Celebrate Earth Day with renowned activist and author Winona LaDuke as she presents: Rights of Nature
Celebrate Earth Day with renowned activist and author Winona LaDuke as she presents: Rights of Nature
Celebrate Earth Day with renowned activist and author Winona LaDuke as she presents: Rights of Nature
I’m giving a talk at the Women Working for the Earth Summit on Thursday, April 21, “What’s Happening in the Green New Revolution”.
I hope you will join me! Head to the link in my bio to register for this free event 🌍
Rural development economist and environmental justice advocate Winona LaDuke (Anishinaabekwe, Ojibwe) will join AAG President Emily Yeh for a virtual keynote address and x during #AAG2022
Seed Sovereignty: Who Owns the Seeds of the World, Bio-Piracy, Genetic Engineering and Indigenous Peoples.
Inspired by the work of Mahatma Gandhi, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., César Chávez, and Chief Wilma Mankiller, the annual Season for Nonviolence honors these leaders’ visions for an empowered, nonviolent world. Colleges and universities throughout the country celebrate the Season of Nonviolence by bringing together community partners to educate and empower communities on how to use non-violent methods to create a more peaceful world.
Central Oregon Community College has been hosting programming to honor the Season of Nonviolence since 2008. The programming is co-presented by The Nancy R. Chandler Lecture Series and the College's Office of Diversity and Inclusion.
Winona LaDuke – Native American Economist, Environmentalist, Writer, and Executive Director of Honor the Earth
Tuesday, February 1, 6:00 - 7:30 p.m. PST - Virtual Presentation
FREE and OPEN to the public. Register here.
Live captioning will be available. One registration per viewing device please.
Winona LaDuke is a global leader and an economist focused on issues of culturally based sustainable development strategies, renewable energy, water protection, and sustainable food systems. Drawing upon her work in these areas, LaDuke strongly believes there is a clear path forward towards our shared economic future. LaDuke will share her vision for this transition, one that is just and equitable for all, including Mother Earth.
About Winona LaDuke
Winona LaDuke is a rural development economist and author working on issues of sustainable development, renewable energy, and food systems. She lives and works on the White Earth reservation in northern Minnesota, and is a two-time vice-presidential candidate with Ralph Nader for the Green Party.
As Executive Director of Honor the Earth, she works nationally and internationally on the issues of climate change, renewable energy, and environmental justice alongside Indigenous communities. In her own community, she is the founder of the White Earth Land Recovery Project, one of the largest reservation-based non-profit organizations in the country. She is also the co-founder (along with the Indigo Girls) of Honor the Earth, a grassroots environmental organization focused on Indigenous issues and environmental justice.
Tuesday, February 1, 4:00-5:00 p.m. PST - Virtual Discussion
Program is FREE & OPEN to all COCC STUDENTS
Students Register Here.
COCC students are invited to join an informal virtual conversation and Q & A with acclaimed Native American environmentalist, Winona LaDuke before her public presentation. LaDuke lives and works on the White Earth reservation in northern Minnesota, and is a two-time vice-presidential candidate with Ralph Nader for the Green Party. She is also the co-founder (along with the Indigo Girls) of Honor the Earth, a grassroots environmental organization focused on Indigenous issues and environmental justice.
Thu, Dec 9, 6:00 PM - 7:30 PM CST ·Via Zoom
Event Information
We don’t have enough opportunities to come together and recognize the power of our organizing, so its moments like this help sustain us in this fight to protect our health, communities, and environment from oil & gas.
Our Keynote Speaker for this year's event is Winona LaDuke, founder of Honor the Earth – and we're having a musical performance by Eilen Jewell. All together we will celebrate the recipients of this year's Community Sentinel Award for Environmental Stewardship!
Congratulations to this year’s Sentinel Award Winners!
Love Sanchez of Corpus Cristi, Texas
John Beard, Jr. of Port Arthur, TX
Travis London of Donaldsonville, LA
Veronica Coptis of Greene County, PA
🎟 Support the event by purchasing a sliding scale ticket here
Register for the 2-day virtual conference on Mobilizing Decolonial Praxis with amazing keynote speakers and presenters! Join to collectively reconceptualize Indigenous Education for our communities by engaging in sharing knowledge, experiences, and visions for the future. June 21-22, 2021, from 9-4 PM MST.
https://www.conservancyforcvnp.org/crooked-river-reads/
March 22, 2020 7-8PM
Join Vandana Shiva, Leah Penniman, Winona LaDuke, and Jeremy Lent for a discussion on moving the world to a community-oriented way of life.
The path toward an ecological civilization moves us from an uncivilized society based on selfish wealth accumulation to one that is community-oriented and life-affirming. You’re invited to join us for a virtual conversation on the ways communities are already working toward that goal—and how you can be a part of it.
This event features contributors to our upcoming issue of YES! Magazine, "An Ecological Civilization"—Vandana Shiva, Leah Penniman, Winona LaDuke, and Jeremy Lent—and will be facilitated by YES! executive editor Zenobia Jeffries Warfield and Andrew Schwartz, co-founder and executive vice president of the Institute for Ecological Civilization. Reserve your seat now!
February 17, 6pm New York/11pm London
Check the event time in your location
Join us for a free, live streamed event bringing together world-leading experts in sustainability science and practice to discuss vital questions around equity, inclusivity and solidarity.
Global sustainability cannot be realized without achieving sustainability for the most vulnerable and underrepresented communities – many of them in low- and middle-income countries, as well as those increasingly left behind in high-income countries.
Yet the framing of sustainability, investment in innovation, and academic analysis has been dominated by processes that give relatively little regard to and participation from these communities, even when they are about them. This bias matters, because decisions on sustainability include important trade-offs, and processes that lack inclusivity and diversity miss many opportunities arising from the different social, cultural and demographic attributes.
This SRI Talk theme, Sustainability for Whom?, is one of the five Congress Pillars of the Sustainability Research and Innovation Congress 2021 (SRI2021) which will take place June 12-15, 2021, in Brisbane, Australia.
This 60-minute talk will be live streamed through the SRI2021 virtual platform and will include a moderated discussion and live audience Q&A. This event is free to attend, please register at the link below. Connection details will be sent via email and linked from the website and social media platforms ahead of the event.
THE GREAT NORTHERN - JANUARY 28-FEBRUARY 7, 2021
The Great Northern celebrates our cold, creative winters through ten days of diverse programming that invigorate mind and body. In an era of changing climate that threatens our signature season, we seek to create community, inspire action, and share the resilient spirit of the North with the world.
The health and sustainability of our environment and climate are elemental to who we are as a society. Films are a powerful tool to address climate change — they educate, inspire, and empower audiences toward action. For the inaugural collaboration of The Great Northern and MSP Film, we are presenting films that speak to essential issues in the climate conversation based around the 4 elements: Earth, Water, Air, Fire.
Climate Action Films:
The Biggest Little Farm (Earth)
First Daughter and the Black Snake (Water)
2040 (Air)
Rebuilding Paradise (Fire)
Reserve your ticket and start watching Thursday, January 28 through February 7, 2021. You will have 48 hours to complete once you begin watching.
WE THE PEOPLE: REQUIRED WATCHING
We the People: Required Watching Conversation: Sunday, January 31 at 7:00pm. With Keri Pickett (Filmmaker), Winona LaDuke (Economist and Executive Director of Honor the Earth), moderated by MSP Film Society Programmer Craig Rice.
REGISTER FOR THE CONVERSATION HERE
Winona LaDuke believes Big Oil is the black snake predicted in indigenous prophecy to bring the earth’s destruction. When new oil pipelines threaten sacred wild rice lakes, Winona dreams of riding her horse against the current of oil, organizing a spiritual ride, because a horse can kill a snake.
MSP Film's We the People: Required Watching is a series designed to spark conversation around current events and issues of social impact affecting our community, country and world. This series is generously supported by the George Family Foundation and KNOCK, Inc. All We the People online discussions are generously supported by Kelly and Mike Palmer.
The films are curated by the MSP Film Society (MSP Film), whose mission is to inform and transform individuals and communities through the power of great cinema. MSP Film has spent the last five decades celebrating a myriad of cultures, countries and issues of collective local and global concern through film, believing in the potency of storytelling to move people, and to move people to action. Our widely recognized Minneapolis St. Paul International Film Festival, Cine Latino or We The People film series among many others - all developed with the counsel of inspiring individuals from around the world - represent a diversity of perspectives and 100+ cultures and countries each year, providing unique platforms for learning and action through film and conversation.
Your ticket purchase directly benefits MSP Film Society during these challenging times, thank you!
REGISTER
Making a Difference for the Earth & Each Other
A Free Online Talk
With Winona LaDuke and Robert “Skip” Backus
Reaffirm your relationship with the earth and the human family in this month’s Omega Conversation with storyteller, fearless Indigenous activist, and two-time Green Party vice presidential candidate Winona LaDuke.
Winona is passionately working toward an economy that is ecologically sustainable, equitable, and just for us all. And her passion for the protection of the earth, water, and each other is contagious.
We are pleased to invite you to a conversation with Winona and Omega CEO Robert “Skip” Backus, Making a Difference for the Earth & Each Other, a free 1-hour Zoom gathering on Thursday, October 29 at 2:00 p.m. EDT.
How can we hack ‘business as usual’ for our campuses and communities to face our current crises better and together? Join us via zoom for a virtual series of sessions grappling with global warming, including the critical matters of racial equity and climate justice.
Oct. 6 • 4 - 5:30pm: For the third part of our series, the Center will host an online community gathering, which will feature select local, inspiring climate-focused organizations. During this event, organizational leaders will highlight the important work they are doing in Minnesota, and share ways in which attendees can get involved and help change the trajectory of climate change and support planetary health. Learn more.
Wellbeing Series for Planetary Health • Part Three
Oct. 6, 4 – 5:30 p.m. Central
For the third part of our series, the Center will host an online community gathering, which will feature select local, inspiring climate-focused organizations. During this event, organizational leaders will highlight the important work they are doing in Minnesota, and share ways in which you can get involved and help change the trajectory of climate change and support planetary health.
The Ethyle R. Wolfe Institute for the Humanities, in cooperation with the Robert L. Hess Scholar-in-Residence Planning Committee, presents the Robert L. Hess Memorial Lecture:
The 31st Annual Headwaters Conference: Inclusive Climate Action
September 18-19, 2020
Understanding Our Food Systems is a collaborative participatory, action-based project led by fourteen First Nations communities and supported by a collaborative partnership between the Thunder Bay District Health Unit and the Indigenous Food Circle.
The Institute for Tribal Environmental Professionals (ITEP) is honored to host the United States’ First Biennial National Tribal and Indigenous Climate Conference (NTICC) along with support from the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) Tribal Resilience Program. The NTICC is open to all US tribal nations and Indigenous Peoples from throughout the world, with an emphasis on including our Elders and Youth. The NTICC will convene experts on climate change and will include a balance of Traditional Indigenous Knowledges and Western Science. This conference will allow an opportunity to share information and support one another. We welcome all to join us!
Join the Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian (NMAI) and Teaching for Change for keynote speaker Winona LaDuke curriculum workshops. The focus of the teach-in is Indigenous peoples’ histories and experiences around food and water justice today. The keynote speaker and interactive workshops will feature classroom resources from the NMAI’s Native Knowledge 360° and the Zinn Education Project’s Teach Climate Justice campaign. The teach-in will be held virtually via Zoom.
This webinar will showcase local and regional fiber and textile systems that drive environmentally and socially healthy production chains and businesses, support local job creation, and rebuild markets for regionally produced fashion and fiber-based products.
Join us as internationally-renowned activist and author Winona LaDuke - an Anishinaabekwe (Ojibwe) member of the White Earth Nation - discusses how the pandemic provides us with an opportunity to walk a new path, taking care of each other, and our Mother Earth.
Winona LaDuke: "Lighting The 8th Fire: Indigenous Economics For Our Future"
Future of Women in Food Entrepreneurship
Join us for an evening all about hemp, one of the most useful plants known to humankind.
We’ll show a short film, talk about Patagonia’s sourcing and use of the fiber, and give the mic to internationally known activist/author Winona LaDuke, who’ll tell you about her efforts to restore foodways, “rematriate” seeds and build a new economy based on locally produced food, energy and fiber. We’ll have refreshments and Patagonia Provisions snacks. Bring a friend and come learn about this misunderstood plant.
Doors 7 PM
Event 7:30 PM
PATAGONIA WASHINGTON, DC
3104 M St NW
202.333.1776
@patagoniadc
patagonia.com/dc
Join us for an evening all about hemp, one of the most useful plants known to humankind.
We’ll show a short film, talk about Patagonia’s sourcing and use of the fiber, and give the mic to internationally known activist/author Winona LaDuke, who’ll tell you about her efforts to restore foodways, “rematriate” seeds and build a new economy based on locally produced food, energy and fiber. We’ll have refreshments and Patagonia Provisions snacks. Bring a friend and come learn about this misunderstood plant.
Doors 7 PM
Event 7:30 PM
PATAGONIA NYC UPPER WEST SIDE
426 Columbus Ave
917.441.0011
@patagonianyc
patagonia.com/upperwestside
RSVP for Spur Winnipeg: In Conversation with Winona LaDuke By: Literary Review of Canada SAT, 14 MAY WINNIPEG, MB, CANADA
Winona LaDuke is an Anishinaabekwe (Ojibwe) enrolled member of the Mississippi Band of Anishinaabeg. She is an indigenous rights activist, an environmentalist, an economist, and a writer, known for her work on tribal land claims and preservation and for sustainable development.
LaDuke talked about climate change and climate justice in the indigenous peoples’ communities, followed by a conversation with Mililani Trask.
This event was part of the In Pursuit of Cultural Freedom lecture series.