embracing slow fashion, we don’t just reduce our carbon footprint—we participate in weaving a future where style aligns with sustainability, and beauty is inseparable from ethics.

“When you choose slow fashion, you choose to slow down destruction—and stitch a more resilient world.”

For more tools, resources, and stories of fashion for the future, visit:

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