Ellen Miles is a London-based activist with "a mission to make nature contact a recognised human right" and she deserves widespread recognition for creating and collating this brilliant book. Comprised of three chapters, each exploring themes of welfare, injustice, and change, it contains a welcome range of voices from across our society's still lamentably entrenched socioeconomic, racial and gendered divides.
The result is both heart-breaking and hopeful, with each contributor - including Ellen herself - eloquently, and with great wisdom, describing their experiences, and making an intelligent case for why they care deeply about our environment and the natural world.
The book in its entirety is a timely clarion call to action. which goes straight to the heart of why it is so important that each of us finds our own way to care about preserving our access to green spaces; understanding that to value our 'right' to the natural world means that we recognise we are an integral part of, not separate from it.
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