Walking alongside each other
Here are three places to start, or continue, your learning journey about Indigenous-led conservation.
Here are three places to start, or continue, your learning journey about Indigenous-led conservation.
Y2Y is helping connect grizzly bears back to important habitat in the Bitterroot valley and beyond, thanks to your support.
Tell B.C. to invest into Indigenous governments and communities to protect ecosystems and biodiversity, and engage in land-based reconciliation.
A new report from University of
Northern British Columbia and Y2Y shows at least 24 per cent of trails on public land in Kananaskis Country and B.C.’s Upper Columbia are not documented by the government.
What does land-based reconciliation look like in our region, and how do we get there, together?
Y2Y celebrates the leadership of Blueberry River First Nations and the B.C. government in the signing of an implementation agreement on January 18.
Brynn McLellan is Y2Y’s recreation ecology intern. Her contributions have been essential in understanding recreation in the Yellowstone to Yukon region as part of a multi-year research project with UNBC.
Y2Y among conservation groups supporting significant step in recovery for one Alberta caribou herd
Allegra Sundstrom, a researcher who received Y2Y’s 2021 Sarah Baker grant, is conducting research to understand why some tools and techniques to reduce human-wildlife conflict are more readily adopted and used compared to others.
Nature is for everyone. This extends to physical, economic and social access. To be truly accessible, we need to consider the sorts of barriers that are keeping people from nature.