DARCIA NARVAEZ is a Professor of Psychology Emerita at the University of Notre Dame and founder of The Evolved Nest Initiative, focused on developing appropriate baselines for lifelong human wellness by meeting the biological needs of infants. Dr. Narvaez is the author or editor of over twenty books and dozens of articles. G.A. BRADSHAW is the founder and director of The Kerulos Center for Nonviolence. Her diagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder in free-living elephants launched the field of trans-species psychology. She holds doctorate degrees in ecology and psychology and a master's in geophysics and was a Fellow at the National Science Foundation National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis.
"This gem of a book, vast in erudition and insight and rich in
mind-boggling scientific observation, will leave the reader both
humbled and grateful." —From the foreword by Gabor Maté, author of
The Myth of Normal
"[An invitation] to turn to Nature and our nonhuman Animal
relatives to learn the ways of 'mothering'—of care for the earth,
all her beings, and future generations." —Dr. Vandana Shiva,
physicist, ecofeminist, and food sovereignty activist
"The most thought-provoking, fascinating, challenging, beautiful
book I’ve read in years." —Bruce D. Perry, MD, PhD, Department of
Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Feinberg School of Medicine,
Northwestern University
"...an absolute pleasure to read...it provocatively challenges us
to rethink our relationship with and moral responsibilities to the
other species with whom we share the planet." —Allan N. Schore,
PhD, Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences at UCLA’s
David Geffen School of Medicine
"...timely and vital...a crucial documentation of how our ancestral
history is [more] one of collaborating as a larger identity than
the lessons modern culture portrays of solo-self in isolation."
—Daniel J. Siegel, MD, author of IntraConnected
"...our refusal to accept and cherish the commonality we have with
other beings is undermining our ability to raise children to be
happy and socially functional adults. If only we paid attention to
how other Animals do it." —Dr. Reed Noss, past president of the
Society for Conservation Biology
"...breathtakingly comprehensive, insightful, and singularly
creative..." —Richard M. Lerner, director of the Institute for
Applied Research in Youth Development, Tufts University
"In this masterpiece of reconceptualization, [the authors] reveal
the deep commonalities in the developmental systems of both humans
and our nonhuman Relatives." —Jeremy Lent, author of The Web of
Meaning
"Profound, wonder-filled, and deeply reasoned." —Dacher Keltner,
director of the Berkeley Social Interaction Lab
"The future of our fragile, magnificent, and interconnected planet
depends on the goodwill and love of everyone living everywhere....
And there is no better cohort on which to focus than youngsters,
because they are the future." —Marc Bekoff, author of Rewilding Our
Hearts
"...simultaneously brilliant and breathtaking." —Douglas P. Fry,
PhD, author of War, Peace, and Human Nature
"[The authors] compassionately remind us of our evolutionary and
contemporary connection with the diverse social systems of nonhuman
species that populate the Earth." —Stephen W. Porges, PhD, author
of Polyvagal Safety
"[The book] has much to teach academics, society, and parents about
how to support the rearing of a healthy child." —C. Sue Carter,
PhD, professor of psychology, University of Virginia
"...highly original and thought-provoking..." —Robert Lickliter,
professor at Florida International University
"A rare and respectful engagement with the kinship worldview in a
manner that acknowledges and invites us to learn from the guidance
provided by our Plant and Animal relatives. —Amba J. Sepie,
multidisciplinary author, teacher, and Whitinga Fellow, Massey
University, Aotearoa New Zealand
"The book we all need to be reading right now." —Nakia S. Gordon,
associate professor of psychology, Marquette University
"[The authors] provide teachings that stem from observing our
nonhuman relations, showing how they exemplify a life-sustaining
kinship worldview that guided us for most of human history."
—Wahinkpe Topa (Four Arrows), aka Don Trent Jacobs, PhD, EdD,
coauthor of Restoring the Kinship Worldview
"...lessons for how we as parents of our own species can better
understand what it means to raise a child to be healthy in body and
mind." —Carl Safina, author of Becoming Wild
"...beautifully traces the natural science and living process
available within, between, and all around us to grow the caring,
lasting, deep connections essential for children, families, and
communities to thrive." —Christina Bethell, PhD, MBA, MPH,
professor of child health, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns
Hopkins University
"Revelations for a hopeful future are visible within our natural
world and revealed from Indigenous and ancestral wisdom." —David W.
Willis, MD, senior fellow at the Center for the Study of Social
Policy
"[The authors] offer insights into the costly tradeoffs we have
made to live in the crowded, hierarchical societies we call
civilization, and how to find our way back to the living world."
—David Johns, retired professor of political science, School of
Government, Portland State University
"...fascinating, important, and accessible...a brilliant addition
to the developmental literature on prosocial behaviour." —Paul
Gilbert OBE, The Compassionate Mind Foundation
"...highlights the importance of taking both an evolutionary and
animal-comparative perspective for understanding the nature and
development of any animal, including humans." —David F. Bjorklund,
PhD, professor of psychology at Florida Atlantic University and
author of How Children Invented Humanity
"A fascinating and lively way to begin learning about how human
childcare fits into the vast spectrum and deep evolutionary history
of the caring that is central to community." —Melvin
Konner, MD, PhD, Samuel Candler Dobbs Professor of
Anthropology, Program in Neuroscience and Behavioral Biology, Emory
University
"...essential reading for those who care about children, those who
care about life on this planet, and those who recognize (or need to
recognize) that those topics are inextricably intertwined."
—Derrick Jensen, ecophilosopher and author of The Myth of Human
Supremacy
"...a fascinating work...[and] a cautionary tale on the perils of
turning against Nature." —Riane Eisler, author of Nurturing Our
Humanity
"...beautifully written [and] scientifically rich..." —Gordon M.
Burghardt, professor of psychology at the University of
Tennessee
"Scholars and practitioners alike will be informed and inspired by
the interweaving of remarkable insights drawn from across many
Animal species." —L. Alan Sroufe, professor emeritus of child
development at the University of Minnesota
"Narvaez and Bradshaw's brilliant, soul-nourishing stories of human
and Animal families are a welcome journey home." —Lisa Reagan,
editor of Kindred Media and cofounder of Kindred World
"[The authors] take up perhaps the biggest question of all: Who are
we? Their answer: an evolved species deeply connected to the
more-than-human world, joyously so, if we can but rediscover
nature's relational ways of being." —Peter H. Kahn, Jr., author of
Technological Nature
"By respectful dialogue between Indigenous knowledge and Western
scientific insights, the authors point a way forward to creating
the kind of earth-bound, caring communities which are so vitally
needed." —Celia Deane-Drummond, director of Laudato Si’ Research
Institute, Campion Hall, University of Oxford
"...a compassionate, wise, and gently thought-provoking
investigation of our natural capacities to care for and raise our
young through benevolent human and non-human relationships." —Tina
Malti, PhD, professor, psychotherapist, and co-editor of The
Cambridge Handbook of Prosociality
"...a powerful plea to heal our connections to the natural world
and to each other." —Sue Gerhardt, psychotherapist and author of
Why Love Matters
"A good place to begin the profound process of political and
scientific re-thinking we all need." —Professor Chris Knight,
Senior Honorary Research Associate, department of Anthropology,
University College London
"From Whales to Wolves, the authors give touching examples of
whole-child parenting that could easily pass for the human ideal."
—Tamarack Song, founder of the Healing Nature Center and author of
Blossoming the Child
"[The authors] help us to look within our species' deep history for
clues to inspire a more humane and sustainable future for our
children and all our Kin." —Ruth Anne Hammond, author of Respecting
Babies
"...simultaneously a revelation and a return to Indigenous ways of
knowing.... a call to reclaim nature-based childrearing knowledges
that are caring, ethical, spiritual, and social." —Jennifer
Markides, assistant professor in the Werklund School of
Education
"...a compelling case for re-embracing Nature and natural history
to optimize our children's development and our societies'
relationship to the natural world." —Eric Nelson, PhD, Principal
Investigator, Abigail Wexner Research Institute, Nationwide
Children's Hospital
"...a beautiful description of the contexts for birth and
development in various Animal species, with the focus always on
helping us understand ourselves and our truest needs in relation to
Nature." —Peter Gray, research professor of psychology and
neuroscience at Boston College and author of Free to Learn
"Truly a wonderful book." —Stuart Shanker, Founder of The MEHRIT
Centre
"The Evolved Nest enriches our imagination about how we can embrace
companionship care to build a relational world of resilience,
empathy, reciprocity, and respect." —Mary Watkins, PhD, author of
Mutual Accompaniment and the Creation of the Commons
"This book provides the rationale we need to nurture children
towards our humane species potential rather than adapting them to
the cutthroat patriarchal capitalism that is now destroying the
intricate web of all life." —Genevieve Vaughan, author of The Gift
in the Heart of Language
"The book is a call to come home—to a home that is multispecies,
that is nurturing, and that is healing, for parents and children
alike." —Margo DeMello, cultural anthropologist at Carroll College
and author of Animals and Society
"In this terrifying time, we need a new animist cosmology. This
book which examines the 'evolved nest' of a range of complex
intelligent mammal and bird species, including humans, could
provide the source." —Dr Camilla Power, anthropologist
"A delightful nest of knowledge, woven from strands of scientific,
Indigenous, and nature-based thought." —Cheryl Alexander, filmmaker
of Takaya: Lone Wolf
"A glorious manifesto for re-wilding humanity, our return to the
ways of relationship that will bring us back to peace and
ecological belonging."—Robin Grille, psychotherapist and author of
Parenting for a Peaceful World
"...a blueprint for a compassionate world." —Barbara Nicholson,
cofounder of Attachment Parenting International
“...as profound as it is illuminating." —Lysa Parker,
cofounder of Attachment Parenting International
"...rich and inspiring wisdom drawn from animals, children, sages,
and scientists to help us feel kinship as our Indigenous birthright
and restore the nest we call earth." —O. Fred Donaldson, author of
Original Play, husband, father, play specialist, aikidoist,
calligrapher, cowboy, and Native American craftsman
“Dynamic and rich.... at once inspiring and a warning to how we
must return to natural ways and rhythms if our species is to
survive." —Kate White, MA, BCBMT, RCST, CEIM, SEP, PPNE, PLC,
founding director of education for the Association for Prenatal and
Perinatal Psychology and Health
"Let this book raise us and our children and theirs to come."
—Deena Metzger, author of La Vieja and La Negra y Blanca
"Darcia and Gay take us back to the future, revealing that our
authentic nature is Nature.... Everyone who turns these pages will
be struck, awakened, and hopefully transformed by the symphony of
brilliant insights these two sing." —Michael Mendizza,
entrepreneur, author, and founder of Touch the Future
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