<p> A lot has changed in the world since the Endangered Species Act (ESA) was enacted 50 years ago in December 1973. Two researchers at The Ohio State University were among a group of experts invited by the journal <em>Science</em> to discuss how the ESA has evolved and what its future might hold. <a href="https://tdai.osu.edu/people/berger-wolf.1">Tanya Berger-Wolf</a>, faculty director of Ohio State’s <a href="https://tdai.osu.edu/">Translational Data Analytics Institute</a>, led a group that wrote on “Sustainable, trustworthy, human-technology partnership.” <a href="https://aede.osu.edu/our-people/amy-w-ando">Amy Ando</a>, professor and chair of the university’s <a href="https://aede.osu.edu/">Department of Agricultural, Environmental, and Development Economics</a><u>,</u> wrote on &ldqu
Land Conservation Measures May Be Widening the Racial Wealth Gap : The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education
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Study Finds Wealthy White Homeowners Benefit Most from Land Conservation
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Important new discussion paper from a star-studded cast of environmental and resource economists . .on the need for the environmental economics discipline to take better care in considering the systemic issues of race and justice in our research published by Resources for the Future: Our paper argues that systemic racism is.