Rep. Raul Grijalva wins Ansel Adams Award for conservation leadership
TWS
4 reasons President Biden should protect Avi Kwa Ame in Nevada
Alan O'Neill
New film: Drilling in Chaco Canyon region threatens Indigenous cultural sites
Andrew Kearns/FLICKR CC BY 2.0
New wildlife threat findings confirm we have to protect lands and waters
Brian Henderson, Flickr
6 reasons old-growth forests are really important
Nicholas_T, Flickr
Watch: Racist & offensive place names featured in panel discussion
Mason Cummings, TWS
4 reasons for President Biden to protect Texas’ Castner Range
Mark Clune
4 ways protecting lands and waters can help answer the extinction crisis
Jacob W. Frank, NPS
Movement to change racist names on public lands moves forward
Wikimedia Commons
Together we can protect public lands, now and forever.
Each day thousands of acres of wild places are lost to mining, drilling, logging and other development. But we don't have to give it all away. Together, we can save our wildest lands for future generations.

Nearly 112 million acres of wilderness protected
Miles Morgan
Protecting 30% of U.S. lands and waters by 2030 to meet environmental challenges
Learn about our 30x30 workKey Issues
Mason Cummings, TWS

Working together for a more inclusive future
Mason Cummings, TWS
Join the movement for wildlands
Defend our wildlands!Racist or offensive names persist in U.S. parks; new plan confronts them
Jim Brekke, flickr

More than 1 million members and supporters are making a difference
Jonathan Meyers, The Wilderness Society
How do we tackle climate change? Look no further than public lands
Read MoreClimate Change Solutions
Mason Cummings.
There is just one hope of repulsing the tyrannical ambition of civilization to conquer every niche on the whole earth. That hope is the organization of spirited people who will fight for the freedom of the wilderness.
Bob Marshall Founder of The Wilderness Society
Our HistoryMason Cummings/TWS