At the Interpreting Environmental Justice conference, our founder Shaunna CM led The Story in the Science: Interpreting Conservation Research for Public Audiences, a session about turning complex conservation data into connection. Drawing from her work at The Big Bad Project, Shaunna explored how interpretation connects research to meaning, bridging the space between scientific insight and human experience.
She invited interpreters and conservation professionals to ask key questions: Who is missing from this story? What does this data mean for the people who live it? How do we make science feel human again? This conversation is at the heart of everything we do. Whether funding field research through Aerial Allies or reframing cultural narratives through Rewriting the Wild, BBP’s work depends on interpretation to connect people to the “why” behind the science.
At the Interpreting Environmental Justice conference, our founder Shaunna CM led The Story in the Science: Interpreting Conservation Research for Public Audiences, a session about turning complex conservation data into connection. Drawing from her work at The Big Bad Project, Shaunna explored how interpretation connects research to meaning, bridging the space between scientific insight and human experience.
She invited interpreters and conservation professionals to ask key questions: Who is missing from this story? What does this data mean for the people who live it? How do we make science feel human again? This conversation is at the heart of everything we do. Whether funding field research through Aerial Allies or reframing cultural narratives through Rewriting the Wild, BBP’s work depends on interpretation to connect people to the “why” behind the science.
At the Interpreting Environmental Justice conference, our founder Shaunna CM led The Story in the Science: Interpreting Conservation Research for Public Audiences, a session about turning complex conservation data into connection. Drawing from her work at The Big Bad Project, Shaunna explored how interpretation connects research to meaning, bridging the space between scientific insight and human experience.
She invited interpreters and conservation professionals to ask key questions: Who is missing from this story? What does this data mean for the people who live it? How do we make science feel human again? This conversation is at the heart of everything we do. Whether funding field research through Aerial Allies or reframing cultural narratives through Rewriting the Wild, BBP’s work depends on interpretation to connect people to the “why” behind the science.