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Our One Earth

Understanding the one planet we share.

HUMANITY FIRST. ALWAYS.

Our planet. Our responsibility. Our understanding.

Our One Earth is a student-run publication exploring the systems that shape human life on this planet. We publish sourced, bylined analysis of the ecological, economic, and social challenges that affect communities worldwide. Our aim is to make complex global issues accessible without sacrificing rigour.

Why we do this

The foundations of human civilisation are systems most people rarely think about: fertile soil, clean water, stable climates, and the biodiversity that keeps these systems functioning. These are not background conditions. They are the prerequisites for everything built on top of them. When they degrade, the consequences are measurable: food insecurity, economic disruption, and widening inequality.

Protecting the natural world is not a question of sentiment. It is a question of function. Every species occupies a role within its ecosystem: apex predators regulate populations, marine species sustain reef systems, and insects underpin global food production through pollination. The loss of any one element creates pressures that ripple outward. When ecosystems weaken, so do the agricultural, economic, and public health systems that depend on them.

The evidence suggests this process is already underway. Marine stocks are in decline due to overfishing, forest loss is reducing the carbon absorption and water regulation capacity of entire regions, and climate instability is disrupting weather patterns that billions of people rely on. Economic models that treat natural resources as externalities have consistently underestimated the long-term cost of environmental degradation.

Conservation, then, is not a peripheral concern. It is a structural one. Maintaining the integrity of ecosystems is among the most consequential investments a society can make in its own stability. The scientific consensus on this point is clear, and the economic case is increasingly well documented.

If we act with strength and unity, we can build a future where humanity stands on firm ground. The decisions made in the coming decades will determine the conditions inherited by future generations. The evidence points in one direction. What remains is the question of whether institutions, communities, and individuals will act on it.

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