A firefighter carries a gear to initiate a controlled prescribed burning in a forest with flames burning close to ground behind him.
Credit: Photo by Emma Renly/Unsplash

California tribes rekindle ancient fire traditions to heal the land and themselves

After a century of U.S. fire suppression, California tribes are reviving cultural burns, low-intensity fires that nourish the land and reconnect communities to their roots.

Michaela Haas reports for Reasons to Be Cheerful.


In short:

  • Indigenous-led cultural burns are making a comeback across Northern California, with state support and scientific backing showing their role in restoring ecosystems and reducing wildfire risks.
  • These “good fires” don’t just clear brush — they revive native plants, support biodiversity, and reconnect tribal members, especially youth, to cultural practices and ancestral lands.
  • Unlike Western fire suppression tactics, cultural burns are deeply relational, guided by observation, permission, and a belief in fire as a non-human relative and healer.

Key quote:

“Cultural fire is a way of returning to the landscapes we were once punished for stewarding. When we gather for a burn, we reclaim our place.”

— Melinda Adams, San Carlos Apache Tribe member and professor at the University of Kansas

Why this matters:

Indigenous-led cultural burns, once outlawed and suppressed, are finally getting recognition and support. And with them comes a powerful blend of ecological revival and cultural healing — a combination of science, tradition, and ceremony. In a state keen to prevent megafires and undo the damage of colonization, Indigenous firekeepers are quietly leading the way.

Read more from EHN: Hands on the land, heart in community: Returning cultural fires

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As governments stall and emissions climb, human rights lawyers like Monica Feria-Tinta are turning to the courts to force climate action — one tree, island, or river at a time.

Samira Shackle reports for The Guardian.

In short:

  • Feria-Tinta is pioneering legal strategies that argue climate inaction violates human rights, helping Indigenous and vulnerable communities take their cases to global courts.
  • Her work includes landmark victories like the Torres Strait case, where the United Nations ruled Australia failed to protect islanders from climate harm, and Ecuador’s Los Cedros forest, which won legal rights as a living entity.
  • While legal wins are often slow and hard-fought, they’re shifting the global legal landscape, transforming courts into battlegrounds where climate justice and biodiversity now have a voice.

Key quote:

“Whether it’s a single tree, or a whole community depending on a river, what is at stake is the future of humanity.”

— Monica Feria-Tinta

Why this matters:

As heat, floods, and displacement intensify, the courtroom has become a potent line of defense. Climate litigation can hold powerful players accountable, push policy change, and help protect the ecosystems our health depends on — even when other systems fail. These legal wins are slow, complex, and anything but guaranteed. But they’re a signal that the courtroom is becoming one of the last places where the planet still stands a fighting chance.

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