YES! Article archive

LeRoy Chatfield

is a former organizer who worked with Cesar Chavez to get union recognition for California farmworkers, created a Saturday school educational enrichment program for farmworker children in Bakersfield, managed the

Erica Etelson

 is a depolarization researcher specializing in political communication and the author of Beyond Contempt: How Liberals Can Communicate Across the Great Divide. A former human rights attorney and longtime activist,
Matt Grisafi

Matt Grisafi

is the senior director of product and marketing at YES! Media.

Natasha Zartman

is a soon-to-be graduate of Biola University’s English writing program and the Torrey Honors Institute.

Melissa A. Fabello, PhD

is a feminist writer and educator whose work focuses on the politics of bodies and wellness. She holds a PhD in Human Sexuality Studies.

Jon Steinman

is the author of “Grocery Story: The Promise of Food Co-ops in the Age of Grocery Giants” (New Society Publishers, 2019).

Lisa Fithian

is an anti-racist organizer who has worked for justice since the 1970s. Using creative, strategic nonviolent direct action and civil disobedience, she has won many battles and trained tens of thousands

Hilary Giovale

is a community organizer, philanthropist, and author of a forthcoming ethnoautobiography about her process of decolonizing and healing from whiteness.

Edgar Villanueva

is the author of Decolonizing Wealth: Indigenous Wisdom to Heal Divides and Restore Balance (Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2021), and the founder and CEO of Decolonizing Wealth Project and Liberated Capital.

Kimberly Dark

is a writer, professor, and raconteur. She has written award-winning plays, and taught and performed for a wide range of audiences in various countries over the past two decades. She

Ben Lorber

works at Political Research Associates as a Research Analyst focusing on anti-Semitism and White nationalism. He lives in Boston, MA.

Kurly Tlapoyawa

is an archaeologist, author, filmmaker, and ethnohistorian. He is the founder of the Chimalli institute. 

Katherine Long

is a Seattle freelance writer and former education reporter for The Seattle Times.

Carl S. Charles

is a staff attorney with Lambda Legal, an oganization dedicated to advancing the civil rights of LGBTQ people and people living with HIV.

Siku Allooloo

is an Inuit/Haitian Taino writer from Denendeh, Northwest Territory.

Shira Feder

is a freelance New York-based writer who covers science, culture, and everything in between. She has written for Vox, The Daily Beast, and The Huffington Post.

Tarell Kyles

is a doctoral student at Pacifica Graduate Institute. She is an organizer with the Truth Telling Collective and the Malcolm X Grassroots Movement.  

Rob Hopkins

is co-founder of Transition Town Totnes and Transition Network. He is the author of “The Power of Just Doing Stuff,” “The Transition Handbook,” and “The Transition Companion.” His latest book is

YES! Editors

are those editors featured on YES! Magazine’s masthead. Stories authored by YES! Editors are substantially reported, researched, written, and edited by at least two members of the YES! Editorial team.

Kari Nixon

is an assistant professor at Whitworth University, where she teaches medical humanities, Victorian literature, and the impact of disease upon social norms.

Isabella Garcia

is a former solutions reporter and former editorial intern for YES! Media. Her work has appeared in The Malheur Enterprise and YES! Magazine. Isabella is based in Portland. She can

Kari Marie Norgaard

(non-Native professor of sociology and environmental studies at University of Oregon) has engaged in environmental justice policy work with the Karuk Tribe since 2003. Kari is also the author of

Deborah Taffa

teaches creative nonfiction at Washington University in St. Louis. She is the author of the memoir, “Whiskey Tender.”

Alejandro Frid

is an ecologist for First Nations of British Columbia’s Central Coast, and an adjunct assistant professor in the School of Environmental Studies at the University of Victoria.

Hussain Abdulhaqq

is an urban garden educator, a naturalist, and a Black man raised in a family of soldiers, artists, and teachers.
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