From a scholarly perspective, the goal of RACELAND is to develop a new conceptual framework to study racial segregation from a transnational and environmental perspective. This framework derives inspiration from various disciplines, in particular cultural and historical geography and environmental humanities. Using concepts such as the Plantationocene, racial ecologies, counter-plantation projects, the metabolic rift, and multispecies justice, I aim to create a better understanding of how in particular racialized large-scale agriculture economies impact people and nature on global scales. As such, RACELAND is not just interesting for academics, but it is also very relevant for the world outside academia, considering the pressing issues that are central to the project: environmental degradation, racialized exploitation, the political threats of authoritarianism, and species loss, but also attempts to counter such destructive tendencies with grassroots sustainable action. Through conferences, public lectures, interviews with various media (e.g. newspapers, radio), podcasts, scholarly articles, investigative journalism pieces, online outlets (YouTube, project website, and project Instagram account), and teaching, I will disseminate the results of RACELAND to a wide-ranging and varied audience, both in Europe and the US.