Through technology, branding, city design and more, creatives can play an important role in promoting sustainability and addressing climate change. In The Sustainability Issue, Creative Review looks at those who are leading the charge https://bit.ly/2FkCH2g 
Tackling the climate crisis will take imagination and grit – attributes that creatives and designers have in abundance. Here, Ashley Johnson, Katee Hui and Naresh Ramchandani of @pentagram and @dothegreenthing explain how creatives can help create change https://bit.ly/2YUGUk7 
An Ocean of Plastic: Through her beautiful images of manmade waste, photographer Mandy Barker ( @plasticpieces) has highlighted the ugly truth about plastic pollution. Rachael Steven talks to her about her creative process https://bit.ly/3jxEaB3 
How to Brand A Sustainable Business: Historically, sustainable branding has found itself firmly stuck in the eco-cliché trap – conjuring up images of green rolling hills, earthy tones, and the obligatory leaf motif. But now, this is changing https://bit.ly/3gT37VX 
The pandemic has prompted cities around the world to reconsider everything – from parks and public transport to the way high streets work. We explore why good design is the way forward for greener, more sustainable spaces https://bit.ly/3lLoSe8 
Responsibility and the Internet of Things: The vast majority of our tech is designed to have a short shelf-life and be impossible for consumers to fix themselves. For a sustainable future, @method_inc ECD Helen Le Voi says this needs to change https://bit.ly/3lOt0tM 
Creative campaigns are increasingly used by environmental groups to promote a greener way of life – but are bandwagon-jumping brands diluting the message? @GreenpeaceUK, @XRLondon and @motherlondon on the role of advertising in sustainability https://bit.ly/3jRWULH 
B Corporations have a legal obligation to consider how their practices affect those who work with them and the environment. But how do you become one? Danny Miller – co-founder of design agency @HumanAfterAll – talks us through the process https://bit.ly/3imjyeM 
Georgina Johnson’s first book – The Slow Grind: Finding Our Way Back to Creative Balance – addresses how our narrow definition of sustainability has created more inequality. Here, the multi-disciplinary artist discusses what needs to change https://bit.ly/2ZjZCls 
We often overlook how much of the West's recycled waste ends up in Africa. Leonie Annor-Owiredu speaks to Burkina Faso-based Hamed Ouattara, one of the artists addressing the problem, about how he hopes his art will lead to wider change https://bit.ly/3k0Ltlc 
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