This edition of Mongabay’s webinar series dives into the wide world of coral reefs, how journalists can better cover them, the people who depend on them, and solutions to protect them. 11 p.m. UTC // 7 p.m. EDT.
Journalist Brian Karem and Stephanie Sugars of Freedom of the Press Foundation’s U.S. Press Freedom Tracker will join FPF’s Caitlin Vogus to discuss the Trump administration’s attacks on the Fourth Estate. 2 p.m. EDT / 11 a.m. PDT.
Join the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists for a webinar exploring the risks of climate change and how to understand what planetary shifts are inevitable — and which are solvable — in this current era of scientific skepticism. 10 a.m. ET.
Join a free roundtable discussion, organized by The People’s Forum and co-sponsored by The Natural History Museum, on what some are calling a “crisis in green capitalism.” Attend in person in New York City or watch the livestream. 6-8 p.m. ET.
Join the Yale Center for Environmental Communication, the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication and the Yale School of the Environment for a discussion on the critical role of local leadership in driving climate communication from the ground up. 2 p.m. ET.
Join My Climate Story project, the Yale Program on Climate Communication, the Penn Center for Science, Sustainability, & the Media and the High Meadows Environmental Institute for a free, live, online, two-hour storytellers’ summit. 4 p.m. ET.
Join the Yale Program on Climate Change Communication and Covering Climate Now to learn how to use these Maps, which identify the diversity of public opinion across the country down to the local level, including belief that global warming is happening, is human-caused and levels of public worry about it. Noon ET.
This edition of Mongabay’s webinar series will examine how journalists can report on corridors and answer key questions related to their use in law, policy, scientific research, conservation and human development. 10:30 a.m. ET.
This in-person event, 5-7 p.m. at the University of Rhode Island, is open to the public. Join The Washington Post's Daniel Wolfe for a conversation with Guenther about her investigation into the propaganda that justifies the fossil-fuel economy and offering new ways to talk about the climate crisis in an effort to create transformative change.