Daily Schedule for the 2023 Bioneers Conference
All times are in Pacific Daylight Time
Keynote Speaker Start Times Approximate. Schedule Subject To Change
Thursday, April 6th all times PDT
Click Title to Expand
April 6th | 9:25 am to 9:32 am | Zellerbach Hall
Keynote
April 6th | 9:49 am to 10:04 am | Zellerbach Hall
Keynote
Introduction by Carl Safina, Safina Center Founding President, Ecologist and Author
We have been killing whales for centuries, but we do so now out of ignorance rather than intent. As cetacean pods lose mothers and grandmothers, they lose wisdom inherited across generations on how to survive. Whale researcher Shane Gero will share some of what he has learned from the thousands of hours he has spent in the company of sperm whales, including how fundamentally similar their lives are to our own and how their cultures define their identity, just as ours do. Shane will explain why we need new approaches to whale conservation that recognize the biologically important divisions between different communities of whales, so we can respect their identity and cultural diversity; and how this can be extrapolated to the larger struggle to conserve biodiversity.
April 6th | 10:05 am to 10:27 am | Zellerbach Hall
Introduced by
Keynote
Introduction by Nina Simons, Bioneers co-founder and Chief Relationship Strategist
Saru Jayaraman, President of One Fair Wage, Director of the Food Labor Research Center at UC Berkeley, founder of the Restaurant Opportunities Center and author of four books including: One Fair Wage: Ending All Subminimum Pay in America, is one of the most creative and effective labor organizers of our era. Today she will speak to us about her work organizing restaurant and other low-wage workers over the last 20 years and the incredible moment of historic worker revolt currently underway in the United States, one that could have enormous implications for both climate justice and for our democracy.
April 6th | 10:36 am to 10:58 am | Zellerbach Hall
Introduced by
Keynote
April 6th | 11:26 am to 11:36 am | Zellerbach Hall
Keynote
Introduction by Kenny Ausubel, Bioneers CEO and Founder
In the early 1980s Ronald Reagan, Margaret Thatcher and conservative economists such as Milton Friedman ushered in a global era of “neo-liberal” economics, which saw markets and large corporations given nearly unrestrained power, leading to ever escalating wealth inequality and the capture of government by monied interests. But in recent years a new global movement, Community Wealth Building, has been pushing back on neo-liberalism, fighting to democratize the economy and build wealth for the many, not just the few. It is taking hold in places as varied as Cleveland, Jackson Mississippi and the Pine Ridge Reservation here in the U.S., and in England, Scotland, Amsterdam and Australia. Renowned journalist Laura Flanders, host of The Laura Flanders Show on public television, will explain why this growing movement for a democratic economy may be the most important economic movement of our time.
April 6th | 11:50 am to 12:12 pm | Zellerbach Hall
Introduced by
Keynote
People over 60 were instrumental in creating social change in their youth, and their wisdom and energy are greatly needed today. Third Act is a place where those who’ve been around awhile can bring their life experience to the work of social change, while supporting the next generations in creating a world that is healthy, equitable, and whole. Longtime activist and renowned leadership educator Akaya Windwood explains the work of Third Act, co-founded by Bill McKibben, and how we can participate in this exciting new movement.
April 6th | 12:12 pm to 12:22 pm | Zellerbach Hall
Keynote
Introduction by Cara Romero, Director of Bioneers’ Indigeneity Program
By now, we have all heard the statistic that Indigenous Peoples protect 80% of the world’s biodiversity, despite being 5% of the world’s population. This simple fact alone should position Indigenous, Native, and Tribal Peoples as not only leaders but experts on resource management and climate mitigation and adaptation. Yet, in many spaces, political and institutional, Indigenous knowledge and expertise are seen as supplemental, and at worse, romantic. So how can we move beyond just acknowledging Indigenous Peoples to working to ensure that their rights are centered and strengthened in climate action at the local, national and global levels? Jade Begay, one of North America’s most effective Indigenous Rights activists will share her insights on how far Indigenous leadership has come and what we can do to strengthen and embolden this leadership that is so needed if we are all to survive on planet Earth.
April 6th | 12:22 pm to 12:44 pm | Zellerbach Hall
Introduced by
Keynote
On Allston Way between Shattuck and Oxford
Participatory Street Art with The Climate Justice Arts Project
Arts organizer David Solnit, muralist Gemma Searle and educator/organizer/artist Julie Searle will host two interactive arts projects sponsored by The Climate Justice Arts Project on the closed-to-traffic block of Allston Way. Don’t miss the fun: come learn new skills in “engaged art”-making as we collaborate in street mural painting and get your of climate justice art posters for Earthweek.
12:20 pm – 5:00 pm Thursday – Saturday
Catch the Drop
Come paint stunningly beautiful rain catchment barrels and learn about water harvesting with cutting-edge eco artists affiliated with the beloved Women’s Eco Art Directory organization (WEAD), a long-standing, groundbreaking organization with deep historical ties to Bioneers. You will discover the joy of combining beauty with life-affirming green technology.
1:00 pm – 6:00 pm Thursday – Saturday
Sprit Nests Creations
Join Jayson Fann and collaborators for an extraordinary immersive medicine space of rhythm and healing, including a 10 ft drum created in collaboration with the 13 Grandmothers. Come hear music 1:30 pm – 2:30 pm Thursday – Saturday, see the installation anytime.
People’s Earth Week: Climate Justice Art & Action
Come see street art poster designs by 10 movement artists–and take poster art kit home to publicly display for Earthweek! Sponsored by the grassroots climate justice networks People VS Fossil Fuels and Stop the Money Pipeline. Info at: bit.ly/ClimateJusticeArtKit
Climate Justice Movement Flags & Banners
See the display along Allston Way of climate justice movement screen printed, hand painted and flags and banners from in frontline and community struggles to protect people and planet.
Artists’ Way
Come browse the beautiful and thought-provoking work of an array of socially and eco-conscious local artists who will be displaying and vending their work on Allston Way and other conference sites.
1:00 pm – 6:00 pm Thursday – Saturday
April 6th | 12:30 pm to 5:00 pm | On Allston Way between Shattuck and Oxford
In order to genuinely tackle the looming climate catastrophe and achieve our dream of a more just and compassionate world, sustained broad-based grassroots-led movements that force necessary structural changes are needed. In this session, visionary leaders explore how hitherto disenfranchised groups are forging coalitions to achieve victories and make systemic change possible in our lifetime. With: Saru Jayaraman, President of One Fair Wage, Director of the Food Labor Research Center at UC Berkeley, one of our nation’s most visionary labor activists; Jade Begay, Director of Policy and Advocacy at the NDN Collective, one of the most effective activists working at the intersection of Indigenous Rights, Environmental Justice and Climate. In a conversation hosted by Rajasvini Bhansali, Executive Director of the Solidaire Network.
April 6th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | Freight & Salvage
Panelists
Bioneers brings together a very diverse, discerning, engaged and reflective community, and the curated conversations around crucial topics we have been hosting recently (“Conversation Cafes”) have proven highly popular and stimulating. Each session begins with a very brief presentation by one of the conference presenters as a “conversation starter” to frame the topic, followed by structured group discussion. At the end of each session, a “harvester” who has carefully witnessed and “absorbed” what has transpired, offers us a poetic synopsis/recapitulation of the highlights of our time together.
As we embrace this year’s theme of transformation, regeneration, and celebration, we must not neglect our inner state, because to help midwife a flourishing society we need a solid internal foundation to build upon. In this conversation we’ll go on a journey, traversing landscapes of self-love, trauma healing, authenticity, and career manifestation. We’ll explore how to emerge from our conditioning, reactivity, “stuckness” and harmful patterns to move into self-loving alignment, empowerment, mindful compassion, prolific creativity and service. We’ll also learn about how “the four phases of flourishing” relate to the transformation our society needs now. With: Marilyn Cornelius, Ph.D., founder of Alchemus Prime. Facilitated by: Amy Lenzo, weDialogue and the World Café Community Foundation. “Harvester:” Jason Bayani, author, theater performer, Artistic Director, Kearny Street Workshop.
April 6th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | Ashby Room, Residence Inn
Panelists
Bioneers is inherently a community of mentors—people eager to learn, share, explore and create together. The “Community of Mentors” space at Bioneers is an intergenerational container that offers youth the opportunity to be in small group mentoring sessions with Bioneers presenters. The presenters will share their life experience in an interactive dialogue with youth who are seeking guidance on their path to activism. We are honored to open the Community of Mentors this year with Nina Simons, Bioneers co-founder, author, activist, speaker and thought leader dedicated to women’s leadership and empowerment. Facilitated by Dave Hage, justine epstein and Sam Burris-DeBoskey of Weaving Earth.
April 6th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | Conference Room in Magnes Museum
Panelists
#LandBack has become a rallying cry in Indigenous circles and beyond from coast to coast, but what does #Landback really mean, and how can we be a part of this movement? In this panel, leaders in the #Landback movement will share different approaches to the return and “rematriation” of ancestral territories. For tribal members, the discussion will include organizational, fundraising, and legal strategies. For non-Natives, panelists will share how to be a good ally for #Landback. Moderated by Cara Romero. With: PennElys Droz; Corrina Gould; Tom Little Bear Nason; Kawenniiosta Jock.
April 6th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | Goldman Theater, Brower Center
Panelists
This interactive session introduces the Gender Equity and Reconciliation International (GERI) process and provides an experiential taste of this methodology that was endorsed by Archbishop Desmond Tutu in 2013. Developed over 30 years across six continents, the GERI process applies principles of Truth and Reconciliation to gender and sexual injustice and builds trust and compassionate communication through interactive activities and group process. Together, women, men, and people of all genders and sexual orientations can jointly confront sensitive and often taboo issues relating to gender and sexuality—without shame and blame—and collaborate skillfully to reach a place of newfound respect, trust, and even mutual reverence. You are warmly invited to join this experiential introduction to the GERI process and discover its auspicious potential for transforming gender injustice and establishing “beloved community.” Facilitated by: William Keepin and Rev. Cynthia Brix, GERI’s co-founders; Alka Arora, Associate Professor of Women, Gender, Spirituality, and Social Justice at CIIS; and Jorge Rico, co-leader of GERI’s Latin America Project and its corporate training program.
April 6th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | San Pablo Room, Residence Inn
Panelists
Join groundbreaking social health workers and nurse practitioners whose work in the “Planetary Health” movement is rooted in compassion and love. They will offer their inspiring stories of co-creating a shared vision for health and healing, grounded in Indigenous healing paradigms that can lead us into a future of restoration, recovery, justice, and co-liberation. With: De-Ann Sheppard, NP and Mi’kmaw scholar; Heidi Honegger Rogers, FNP, advanced practice holistic nurse; and Sonali Sangeeta Balajee, founder of Our Bodhi Project and SSoMA.
April 6th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | Golden Bear Room, Hotel Shattuck Plaza
Panelists
3:00 pm: Plastic Pollution: Truths and Myths from Wellhead to Waste Incineration
Presented in collaboration with the Ecology Center
Plastic pollution is a humanitarian crisis that starts with oil and gas extraction and burdens communities at every point in its lifecycle. Come learn about its links to fracking, pipelines and petrochemical processes, the burgeoning consumer packaging industry, and why the oil industry is pushing this growth. We’ll share the truths and myths around plastic recycling, as well as exciting successes battling waste incineration. The focus will be on how attendees can engage in real solutions based on equity and accessibility. With: Yvette Arellano,Fenceline Watch; KT Morelli, Breathe Free Detroit; Martin Bourque, Ecology Center. Moderated by Shilpi Chhotray, People over Plastic.
April 6th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | Magnes Museum
Panelists
According to a recent World Wildlife Fund report, since 1970 we have lost, on average, roughly 70% of the global populations of mammals, birds, amphibians, reptiles and fish. Scientist activists working tirelessly to reverse this catastrophic trend share their strategies. With: Dave Phillips, co-founder of the Earth Island Institute and Director of its International Marine Mammal Project; Brock Dolman, Co-Director of the WATER Institute and Permaculture Design and Wildlands programs at the Occidental Arts and Ecology Center, and a leader in CA beaver reintroduction; Michelle Lute, Carnivore Conservation Director for Project Coyote. Moderated by Maureen Nandini Mitra, Editor of Earth Island Journal.
April 6th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | Berkeley Ballroom, Residence Inn
Panelists
Surviving and thriving in these difficult times requires expanding our ability to be present with grief and getting to know it for its potential of regeneration and transformation. Through guided group conversation, intimate sharing, simple breath practices, and ritual with stone and water, we will touch into the gifts of connection and healing available to us when we take the time to tend to our grief in community. Please bring photos, written messages and/or responsibly sourced gifts from nature to adorn our communal grief altar. We will also have paper and nature offerings available for you to use. Facilitated by educators/end of life guides/community gatherers/activists: Anneke Campbell; Birgitta Kastenbaum; and Amber Deylon. (Note: to facilitate a safe space for all who join us, we will close our tent doors 5 minutes past the session start time.)
April 6th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | Grief Altar Tent
Panelists
3:00 pm: Young Activists on the Frontlines, with Brower Youth Award Winners
Presented in collaboration with Earth Island Institute’s New Leaders Initiative
The Brower Youth Awards are among the most prestigious prizes in the U.S. for young eco-activists. In this session, three recent winners share their exemplary and inspiring work and strategies. With 2022 winners Amara Ifeji, a leader in climate education policy-making in Maine; Ilana Cohen, a leader of the successful Fossil Fuel Divest Harvard campaign and co-founder of Fossil Free Research; and 2021 winner Peter Pham, San Jose-based transit justice and climate activist at the local, regional and state levels. Moderated by: Alexia Leclercq, co-founder, Start:Empowerment.
April 6th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | Crystal Ballroom, Hotel Shattuck Plaza
Panelists
3:00 pm: Youth Leadership Program: Storytelling with Auntie and Uncle
A conversation on Medicine, Harms in our Communities, and Protecting Youth
Join Vice-Chair Cari Herthel of the Esselen tribe and Jerry Tello of the National Compadres Network to learn about their renowned, inspiring social justice and youth empowerment work.
April 6th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | Tamalpais Room, Brower Center
Panelists
3:00 pm: Youth Leadership Program: The Celebration Singing Tree
Hands-on Mural-Making
In this hands-on art-making workshop, we will engage in the creation of a Singing Tree mural from start to finish during the conference. It will be the 117th Singing Tree mural of a forest of trees made by over 21,000 people from 52 countries, part of an invitation for the whole world to make a painting together, based on the vision of an 8-year-old girl. The workshop will also include scientific information about the positive neurobiological impacts of the “Peace Building Through Art Inspired by Nature” program. Paint clothes will be provided. Hosted by Laurie Marshall, founder of the Unity Through Creativity Foundation and The Singing Tree Project. Facilitated by Singing Tree facilitators Leslie Rein and Sweta Chawla.
April 6th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | Terrace outside Tamalpais Room, Brower Center
Panelists
Marilyn Cornelius signing copies of The Path to Romantic Success
Saru Jayaraman signing copies of One Fair Wage: Ending Subminimum Pay in America
April 6th | 4:30 pm to 5:00 pm
Panelists
The rapid increase of extreme heat events in cities is one of the stark indicators of global warming, and the effects of these events vividly expose the grotesque injustice caused by dramatic differences in neighborhood environments. In most major cities, historically “redlined” low-income communities and communities of color typically have less than half the amount of urban forest cover that wealthier communities possess. Lack of urban canopy contributes to an array of inequities including radically disparate outcomes in public health, economic opportunity, education and life expectancy. Today a coalition of NGOs, cities, scientists and community-centered initiatives has converged to create a moment of historic change, leading to massive public investment in urban forestry at 10X the scale ever before seen. Designed as equity-centered community development focusing on jobs and local enterprise creation, this new vision of urban forests will build climatic AND community resilience. Hear from four leaders in this dynamic emergent field: Julia Hillengas, co-founder and Executive Director of Philadelphia’s PowerCorpsPHL; Samira Malone, 27, first-ever Director of the Cleveland Tree Coalition; Amos White, founder and Chief Planting Officer of 100K Trees for Humanity; and moderator Brett KenCairn, Boulder, CO’s Senior Climate and Sustainability Coordinator.
April 6th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm | Campanile Room, Hotel Shattuck Plaza
Panelists
Until fairly recently the dominant view among scientists was that non-human animals didn’t manifest real intelligence and certainly didn’t live in dynamic cultures, but, mercifully, those misguided ideas have been entirely demolished in recent years. More and more examples of sophisticated decision making, tool usage, emotional richness and complex social organization in more and more species have come to light (something Indigenous traditions have long held to be self-evident). In this session we will join two major figures in this burgeoning scientific and societal renaissance, one a longtime, world-renowned advocate for animal intelligence; the other a daring, visionary young scientist on the frontlines of research on animal societies, in a discussion about what we know and what we might be able to learn from some extraordinary animals, if we can get beyond our species chauvinism. With: Carl Safina, beloved author of such classics as Beyond Words and Becoming Wild; and groundbreaking whale biologist Shane Gero. Moderated by Kate Golden, science journalist and artist.
April 6th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm | Freight & Salvage
Panelists
Young activists have emerged as the most significant and impactful voices in global movements to combat climate change and demand environmental justice. In this session, three outstanding young leaders share their perspectives, projects and aspirations. With: Alexandria Villasenor, award-winning, globally renowned activist, founder of Earth Uprising; Alexia Leclercq, grassroots environmental justice organizer extraordinaire, 2021 Brower Youth Award winner, co-founder of Start: Empowerment; Aniya Butler, Lead Circle Member, Youth vs Apocalypse. Moderated by: Callie Broaddus, founder of Reserva: The Youth Land Trust.
April 6th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm | Golden Bear Room, Hotel Shattuck Plaza
Panelists
Bioneers brings together a very diverse, discerning, engaged and reflective community, and the curated conversations around crucial topics we have been hosting recently (“Conversation Cafes”) have proven highly popular and stimulating. Each session begins with a very brief presentation by one of the conference presenters as a “conversation starter” to frame the topic, followed by structured group discussion. At the end of each session, a “harvester” who has carefully witnessed and “absorbed” what has transpired, offers us a poetic synopsis/recapitulation of the highlights of our time together.
The pandemic has been a time of transition, and for many, trauma and struggle. It has made us face the contradictions in the world that have impacted our physical, emotional, mental and spiritual well-being. For these reasons it is especially important now for us to reground ourselves in the teachings that the natural environment and our ancestors provide in order that we recenter ourselves in the Sacredness we all carry. Author and healing practitioner Jerry Tello will guide us through a process to acknowledge and recover the inner sacred medicine that, when we stay connected to it, is our best guide in all we do. Facilitated by: Amy Lenzo, weDialogue and the World Café Community Foundation. “Harvester:” Jason Bayani, author, theater performer, Artistic Director, Kearny Street Workshop.
April 6th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm | Ashby Room, Residence Inn
Panelists
4:45 pm: Democratizing our Economy and Building the “Next System”
Presented in collaboration with the Democracy Collaborative
Imagine a world in which workers in construction, nursing and home care, farming, social work, teaching, etc., and all the rest of us—we, the people—are the ones who make the key decisions about how to allocate resources in our communities, not wealthy CEOs, massive corporations, or corrupt politicians. This session will delve into what a truly democratic, decentralized/localized economy would look like and closely examine examples of such initiatives already operating around the world that point to a “next system” radically different in fundamental ways from the failed systems of the past and present and capable of delivering superior social, economic and ecological outcomes. With: Laura Flanders, host/Executive Producer of The Laura Flanders Show, author of Blue Grit: Making Impossible, Improbable, Inspirational Political Change in America; Hilary Abell, Co-founder and Chief Policy & Impact Officer at Project Equity; Akaya Windwood, Lead Advisor at Third Act.
April 6th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm | Magnes Museum
Panelists
All of us are aware of the tremendous losses suffered in the natural world as what many are calling the sixth great extinction unfolds, but mostly we are too busy to allow space for the grief we carry. Come join us in exploring how we can respond to our eco-grief and find solace through an embodied experience of our own interconnectedness with the natural world. Through creative visualization andthe use of our senses, wewill transform our grief into a compost that can feed personal and communal regeneration and resilience. Facilitated by educators/end of life guides/community gatherers/activists: Anneke Campbell and Birgitta Kastenbaum. (Note: to facilitate a safe space for all who join us, we will close our tent doors 5 minutes past the session start time.)
April 6th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm | Grief Altar Tent
Panelists
Food can be grown and gleaned in some very unexpected places: People are harvesting wild foods in urban and rural locales, transforming commercial building rooftops into living ecosystems, and making the desert bloom with regenerative and traditional Indigenous practices. Come learn about cutting-edge diverse, innovative, local and rejuvenating food security strategies. With: urban farmer Benjamin Fahrer; Navajo (Diné) farmer James Skeet; Mia Andler, founder and Executive Director of Vilda. Moderated by Arty Mangan, Bioneers’ Director of Restorative Food Systems.
April 6th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm | Crystal Ballroom, Hotel Shattuck Plaza
Panelists
Indigenous peoples across the Pacific have a deep knowledge of the ocean and its ecosystems acquired from hundreds of generations of observation. Today, commercial farming, overfishing, resource extraction and global warming are destroying the ocean systems and exacerbating the climate crisis. In this panel, three leaders with intimate knowledge of the relationships between land and ocean will discuss how to restore balance to the Pacific and to the planet. Moderated by Alexis Bunten. With: Loa Niumeitolu; Kiana Frank; Andrea Kealoha.
April 6th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm | Goldman Theater, Brower Center
Panelists
“The times are urgent, let us slow down.” Bayo Akomolafe
What are the most effective wellbeing practices and supports for this time of upheaval and uncertainty? Community leaders and activists, especially those of us who have suffered othering and colonization, are reporting greater stress, grief and mental health challenges. As current systems transform, collapse and shift, there is a great and growing need for radical artists, activators and healers to center collective wellbeing. Join Ginny McGinn of the Center for Whole Communities Collective and Sonali Sangeeta Balajee, founder of Our Bodhi Project and the Spiritual Social Medicinal Apothecary (SSoMA), in an experiential session in which they will lovingly guide us through mindful and creative practices designed to help us slow down, heal and collectively receive our greatest wisdoms.
April 6th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm | San Pablo Room, Residence Inn
Panelists
Understanding the history of women’s pivotal roles in revolutions is essential to helping us create a new map that will permit us to move forward into far more enlightened and compassionate societies around the world. This panel will explore women’s game-changing roles in anti-colonial and liberation movements, from Algeria, Chile and Liberia to the courageous present-day women in Iran. We will survey the strategies and themes of several effective women-led revolutions in history, as well as the necessity of the everyday “inward revolution” required to shape the outer change we seek as a collective. With: Azita Ardakani, Iranian-born entrepreneur and social activist; Zainab Salbi, Iraqi American women’s rights activist and writer, co-founder of Women for Women International. Moderated by Bioneers co-founder, Nina Simons.
April 6th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm | Berkeley Ballroom, Residence Inn
Panelists
True to a rainbow, queerness carries a spectrum of perspectives, with many gradients of experience. Alongside the inherited magic and joy of our liberated identities, we are often also moving with our wounds, questions, thoughts, and processes that can be challenging to navigate alone. This space is dedicated to making sanctuary for discussions, witnessing, and peer support as we work through and with who we are. Come as you are to speak, be heard and to hear, so we can make medicine for each other in the shared journey of being queer. This space is dedicated to the LGBTQ2SIA+ experience and those respectfully honoring that intention. Hosted by Orion Camero, former Brower Youth Awards winner and Spiritual Ecology fellow, alongside Anuhea “BB” Haruki Hoshide Cooke.
April 6th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm | Kinzie Room, Brower Center
Panelists
Restorative justice focuses on mending broken relationships, as well as maintaining positive healthy relationships. It is a fundamental shift in the way we view and do justice. What happens when we think about harm in ways that don’t involve retaliation or vengeance but instead healing and transformation. Restorative Justice healing circles will be facilitated by RJOY (Restorative Justice for Oakland Youth).
April 6th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm | Tamalpais Room, Brower Center
Panelists
Our media partner YES! Media – publisher of YES! Magazine – is hosting a casual connection space from 6:00 pm – 7:30 pm every day of the Bioneers conference. Come to decompress, refresh, and share with YES! what inspiring stories you’re hearing at Bioneers, and cool things you’re working on at home! Plus pick up some free YES! Magazines! Join them at Hotel Shattuck Plaza, Suite 310.
April 6th | 6:00 pm to 7:30 pm
Mia Andler signing copies of The Bay Area Forager and Sierra Forager
Carl Safina signing copies of Becoming Wild and Beyond Words
Nina Simons signing copies of Nature, Culture and the Sacred
April 6th | 6:15 pm to 6:45 pm | Pegasus Bookstore (Lobby of Magnes Museum)
Panelists
The film will be introduced by Ernest Alfred, Hereditary Chief of Tlowit’sis First Nation, elected leader of the ‘Namgis First Nation and leader of the Swanson Occupation.
After a mother orca carries her dead calf for 17 days, two filmmakers join Indigenous leaders and scientists making a final attempt to protect the last 73 Southern Resident orcas from extinction. Winner of many prestigious awards, Coextinction moves beyond a traditional wildlife documentary, taking us deep into the oceans and forests of the Pacific Northwest to witness the complex systems of interconnectedness linking together ecosystem collapse, centuries of injustice against Indigenous peoples, and the frontlines of the world’s most pressing environmental threats.
The Coexistence Films team includes: Gloria Pancrazi, Elena Jean, Andrew Luba, Nicholas Castel, Victoria Obermeyer, Julien Verschooris, Morgane Trussardi, Carolina Vitorino; with co-collaborators: Will George, Chief Ernest Alfred, K’odi Nelson, Jesse and Carrie Nightwalker, and 15+ First Nations and Sovereign Tribes on whose lands filming took place. The film was made with generous support from Dr. Bronner’s, PNW Protectors, hundreds of crowdfunding supporters, and many other organizations and individuals.
NOTE: To support Coextinction’s impact campaign, visit: https://www.gofundme.com/f/coextinction-film-impact-campaign
April 6th | 6:40 pm to 8:30 pm | Goldman Theater, Brower Center
Introduced by
8:30 pm: Film Screening: A Sneak Preview of Regenerating Life, Parts 1 and 2
Part 1 “Water Cools the Planet” and Part 2 “Life Sustains the Climate”
Regenerating Life takes an ecological approach to unpacking the social and environmental crises that confront us, challenging the prevailing climate change story and offering new, attainable solutions. It tracks growing movements of farmers, activists, scientists, and others working to repair the environmental and social devastation we have caused. We will be screening parts 1 and 2. Part 3, “Small Farms Feed the World,” will be available online for conference attendees to watch right after the conference.
A film by John Feldman.
April 6th | 8:30 pm to 10:00 pm | Goldman Theater, Brower Center
Whereby we convene the Renaissance Council to banish crack-pot tyranny to the Underworld, to learn knitting and weaving, as the gods sentenced Hercules when he was sundering the fabric of creation.
Pluto, just arrived in Communitarian Aquarius, guides us to constellate the Community of Reverent Ingenuity. Symbiotic Mutualism!
“Who are the fittest: those who are continually at war with each other, or those who support one another? We at once see that those animals which acquire habits of mutual aid are undoubtedly the fittest.” Peter Kropotkin
This evening, Chief Trickster at Coyote Network News, Caroline Casey, the host and “weaver of context” of the Visionary Activist Show (critique and solution) on KPFA/Pacifica for 26+ years, now in her 20th+ year at Bioneers, accompanied by the brilliant, eclectic violinist Briana Di Mara, will proffer her inimitable astro*mytho*political*cultural meta narratives, whereby to quicken our endogenous indigenuity, to set all of our collaborative skills humming. And skidding in to cahoot, long-time ally Amikaeyla Gaston, on drums, “sacred ethnomusicologist/song keeper of chants from indigenous traditions around the world…Confluencing of Allies!” The more words, myths, metaphors – the more ways to cahoot with our Flora Fauna Fungi Kin. Democratic Animism Now! Language crafting – that our words stories be in accord with our dedicated hearts! Drawing on the power of majnoun (“yearning for the Divine” ) – let’s dissolve cruelty and dominance out of humanity’s repertoire. ”
April 6th | 9:00 pm to 10:30 pm | Freight & Salvage
Panelists
Friday, April 7th all times PDT
Click Title to Expand
April 7th | 9:29 am to 9:45 am | Zellerbach Hall
Keynote
Introduction by DJ Cavem, Rapper, Educator and Vegan Chef
In this multimedia presentation, chef, author, publisher, and artist Bryant Terry will talk about the arc of his work over more than two decades, all centered on his tireless efforts to create a much healthier and far more equitable and sustainable food system. Through performance, slides, and music, Bryant will share the multiple ways in which he has approached systems change—engaging in grassroots activism, authoring six books, making media appearances, curating programming at the Museum of the African Diaspora, running a publishing imprint, and creating studio art as a Fellow and MFA student in the Art Practice Program at UC Berkeley.
April 7th | 9:30 am to 10:50 am | Zellerbach Hall
Introduced by
Keynote
Before Rep. Pramila Jayapal was elected to Congress and later became the Chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, she was an organizer and activist, and an enthusiastic Bioneers participant. In this personal video message to the Bioneers community, Rep. Jayapal will discuss her theory of change that she developed as an organizer and has employed as a legislator. She highlights an “inside-outside” approach to building power and enacting meaningful change and policy shifts at national, state, and local levels.
April 7th | 9:43 am to 9:57 am | Zellerbach Hall
Keynote
Introduction by Teo Grossman, Senior Director of Programs and Research at Bioneers
A massive influx of clean energy investments is poised to transform the American economy during this decade. Opportunities abound to take advantage of new climate incentives. If we get this right, the U.S. could be on track to reach 80% clean power by 2030, leading to deep decarbonization across other sectors including transportation, buildings and manufacturing. Nevertheless, success is far from guaranteed without widespread action from the grassroots to the canopy. What did it take to pass a historic $370 billion climate deal in Congress? How can American households and businesses take full advantage of it? What does effective, equitable implementation look like? Join award-winning author, political scientist, and climate expert Dr. Leah Stokes for a deep dive on clean energy policy and the tools we have to realize our electric future in this decade and beyond.
April 7th | 9:58 am to 10:20 am | Zellerbach Hall
Introduced by
Keynote
Climate activists have made landmark progress on fossil fuel divestment. Now we need to evolve the divestment movement to the next level by holding universities and academia broadly accountable to fully separate from Big Oil’s influence. This means getting such institutions to reject industry funding for climate research, which has distorted public knowledge and policy, while contributing to greenwashing. Ilana Cohen will explain how a burgeoning international grassroots movement of students and academics, known as Fossil Free Research, is seeking to combat the industry’s pernicious influence, and how you can get involved in the fight!
April 7th | 10:21 am to 10:30 am | Zellerbach Hall
Keynote
April 7th | 10:52 am to 11:08 am | Zellerbach Hall
Keynote
11:17 am: John Warner – The Materials Metabolism – Rethinking our Molecular Relationship with Nature
Introduction by Kenny Ausubel, Bioneers CEO and Founder
For materials from nature to become human-designed products, they have to undergo multiple transformations in processes of assembly and disassembly. Atoms combine to make molecules; molecules combine to make materials; and we humans assemble and disassemble nature’s products to form molecules and materials that we then recombine to create our artifacts and products, but, unfortunately, most of what we produce is fundamentally unsustainable and dangerously incompatible with living systems. However, one of the founding progenitors of the entire field of “green chemistry,” John Warner, will explain that by using the principles and practices of the discipline he helped birth, we can embrace and emulate nature’s “materials metabolism” to create the products we need without endangering the web of life. By reimagining how we design and build, we can create a new materials economy that is truly in harmony with nature.
April 7th | 11:17 am to 11:38 am | Zellerbach Hall
Introduced by
Keynote
Introduction by J.P. Harpignies, Bioneers Senior Producer
In our opinion, Kim Stanley Robinson is our greatest living science fiction writer. His more than 20 award-winning books over four decades, translated into some 26 languages, have included many highly influential, international bestselling tomes that brilliantly explore in a wide range of ways the great eco, economic and socio-political crises facing our species, yet nothing had prepared him for the global explosion of interest in his visionary 2020 novel, Ministry for the Future, which projects how a possible climate-disrupted future might unfold and how the world might respond meaningfully. It’s also chock full of brilliant science and wildy imaginative ways humanity steps up. Among other results, he was invited by the UN to speak at COP-26 in Glasgow. Stan will offer us his overview of where we currently stand in relation to the climate crisis.
April 7th | 11:39 am to 12:03 pm | Zellerbach Hall
Introduced by
Keynote
Amara Ifeji mobilized a grassroots effort to address racism in her high school in Maine, at age 14. She also developed a love for the mountains and woods around her, but she saw her passions for the environment and racial justice as distinct until she heard youth of color like herself share their experiences working at this intersection and realized these struggles were completely intertwined. She will share how this awakening shaped her subsequent work as a remarkably effective organizer and advocate who centers storytelling to realize environmental justice, climate education, and outdoor learning for ALL youth.
April 7th | 12:03 pm to 12:11 pm | Zellerbach Hall
Keynote
Erin Matariki Carr is from the Māori tribal nations of Ngāi Tūhoe and Ngāti Awa, and lives in Tāneatua in the east of the North Island of Aotearoa New Zealand. Matariki is a member of RIVER and a lawyer working within the inter-generational movement of Māori resistance that is now surging towards constitutional transformation in honour of the treaty Te Tiriti o Waitangi 1840 between the British Crown and sovereign hapū Māori. An important story in this movement has been the granting of legal personality to Te Urewera rainforest, the homelands of Ngāi Tūhoe. Here, Tūhoe aims to “disrupt the false notion of human superiority over the land” by removing human ownership and management, and providing a new kawa (or law) that starts with “human management for the benefit of the land”.
April 7th | 12:12 pm to 12:34 pm | Zellerbach Hall
Keynote
On Allston Way between Shattuck and Oxford
Participatory Street Art with The Climate Justice Arts Project
Arts organizer David Solnit, muralist Gemma Searle and educator/organizer/artist Julie Searle will host two interactive arts projects sponsored by The Climate Justice Arts Project on the closed-to-traffic block of Allston Way. Don’t miss the fun: come learn new skills in “engaged art”-making as we collaborate in street mural painting and get your of climate justice art posters for Earthweek.
12:20 pm – 5:00 pm Thursday – Saturday
Catch the Drop
Come paint stunningly beautiful rain catchment barrels and learn about water harvesting with cutting-edge eco artists affiliated with the beloved Women’s Eco Art Directory organization (WEAD), a long-standing, groundbreaking organization with deep historical ties to Bioneers. You will discover the joy of combining beauty with life-affirming green technology.
1:00 pm – 6:00 pm Thursday – Saturday
Sprit Nests Creations
Join Jayson Fann and collaborators for an extraordinary immersive medicine space of rhythm and healing, including a 10 ft drum created in collaboration with the 13 Grandmothers. Come hear music 1:30 pm – 2:30 pm Thursday – Saturday, see the installation anytime.
People’s Earth Week: Climate Justice Art & Action
Come see street art poster designs by 10 movement artists–and take poster art kit home to publicly display for Earthweek! Sponsored by the grassroots climate justice networks People VS Fossil Fuels and Stop the Money Pipeline. Info at: bit.ly/ClimateJusticeArtKit
Climate Justice Movement Flags & Banners
See the display along Allston Way of climate justice movement screen printed, hand painted and flags and banners from in frontline and community struggles to protect people and planet.
Artists’ Way
Come browse the beautiful and thought-provoking work of an array of socially and eco-conscious local artists who will be displaying and vending their work on Allston Way and other conference sites.
1:00 pm – 6:00 pm Thursday – Saturday
April 7th | 12:30 pm to 5:00 pm | On Allston Way between Shattuck and Oxford
Alexis Bunten and Danielle Greendeer signing copies of Keepunumuk: Weeâchumun’s Thanksgiving Story
April 7th | 1:30 pm to 2:00 pm | Pegasus Bookstore (Lobby of Magnes Museum)
Panelists
“No problem can be solved from the same level of consciousness that created it.” –Albert Einstein
This panel will explore the evolving field of Green Chemistry and explore ways in which chemistry education can become more adaptive so that new ideas can raise the level of consciousness in the entire field. Systemic change in chemistry education is essential if we are going to be able to better prepare scientists with the tools and understanding they will need to genuinely address sustainability at a molecular level, so that we can lay a solid foundation for a far healthier, much less toxic industry and economy. With the co-founder of the entire field of Green Chemistry, John Warner, Ph.D.; Amy Cannon, Ph.D., Executive Director, Beyond Benign; Meredith Williams, Director of the California Department of Toxic Substances Control (DTSC).
April 7th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | Berkeley Ballroom, Residence Inn
Panelists
This panel of community leaders from Aotearoa/New Zealand will share their on-the-ground insights, from initiatives that demonstrate paradigm shifts for “rights of nature” legal protections for land and people, cultural capability and education, and convening multi-stakeholder land stewardship. Underpinning all these stories, the unique natural, cultural and legal history of Aotearoa and the Māori worldview reminds us of the value of humility, courage and connection. With: Jan Hania, Principal of Strategy Development, Biome Trust; Lara Hania, educator, storyteller; Erin Matariki Carr, Project Lead, RIVER. Moderated by Chelsea Robinson, Open Lunar Foundation.
April 7th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | Golden Bear Room, Hotel Shattuck Plaza
Panelists
Bioneers brings together a very diverse, discerning, engaged and reflective community, and the curated conversations around crucial topics we have been hosting recently (“Converstaion Cafes”) have proven highly popular and stimulating. Each session begins with a very brief presentation by one of the conference presenters as a “conversation starter” to frame the topic, followed by structured group discussion.
Climate change is of course an existential global crisis that demands urgent collective action, but most climate activism doesn’t seek to address our shared trauma and need for collective healing. If we reduce the climate crisis to a cold, mathematical problem that can be solved by simply reducing carbon emissions, we will fail to address the deeply rooted attitudes and injustices that have led to the creation of a society that destroys ecosystems and people in the first place. This workshop invites us to broaden our understanding so that we can envision strategies that include heart-centered approaches to tackling the climate crisis. Only by really, deeply seeing and feeling our interconnections to each other and to the planet will we be able to move toward collective liberation. Join Bioneers’ Board Chair and Executive Director of Indigenous Climate Action (ICA), Eriel Deranger as she explains how Indigenous movements can provide valuable insights into how we can move through trauma to heal ourselves and the planet. Facilitated by: David Shaw, Santa Cruz Permaculture and UCSC Right Livelihood College. Harvester: Jahan Khalighi, spoken word poet, youth educator and community arts organizer.
April 7th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | Ashby Room, Residence Inn
Panelists
Bioneers is inherently a community of mentors—people eager to learn, share, explore and create together. The “Community of Mentors” space at Bioneers offers youth conference participants the opportunity to be in small group mentoring sessions with Bioneers presenters who share their life experiences in an interactive dialogue format in order to be of service to young people seeking guidance on their path to activism. In this session featuring Nazshonnii Brown-Almaweri, a farmer, STEM educator and the Intercultural Conversations Program Manager for Bioneers, young people will be invited to bring questions about how to navigate an unpredictable future and develop a path towards resilience, health and empowerment. Co-hosted by fellow members of the Weaving Earth team, Justine Epstein and Sam DeBosky.
April 7th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | Conference Room in Magnes Museum
Panelists
Developed over 30 years across six continents, the Gender Equity and Reconciliation International (GERI) program applies principles drawn from Truth and Reconciliation initiatives to seek to transmute gender and sexual injustice and achieve gender equality. The GERI process creates a unique forum for empathic truth-telling on sensitive issues and builds mutual trust and compassionate community through interactive activities and group process. Together, women, men, and people of all genders and sexual orientations can jointly confront difficult and often taboo issues relating to gender and sexuality—without shame and blame—and collaborate skillfully to reach a place of newfound respect, trust, and even mutual reverence.
This session will highlight three GERI program areas that span a diverse spectrum of gender identities and intersectionalities, including: MeToo to WeTogether, LGBTQ+ healing; and Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC). The presenters will share inspiring stories and impacts of the GERI programs in diverse countries and cultures, which demonstrate how the methodology of deep truth-telling and collective alchemy can dissolve root causes of gender conflict, through skillfully facilitated, heart-centered transformational experiences. Facilitated by: William Keepin and Rev. Cynthia Brix, GERI’s co-founders; Alka Arora, Associate Professor of Women, Gender, Spirituality, and Social Justice at CIIS; and Jorge Rico, co-leader of GERI’s Latin America Project and its corporate training program.
April 7th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | Campanile Room, Hotel Shattuck Plaza
Panelists
The dominant culture that brought us colonialism, patriarchy, white supremacy and capitalism has led us to the brink of global ecological, economic and social collapse. In this session we will hear from women leaders who are lifting up frontline women around the world. They will share what they see as emergent directions in movement-building, healing and transformative change. They will describe inspiring examples of grassroots women’s Climate Justice initiatives offering equitable and vibrant solutions. They’ll show how it’s essential to amplify and invest in BIPOC and grassroots women climate leaders globally. With: Osprey Orielle Lake, founder and Executive Director of the Women’s Earth and Climate Action Network International; Leila Salazar Lopez, Executive Director of Amazon Watch; Zainab Salbi, founder of Women for Women International, author of Freedom is an Inside Job; Amira Diamond, co-founder and Co-Director of Women’s Earth Alliance (WEA).
April 7th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | Freight & Salvage
Panelists
Yurok and Karuk peoples have been fighting for decades to remove dams on the Klamath River that destroyed riparian ecosystems and decimated salmon populations that underscore traditional lifeways. In 2022, the US government finally agreed to remove four dams and engage in the largest river restoration project in US history. Join us to learn the story of this incredible achievement in tribal activism, groundbreaking tribal partnerships with state and federal governments, and culture-based methods for river restoration. Moderated by Cara Romero. With: Samuel Gensaw, Isaac Kinney and Craig Tucker.
April 7th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | Goldman Theater, Brower Center
Panelists
Indigenous wisdom contains a deep and broad understanding of body, mind and spirit that allows for a more holistic orientation than the narrow perspective that has led us toward inner and outer crisis. But how can we integrate Indigenous wisdom into our daily personal and professional lives? This interactive session is designed for those who are already on or who wish to begin a journey toward establishing “kin-centric” harmonious relationships with people, communities, and the entire natural world. Facilitated by: Anita Sanchez, Ph.D., author of The Four Sacred Gifts: Indigenous Wisdom for Modern Times.
April 7th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | San Pablo Room, Residence Inn
Panelists
3:00 pm: Money Flowing Like Water: The Restorative Capital (R)evolution
Presented in collaboration with Full Spectrum Capital Partners
As the breakdown of systems rooted in myths of separation, supremacy and scarcity quickens, humanity is rising, in partnership with the rest of the natural world, to ways of life that seek to bring humans back into balanced and reciprocal mutuality with each other and the natural world. Part of this is a quiet revolution underway in the financial system. New visionary “capital stewards” engaged in reparations work, asset transfers, philanthropy, impact investing and “restorative finance” are finding ways to make capital flow like water and become a healing medicine that starts to repair the harms of our collapsing extractive economy. Join us for a dialogue with some leaders in the “full spectrum” and “integrated capital” worlds who will share how the transformations in their own lives and communities have opened up new pathways to support money to flow with the spirit of water. Hosted by: Taj James, founder, Movement Strategy Center and Full Spectrum Capital. With: Damien Goodmon, CEO of Downtown Crenshaw Rising; Dr. Stephanie Gripne, founder and Director of the Impact Finance Center; Joseph Cureton, Chief Coordinating Officer of Obran Cooperative and ObranCaptial; Chad Dyer, Trustee of Future Allies Foundation and Good Life Pledge Capital Steward.
April 7th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | Crystal Ballroom, Hotel Shattuck Plaza
Panelists
It turns out that we humans have the power to fight climate change even after death. Join Katrina Spade of Recompose and John Christian Phifer of Larkspur Conservation as they describe the similarities and differences between natural burial and human composting. How do these two regenerative death-care practices compare from ecological, cost, and design perspectives? Why are they both considered to be critical tools in the climate healing toolbox?
April 7th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | Magnes Museum
Panelists
Surviving and thriving in these difficult times requires expanding our ability to be present with grief and getting to know it for its potential of regeneration and transformation. Through guided group conversation, intimate sharing, simple breath practices, and ritual with stone and water, we will touch into the gifts of connection and healing available to us when we take the time to tend to our grief in community. Please bring photos, written messages and/or responsibly sourced gifts from nature to adorn our communal grief altar. We will also have paper and nature offerings available for you to use. Facilitated by educators/end of life guides/community gatherers/activists: Anneke Campbell and Ladybird Morgan. (Note: to facilitate a safe space for all who join us, we close our tent doors 5 minutes past the session start time.)
April 7th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | Grief Altar Tent
Panelists
3:00 pm: Youth Leadership Program: Rehearsing our Revolution
Cultivating Wellness in Relationship to Our Environments
In this youth-led workshop that utilizes interactive practices developed in the 1970s in Brazil by Augusto Boal influenced by the work of the great educator Paulo Freire, author of the highly influential book, Pedagogy of the Oppressed, we will explore 10 different dimensions of holistic wellness, with special emphasis on cultivating environmental wellness, personally and collectively. In order to be effective activists, we need to be solidly grounded in personal health, which then permits us to have healthy relationships to ourselves, our communities and our environments. Facilitated by Sam Martinez and Julianna Horcasitas of BAY-Peace.
April 7th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | Tamalpais Room, Brower Center
Panelists
Cynthia Brix and William Keepin signing copies of Gender Equity and Reconciliation
Zainab Salbi signing copies of Freedom is an Inside Job and Between Two Worlds
Anita Sanchez signing copies of The Four Sacred Gifts
April 7th | 4:30 pm to 5:00 pm | Pegasus Bookstore (Lobby of Magnes Museum)
Panelists
4:45 pm: “Brazil is Back, but…”—The Lula Administration’s First 100 Days: What Is the Situation Regarding Human Rights and Amazon Protections?
Presented in collaboration with Amazon Watch
After narrowly defeating the rightwing extremist Jair Bolsonaro last year, Lula da Silva began his third presidential term by reaffirming Brazilian democracy, the rule of law, and reinstating critical socio-environmental protections to reverse the Amazonian catastrophe unleashed by his predecessor. Despite these very positive steps, Lula’s administration faces a myriad of challenges as entrenched interests work to undermine its agenda. What does this scenario portend for the future of the world’s largest rainforest? Moderated by Leila Salazar-López, Executive Director, Amazon Watch. With: Christian Poirier, Program Director, Amazon Watch; Indigenous youth activist and media maker Eric Terena (aka DJ Eric Marky); Priscila Tapajowara (Tapajó I Brazil) an Amazon-born Indigenous rights and climate activist, photographer and documentary filmmaker; Ana Paula Vargas, Brazil Program Director at Amazon Watch.
April 7th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm | Magnes Museum
Panelists
Bioneers brings together a very diverse, discerning, engaged and reflective community, and the curated conversations around crucial topics we have been hosting recently (“Conversation Cafes”) have proven highly popular and stimulating. Each session begins with a very brief presentation by one of the conference presenters as a “conversation starter” to frame the topic, followed by structured group discussion. At the end of each session, a “harvester” who has carefully witnessed and “absorbed” what has transpired, offers us a poetic synopsis/recapitulation of the highlights of our time together.
In this session, researcher/physician/author, Michael Amster, MD, will share the magic of awe, the most powerful of human emotions, one that can give us a sense of unity with the entire universe. When practiced enough, awe has the potential to heal us and change the world because when we experience it, we feel kinder and more caring, deeply connected to others and all life on earth. In this conversation starter, we will explore how experiencing awe in the ordinary moments of our lives can boost our health and vitality and can help us as we seek to address humanity’s greatest current challenges. Facilitated by: David Shaw, Santa Cruz Permaculture and UCSC Right Livelihood College. Harvester: Jahan Khalighi, spoken word poet, youth educator and community arts organizer.
April 7th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm | Ashby Room, Residence Inn
Panelists
What does it mean to be Native? Is it enrollment in a federally recognized tribe? Is it descendancy proven by genealogical records? A family story? DNA? What does the saying, “everybody is Indigenous” mean? And how do you talk about Native identity depending on which category fits you? Join the Indigeneity Program team and special guests as we unpack tribal identity in a frank conversation. Moderated by: Cara Romero, Alexis Bunten and Nazshonnii Brown-Almaweri. With: Andrew MacDonald; Gregg Castro; Manny Lieras; Paloma Flores; Bette Billiot; Christie Lacoban; Te Maia Wiki; Manaia Lieras.
April 7th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm | Goldman Theater, Brower Center
Panelists
Design thinking offers a systematic process for creativity. It is popular in product design, education, wellness, and many other fields. In this workshop, we will learn how to perceive challenges differently as a step toward solving them. We’ll explore how to reframe problems, brainstorm ideas, and arrive at unexpected solutions. We’ll get a taste of what can be achieved in a time-efficient manner in a playful setting; and the tools we acquire in this session can be applied to our work on behalf of issues we care most passionately about. Facilitated by: Marilyn Cornelius, Ph.D., Alchemus Prime.
April 7th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm | San Pablo Room, Residence Inn
Panelists
4:45 pm: Practicing Regenerative Finance: How Community Loan Funds, Shared Governance and Reinvestment Support Local Solutions to the Climate Crisis
Presented in collaboration with the Climate Justice Alliance
Community loan funds are creating new possibilities for funding local solutions to the climate crisis, while also addressing a long history of institutional disinvestment in traditionally disenfranchised communities. Four grassroots organizers on the frontlines will speak to the ways that reinvestment campaigns are calling on philanthropy to invest in these local funds, redefine traditional conceptions of risk and return, and center stewarding wealth in ways that generate healing rather than harm. With: Gopal Dayaneni, co-founder, Movement Generation: Justice and Ecology Project; Loren White Jr., Community Development Coordinator at the Indigenous Environmental Network; Lupe Romero Elicea, Co-Director for the Climate Justice Our Power Loan Fund; Briana Sidney, Cooperation Richmond.
April 7th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm | Golden Bear Room, Hotel Shattuck Plaza
Panelists
LGBTQ2SIA+ communities have long had to imagine and innovate relentlessly in their struggles for dignity and equality. In the face of newly empowered homophobic reactionary forces, queer visionaries have been engaging in ever more social, cultural, political and artistic creativity, forging new paths in a dazzling variety of forms. In this session we will hear from three inspiring, impressive and remarkably diverse innovators: Taylor Brorby, essayist, poet, environmentalist and author of the extraordinary memoir, Boys and Oil: Growing Up Gay in a Fractured Land; Niko Alexandre, a Black Queer forester and co-creator of the Shelterwood Collective, dedicated to a vision of Queer and Indigenous land stewardship and Afro-Indigenous food systems; Ashara Ekundayo, a queer, Black feminist interdisciplinary curator, cultural theologian, maker and the Founder/Director at Artist As First Responder. Moderated by Kristin Rothballer, independent consultant and Senior Fellow at the Center for Whole Communities.
April 7th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm | Crystal Ballroom, Hotel Shattuck Plaza
Panelists
In North America, agency over how we die has moved from family-centered community care to costly corporate systems driven by profit. A medical conveyor belt disempowers and isolates our dying, causing hardship on already strained families and communities, compounding grief and trauma. But alternative end of life carers, community educators and innovators are bringing change to the way we die in America, reclaiming agency over a natural process by dispelling fear, sharing wisdom on accompanying the dying, tending to our dead, and facilitating grieving in community. Come explore how we can reclaim and reimagine our own dying and that of our beloveds. Facilitated by educators/end of life guides/community gatherers/activists: Anneke Campbell; Birgitta Kastenbaum; and Amber Deylon.
April 7th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm | Grief Altar Tent
Panelists
On the one hand, the global ecological, socio-political and economic news is indisputably grim: accelerating climate catastrophes, plummeting biodiversity, increasingly authoritarian regimes and movements on the rise planet-wide, the specter of a classic “Thucydides’ trap” in U.S.-China relations, entrenched capital undermining every effort at decarbonization, etc. On the other: the radical awakening and rising up of younger generations, the emergence of some genuinely impactful large-scale “green” initiatives and policies, the exponential growth of clean energy technologies; the recent successful rebuff of several right wing leaders and parties in key countries, etc. Is the human enterprise precariously perched on the knife-edge between catastrophic unraveling or the birth of a new, life-affirming civilization? It is hard to imagine two more appropriate interlocutors to explore the current zeitgeist: Kim Stanley Robinson, our greatest living science-fiction writer, who has fascinatingly and rigorously envisioned scenarios of human adaptation to the climate crisis in many of his novels; and Leah Stokes, a professor of environmental politics who is one of the nation’s most brilliant experts on energy, climate and public policy; and who many consider to have been a key behind-the-scenes prime mover in shepherding the giant IRA climate bill through Congress. Hosted/moderated by J.P. Harpignies, Bioneers Conference senior producer.
April 7th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm | Berkeley Ballroom, Residence Inn
Panelists
Nothing is more central and visceral to the human experience than eating. Recent decades have seen a sea change in awareness about the crucial importance of what we eat, how and where our food is grown, and by whom. Making radical changes to our entire system of agriculture and to societal attitudes toward plants, animals and the entirety of the natural world will give us the chance of emerging from our current crises and ushering in the birth of a life-affirming civilization. With: Alice Waters, legendary, highly influential chef who has been a leader in radically improving American cuisine’s social and ecological impacts, as well of course as its gustatory and nutritional qualities; in conversation with Nikki Silvestri, Founder and CEO of Soil and Shadow, former ED of Green for All and the People’s Grocery, recipient of numerous awards, including ELLE Magazine’s Gold Award and OxFam America’s Act Local, Think Global Award.
April 7th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm | Freight & Salvage
Panelists
Come hear first-hand accounts of the ordeals and life challenges of courageous, inspiring young adults who had to flee their homelands as refugees to the U.S., after which we’ll engage in a discussion about refugee rights. Mahjabin Khanzanda, who had been an interpreter for the U.S. army, barely made it out of Kabul on an emergency evacuation flight just before the Taliban took over Afghanistan. Noor Almusahwi first became a refugee in Syria when his family fled Iraq under threat from Saddam Hussein’s regime, before then becoming a refugee again after the brutal war in Syria ignited. They will be joined by Andrea Valverde, a highly experienced social worker with Refugee Foster Care. Hosted by: Humaira Ghilzai, social entrepreneur, writer, producer, educator, co-founder of the non-profit Afghan Friends Network.
April 7th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm | Campanile Room, Hotel Shattuck Plaza
Panelists
This interactive session will be a caucus space for white-identified youth. Using a heart-centered, nourishing process, we will unpack the history of “whiteness” and explore what it means to be a white settler on Indigenous land as well as the harms that white supremacy has caused. With ritual, introspection, and dialogue, we will witness and support each other in the long-term process of learning to become a good relative and an effective ally to communities of color. Facilitated by: Hilary Giovale and Joe Sweeney.
April 7th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm | Kinzie Room, Brower Center
Panelists
The BIPOC Youth Caucus is a safe and brave open forum where youth of color have an opportunity to listen to one another and share the real issues that come with holding their identities in social and environmental movements as well as in the world at large. Facilitators will help youth deal with their struggles and aspirations and have an opportunity to move toward healing. Facilitated by Brandi Mack, Minkah Smith and Alondra Aragon.
April 7th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm | Tamalpais Room, Brower Center
Panelists
Our media partner YES! Media – publisher of YES! Magazine – is hosting a casual connection space from 6:00 pm – 7:30 pm every day of the Bioneers conference. Come to decompress, refresh, and share with YES! what inspiring stories you’re hearing at Bioneers, and cool things you’re working on at home! Plus pick up some free YES! Magazines! Join them at Hotel Shattuck Plaza, Suite 310.
April 7th | 6:00 pm to 7:30 pm
Taylor Brorby signing copies of Boys and Oil: Growing Up Gay in a Fractured Land
Kim Stanley Robinson signing copies of The Ministry for the Future
Leah Stokes signing copies of Short Circuiting Policy
April 7th | 6:15 pm to 6:45 pm | Pegasus Bookstore (Lobby of Magnes Museum)
Panelists
Whether you are gay, bi, or lesbian, transgender or two-spirit, or adjacent allies supporting us to thrive, our shared lineage makes for a vibrant garden of beings that mutually support our growth and blooming. This gathering celebrates our self-expression through a night of expression, through performances and participation. Take part and witness the spells cast for wellness for the queer community through food + drink, song, dance and connection in a night celebrating our unique roles in liberation. This is a space dedicated for LGBTQ2SIA+ folx, but allies are welcome. Hosted by Orion Camero, former Brower Youth Awards winner and Spiritual Ecology fellow.
April 7th | 6:30 pm to 8:30 pm | Tamalpais Room, Brower Center
Panelists
With a special live appearance by Bernie and Katherine Krause to introduce the film.
Bernie Krause, the legendary pioneer of Acoustic Ecology began his journey in the 1960s as a prolific composer at the forefront of the synthesizer revolution helping transform the cinema and the music industries, but a single chance encounter with the sounds of the wilderness set him on a completely new trajectory gathering wilderness recordings across the globe. Over half a century later, his vast archive of captured soundscapes reflects dire habitat devastation in virtually all ecosystems on Earth, yet also yields urgent stories about the need for immediate change. Bernie and his wife Kat tragically faced the immediacy of climate change when their home and recording studio was completely destroyed by the Sonoma wildfires of 2017. Their message to us is ever more urgent.
“The Last of the Nightingales” invites us to experience the rich acoustic beauty of the living world through Bernie’s ears and to reconnect with it. As more and more soundscapes fall silent, Bernie reminds us that it is not too late to begin listening.
Directed and edited by Masha Karpoukhina; cinematography by Justin LaFleur; produced by Hassan Said and Rose Wyatt.
April 7th | 6:40 pm to 7:20 pm | Goldman Theater, Brower Center
Protecting and Restoring California’s Ecosystems with Nature-Based Solutions
Three Short Films by Masha Karpoukhina
Produced by Colorfool Films
These 3 short films represent an inspiring patchwork of some of the most ambitious conservation projects to be undertaken in California in response to the climate crisis. What can be achieved if we decide to work in concert with nature rather than against her? If we decide to learn from the wealth of ecological knowledge embedded in the evolutionary process, billions of years in the making? In many ways, the things that we love most about the Bay Area from our coastal redwoods, to the majesty of the Bay, to the free flowing waters that nourish it, deeply depend on the success of these 3 projects. They represent hope, but it’s clear that they will not be enough. How can we inspire a thousand more projects just like these to help redefine what is possible?
A Valley Endures: Peninsula Open Space Trust (POST)
Between two ridges—the Santa Cruz Mountains and the Diablo Range—lies Coyote Valley, the last remaining, largely undeveloped link connecting 1.13 million acres of habitat that is already severely fragmented by human development. If the wildlife who call these habitats home are to have a chance at adapting to our changing climate, or even surviving, Coyote Valley must be protected forever. (5 minutes)
Where the Wetlands Grow: Save The Bay
As the Bay Area braces for 7 feet of sea level rise by the year 2100, Save The Bay and partners such as the South Bay Salt Pond Restoration Project are pioneering nature-based solutions for one of the largest tidal marsh restoration projects on the West Coast. This innovative approach protects Bay Area wildlife and human communities with healthy marshes teeming with native vegetation instead of hardened seawalls or levees. (3 minutes)
6000 Miles: CalWild
There are so few free-flowing rivers in the U.S. that the Department of the Interior considers them endangered ecosystems. Enter Kayla Lopez, a young river activist, and Steve Evans (aka The River Guy), who has lobbied for wild rivers in Congress his whole life. Both are on a journey into the spirit of the California rivers they hold dear. Follow their stories as we explore CalWild’s mission to protect a total of 6,000 miles eligible under the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act by 2028. (5 minutes)
April 7th | 7:20 pm to 7:40 pm | Goldman Theater, Brower Center
This short film shows frontline Ecuadorian conservationists invoking the “rights of nature” clause in their nation’s constitution to work to save areas of immense biodiversity. This half hour screening is of Episode #4 from Tangled Bank Studio’s brand-new series, Wild Hope.
The film will be introduced by Callie Broaddus, founder of Reserva: The Youth Land Trust, a nonprofit empowering youth to conserve threatened species and habitats around the world.
Great thanks to Tangled Bank Studios, a mission-driven production company.
April 7th | 7:40 pm to 8:20 pm | Goldman Theater, Brower Center
Introduced by
A Friday Night Bioneers Concert
We are delighted to be able to present Rising Appalachia in a special performance in one of the Bay Area’s most revered musical venues, Freight & Salvage, to celebrate Bioneers’ first year in Berkeley. Rising Appalachia, founded by Atlanta-raised, New Orleans-based sisters Leah and Chloe Smith, is renowned for its hauntingly beautiful soulful folk-roots music, but the band has also been truly exemplary in consistently using its platform to activate, organize and support frontline justice work and community organizations. Fifteen years into an adventure that has taken this self-made, stubbornly independent ensemble around the globe, they have recently released a new master-work, their seventh album, Leylines, recorded in California in a studio overlooking the Pacific Ocean and are eager to share their latest creation. This show will feature Rising Appalachia with their full five piece band. Don’t miss it!
Freight & Salvage, 2020 Addison St, Berkeley, CA
NOTE: Access to this performance requires a separate registration from Bioneers attendees, with an additional $25 ticket price. Open to the general public as well, ticketing link below:
April 7th | 8:00 pm to 10:00 pm | Freight & Salvage
Panelists
In the spring of 1972, police raided an apartment on the South Side of Chicago where seven women who were part of a clandestine network were arrested and charged. Using code names, fronts, and safe houses to protect themselves and their work, the accused had built an underground service for women seeking safe, affordable, illegal abortions. They called themselves “Jane.”
Directed by Tia Lessin and Emma Pildes, The Janes offers first-hand accounts from the women at the center of the group, many speaking on the record for the first time. The Janes tells the story of this group of unlikely outlaws who defied the state legislature that outlawed abortion, the Catholic Church that condemned it, and the Chicago Mob that was profiting from it, and risked their personal and professional lives to help women in need.
April 7th | 8:20 pm to 10:00 pm | Goldman Theater, Brower Center
Saturday, April 8th all times PDT
Click Title to Expand
Introduction by Nina Simons, Bioneers co-founder and Chief Relationship Strategist
It is a tremendous honor and privilege for Bioneers to be able to welcome back one of the most influential thought leaders, revered teachers, and inspiring role models of our era—Joanna Macy. An author, activist, and scholar of Buddhism, Systems Thinking and Deep Ecology, Joanna created a groundbreaking framework for personal and social change, “The Work That Reconnects” that has equipped tens of thousands of us, activists and engaged citizens, who have felt traumatized and paralyzed by the devastation our species has inflicted on the entire web of life, with a highly sophisticated and powerful psycho-spiritual approach to help us keep working and fighting for a better world. She will share some of the hard-earned wisdom she has garnered in her 9 decades.
April 8th | 9:29 am to 9:48 am | Zellerbach Hall
Introduced by
Keynote
Introduction by Kenny Ausubel, Bioneers CEO and Founder
The energy transition race is on. Fossils fuels have peaked. What do we need to get renewables to prevail as fast as possible, and can we make that victory good for everyone? The 2020s will be the decisive decade in the climate justice fight. Where and how we create the new energy economy, who gets to lead it, who owns it and who works in it now matter more than ever. We must prepare for a large pulse of eco-industrial activity the likes of which the world has never known. As we race to the finish line of the transition away from fossil fuels, visionary “green” entrepreneur and founder of New Energy Nexus Danny Kennedy will present a plan to build out the full 3D potential of clean energy—not just distributed energy, but decentralized in ownership and democratized in control. Highly decentralized global grassroots entrepreneurship is central, as the pathfinding work of New Energy Nexus is demonstrating.
April 8th | 9:56 am to 10:15 am | Zellerbach Hall
Introduced by
Keynote
Introduction by Nina Simons, Bioneers co-founder and Chief Relationship Strategist
Western culture has for the last several centuries built a society founded on three strong separations: our separation from ourselves, our separation from the other (or the person we call the other), and our separation from the Earth. But, according to john powell, one of our nation’s longtime leading experts on civil rights, structural racism, poverty, and democracy, Director of the groundbreaking Othering & Belonging Institute at UC Berkeley, the reality is that we’re not separate. We’re deeply connected to each other. Our challenge is that in order to emerge from the existential crises we face and to birth a far more humane civilization, we now need to look deeply at ourselves and our social structures to overcome the separations that have been inculcated into us for so long and rediscover our fundamental connection to each other and the entire web of life.
April 8th | 10:19 am to 10:37 am | Zellerbach Hall
Introduced by
Keynote
Introduction by Alexis Bunten, Co-Director of Bioneers’ Indigeneity Program
“In community we pause, we open, we nourish, and we become.”
Yuria Celidwen is of Nahua and Maya descent from the highlands of Chiapas, Mexico, born into a family lineage of mystics, healers, and poets. Her scholarship centers on Indigenous forms of contemplation and has developed into a broader statement she calls the “ethics of belonging.” It has become evident that when we pay attention to the world around us, all we hear is urgency. It is time for community reflection. Yuria will share two core guiding principles from her scholarship, Kin Relationality and Ecological Belonging. She will explain how these concepts can help us access an ever-expansive unfolding of a path of meaning and participation rooted in honoring Life.
April 8th | 11:36 am to 11:58 am | Zellerbach Hall
Introduced by
Keynote
Introduction by Osprey Orielle Lake, founder and Executive Director of the Women’s Earth and Climate Action Network (WECAN) International
How we imagine what’s possible, what matters. Who we are shapes what we do, and what we do in the present shapes the future. In addition to the many practical, scientific and material aspects, the climate crisis has cultural aspects with which we need to engage in order to meet this emergency. Drawing from the new anthology she co-edited, Not Too Late: Changing the Climate Story from Despair to Possibility, Rebecca Solnit will talk about the stories emerging from what science, Indigenous leadership, good organizing, and visionary thinkers are giving us. These stories offer the grounds for hope and the work hope does. What are the ways that what the climate requires of us could mean ushering in an age of abundance rather than austerity?
April 8th | 11:59 am to 12:21 pm | Zellerbach Hall
Introduced by
Keynote
April 8th | 12:21 pm to 12:33 pm | Zellerbach Hall
Keynote
On Allston Way between Shattuck and Oxford
Participatory Street Art with The Climate Justice Arts Project
Arts organizer David Solnit, muralist Gemma Searle and educator/organizer/artist Julie Searle will host two interactive arts projects sponsored by The Climate Justice Arts Project on the closed-to-traffic block of Allston Way. Don’t miss the fun: come learn new skills in “engaged art”-making as we collaborate in street mural painting and get your of climate justice art posters for Earthweek.
12:20 pm – 5:00 pm Thursday – Saturday
Catch the Drop
Come paint stunningly beautiful rain catchment barrels and learn about water harvesting with cutting-edge eco artists affiliated with the beloved Women’s Eco Art Directory organization (WEAD), a long-standing, groundbreaking organization with deep historical ties to Bioneers. You will discover the joy of combining beauty with life-affirming green technology.
1:00 pm – 6:00 pm Thursday – Saturday
Sprit Nests Creations
Join Jayson Fann and collaborators for an extraordinary immersive medicine space of rhythm and healing, including a 10 ft drum created in collaboration with the 13 Grandmothers. Come hear music 1:30 pm – 2:30 pm Thursday – Saturday, see the installation anytime.
People’s Earth Week: Climate Justice Art & Action
Come see street art poster designs by 10 movement artists–and take poster art kit home to publicly display for Earthweek! Sponsored by the grassroots climate justice networks People VS Fossil Fuels and Stop the Money Pipeline. Info at: bit.ly/ClimateJusticeArtKit
Climate Justice Movement Flags & Banners
See the display along Allston Way of climate justice movement screen printed, hand painted and flags and banners from in frontline and community struggles to protect people and planet.
Artists’ Way
Come browse the beautiful and thought-provoking work of an array of socially and eco-conscious local artists who will be displaying and vending their work on Allston Way and other conference sites.
1:00 pm – 6:00 pm Thursday – Saturday
April 8th | 12:30 pm to 5:00 pm | On Allston Way between Shattuck and Oxford
April 8th | 12:33 pm to 12:45 pm | Zellerbach Hall
Keynote
Michael Amster signing copies of The Power of Awe
john a. powell signing copies of Racing to Justice
Rebecca Solnit signing copies of Not Too Late, Hope in the Dark and A Paradise Built in Hell
April 8th | 2:30 pm to 3:00 pm | Pegasus Bookstore (Lobby of Magnes Museum)
Panelists
The world seems to be unraveling—the ever-worsening climate crisis; slews of ethnic and religion-based violent conflicts; the erosion of democratic structures around the world, etc. We are confronting what some are calling a great “poly-crisis.” In this presentation, climate scientist, Buddhist Zen priest and grief ritual facilitator Kritee Kanko will explore how climate grief and intersectional traumas resulting from legacies of white supremacy and heteropatriarchy shape our nervous systems and shrink our ability to act wholeheartedly. She will explain how “difficult” emotions and traumas around injustices can be “composted” so that they fuel our movements for climate justice, and she will share strategies on how to draw power from vulnerability to heal, build resilience and belonging, and act collectively for a better world.
April 8th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | Golden Bear Room, Hotel Shattuck Plaza
Panelists
3:00 pm: Climate Justice Through Power-Building
Presented in collaboration with the Othering & Belonging Institute
The rise of regenerative social movements and civil society hold the greatest power for successfully navigating the “Great Unraveling” engulfing our world, but building on a long history of social struggles, the immense racial justice protests of 2020 demonstrated that “creating the world anew” is impossible without also building power where communities feel the most pain. People power, governing power, and narrative power have to go hand-in-hand to have any chance of overcoming the inevitable, intense backlash from entrenched reactionary forces. Join some visionary activists who will share their strategies to forge alliances at the intersections of issues and communities to bring more people into the beautiful work of transforming our world, creating new ways of governing and achieving climate justice. With: Adam Mahoney, climate and environment reporter at Capital B; Claudia Jimenez, longtime community organizer,Richmond, CA City Council Member; Tamisha Walker, Executive Director, Safe Return Project (a campaign to secure the freedom of formerly incarcerated individuals); Christine Cordero, Co-Director of the Asian Pacific Environmental Network (APEN).Moderated by: Emnet Almedom, researcher at the Othering and Belonging Institute.
April 8th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | Berkeley Ballroom, Residence Inn
Panelists
Bioneers brings together a very diverse, discerning, engaged and reflective community, and the curated conversations around crucial topics we have been hosting recently (“Conversation Cafes”) have proven highly popular and stimulating. Each session begins with a very brief presentation by one of the conference presenters as a “conversation starter” to frame the topic, followed by structured group discussion. At the end of each session, a “harvester” who has carefully witnessed and “absorbed” what has transpired, offers us a poetic synopsis/recapitulation of the highlights of our time together.
Join best-selling Manitoba author and activist Clayton Thomas-Muller to explore what may be required for First Nations people, and all Indigenous peoples, to heal from the violence of the country they’ve lived upon for so long. In Canada, as in the U.S., colonialism is at the heart of many of Native peoples’ most pressing issues, such as food insecurity, climate change, environmental injustice, inequality, and MMIW. We will discuss and explore together how a better future is not only possible, but necessary, and how Indigenous Peoples are leading the way. Facilitated by: David Shaw, Santa Cruz Permaculture and UCSC Right Livelihood College. “Harvester:” Jason Bayani, author, theater performer, Artistic Director, Kearny Street Workshop.
April 8th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | Ashby Room, Residence Inn
Panelists
Bioneers is inherently a community of mentors—people eager to learn, share, explore and create together. The “Community of Mentors” space at Bioneers offers youth conference participants the opportunity to be in small group mentoring sessions with Bioneers presenters who share their life experiences in an interactive dialogue format in order to be of service to young people seeking guidance on their path to activism. In this session, renowned musicians and activists Leah Song and Biko Casini of Rising Appalachia will explore the role of the arts as tools to catalyze change, understand grief, and create catharsis. They will discuss their lives as full-time touring artists and answer questions about life on the road and the role of folk musicians as well as their perspectives on sustainable touring and making a living through artistry. (And hopefully we’ll get to make a little music together as well.) Co-hosted by fellow members of the Weaving Earth team, Justine Epstein and Sam DeBosky. From Leah and Biko: “We are so looking forward to being with you all and also learning from each of you about your experiences making your way in these challenging times.”
April 8th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | Kinzie Room, Brower Center
Panelists
3:00 pm: Honoring Mother Earth and Bodily Sovereignty: Reproductive Rights, Equity and Birth Justice
Presented in collaboration with Full Spectrum Capital Partners
The war on Mother Earth is rooted in the war on the bodies of women and gender non-binary people’s bodily autonomy. As our cultural system rooted in patriarchy and misogyny goes into deeper crisis, the war on women and the feminine is accelerating. As people of all genders rise up to defend abortion access, reproductive rights and justice, the deepening collaboration between the reproductive and birth justice communities is helping us take a holistic, united approach to defending individual and collective rights to bodily autonomy and self-determination. In this session, we will learn from leaders working at the intersection of Birth Justice and Reproductive Justice about how we all can play a role in supporting efforts to ensure that all people have access to reproductive freedom. Hosted by: Taj James, co-founder of Full Spectrum Capital. With: Tenesha Duncan, co-founder and Managing Director of Orchid Capital; Cynthia Gutierrez, Program Manager for UCSF’s Hub of Positive Reproductive and Sexual Health (HIVE) and Team Lily programs.
April 8th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | Campanile Room, Hotel Shattuck Plaza
Panelists
3:00 pm: Indigenous Forum – Healing Justice to Restore Relations with Land
Presented in collaboration with Indigenous Climate Action
We are living in a very exciting time as we witness more instances of successful Indigenous-led #landback campaigns and triumphs over the extraction industry than ever before, but we are also becoming increasingly aware that we cannot restore relations with the land without addressing our own trauma. This session will explore such critical questions as: How might the fight for #landback benefit from the inclusion of Black people and other historically marginalized groups? Does ‘call out culture’ actually harm decolonization movements? In addition to frankly exploring these issues, the panelists will share practical strategies for addressing them using such tools as an intergenerational focus, ceremony, and time on the land. Moderated by Eriel Deranger. With: Jodie Geddes and Carlee Loft.
April 8th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | Goldman Theater, Brower Center
Panelists
The emotion of awe can help us address some of humanity’s biggest challenges, be they climate change, racism or political strife. The reason is that, when we experience awe, we feel more connected, kinder, and more caring toward others and all life on Earth. Awe opens our minds and hearts. Awe is in us and surrounds us all the time, but most of us don’t know how to access it. In this 75-minute experiential session, based on evidence-based research, we will learn to access awe in the ordinary moments of our lives, resulting in improved health for us and the people we connect with. Facilitated by Michael Amster, MD, researcher at the UC Berkeley Greater Good Science Center, and longtime yoga and mindfulness meditation teacher.
April 8th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | San Pablo Room, Residence Inn
Panelists
Richmond, California, which has long been one of the municipalities most impacted by environmental injustice and toxic industries in the entire state, has in recent years emerged as an inspiring example of effective community mobilization, as a number of local groups there working in different domains have demonstrated that people can organize to radically improve their lives and challenge oppressive power structures. Hosted by longtime Richmond community leader and now City Councilwoman Doria Robinson, Executive Director of Urban Tilth and other Richmond community organizations, as well as a member of the California State Food and Agriculture Commission. With: Adam Boisvert, Deputy Director, Urban Tilth; Connie Cho, Attorney, Communities for a Better Environment (CBE); Najari Smith, founding Director of the Rich City Project.
April 8th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | Crystal Ballroom, Hotel Shattuck Plaza
Panelists
Regenerative agricultural practices have shown great promise as potentially significant contributors to helping address the climate crisis and eliminate toxic agricultural chemicals from the environment. New research is showing remarkable results that could have profound implications for food security, soil health, water availability, and biodiversity. Yet still the challenge is how to transition from the massively destructive current “degenerative” faming system to a regenerative one. Leading experts will share their perspectives on how to make that transition. With: Dr. Cynthia Daley, founder/Director of the Center for Regenerative Agriculture and Resilient Systems (CRA) at California State University Chico; and Tim LaSalle, co-founder of CRA. Moderated by Arty Mangan, Bioneers Director of Restorative Food Systems.
April 8th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | Magnes Museum
Panelists
California’s $48 billion Climate Commitment in 2022 plus the Federal IRA represent a once in a lifetime opportunity to onshore the supply chains and build the infrastructure needed to transform our economy to carbon neutrality, while creating jobs and justice for the 100%. How can California and tribal nations such as the Torres Martinez Desert Cahuilla Indians partner for an equitable clean energy future rooted in a circular regenerative economy? What would it look like to have the original landowners at the helm of a place-based industrial strategy to onshore an advanced battery and EV manufacturing supply chain to Inland Southern California? With: Jesus Arguelles, Economic Development Director of the Torres Martinez Desert Cahuilla Indians; Rebecca Lee, New Energy Nexus; Bryan Vega, New Energy Nexus. Hosted by: Danny Kennedy, CEO, New Energy Nexus.
April 8th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | Freight & Salvage
Panelists
Join us for a deep and honest conversation about the transformative power of witnessing and tending to the dying, and holding space for grief. If we are to have a regenerative relationship with life and death, we need courageous hearts willing to speak of vulnerability, grief, mystery and love. Based in the experiences and questions participants bring, we will seek to discover new insights into how our dying and grief might be better supported, thereby strengthening our communal fabric. Facilitated by educators/end of life guides/community gatherers/activists: Birgitta Kastenbaum and Amber Deylon. (Note: to facilitate a safe space for all who join us, we close our tent doors 5 minutes past the session start time.)
April 8th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | Grief Altar Tent
Panelists
A working session open to all youth who want to come and complete the Singing Tree Collective Mural collective before the close of the conference. With Leslie Rein and Sweta Chawla.
April 8th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | Terrace outside Tamalpais Room, Brower Center
Panelists
What makes someone an activist? In this workshop, we’ll explore activism with a focus on historical and modern youth activism, and we’ll use the art and power of poetry to share and illustrate our most passionate thoughts, ranging from our identities to global issues. In the end, we will discover the activist within us all and learn to empower our fellow youth peers! Facilitated by poet and activist Myra Estrada, a 2023 Youth Speaks Teen Poetry Slam finalist.
April 8th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm | Tamalpais Room, Brower Center
Panelists
Clayton Thomas-Muller signing copies of Life In the City of Dirty Water
April 8th | 4:30 pm to 5:00 pm | Pegasus Bookstore (Lobby of Magnes Museum)
Panelists
Recent decades have been characterized by the emergence of large-scale social movements on both the left and right sides of the political spectrum. To name just a few, on the left are a plethora of movements such as the “Arab Spring,” “Indignados” in Spain, the unrest in Iran, and here in North America Occupy, Black Lives Matter and Water Defenders. On the right are the resurgence of Neo-Fascist parties in Europe, “Bolsonarism” in Brazil and white and Christian nationalisms and insurrectionist Trumpist groups at home. There is no doubt that this is an extremely turbulent historical period. In this session, two experts, one who studies the right, the other a veteran of and keen observer of anti-authoritarian movements, compare notes and discuss what history might teach us about what we progressives might expect from the collisions of these dueling dynamics in our own era. With: Professor Lawrence Rosenthal, founder of Berkeley’s Center for Right Wing Studies; and Howard Besser, renowned Professor of Film Studies at NYU and creator of the Howard Besser Program for Anti-Authoritarianism and Social Movements at Berkeley. Moderated by: Minoo Moallem, Gender & Women’s Studies professor and Director of Media Studies at UC Berkeley.
April 8th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm | Berkeley Ballroom, Residence Inn
Panelists
In times of crisis, societies look to their storytellers to understand and process the challenges and to peek around corners to see pathways that purely rational analyses simply can’t fathom. Today, best-sellers in fiction and memoir are setting real-world information about the climate crisis, social justice movements, and migration realities within their narratives. Audiences are ready for these stories, but what about artists? Does the moment dictate the art? In our ancestral past it was the myth-makers who guided their communities through crisis. Do modern day writers think about their obligations on the entertainment-awareness spectrum? How do storytellers move in or move out of our current moment? Join a conversation with leading writers about their creative process, how they consider the bigger local and global conversations as they craft their work, and the relationship between fictional narratives and real world movements for change. Hosted by Laleh Khadivi, Iranian-born writer and filmmaker. With: Keenan Norris, novelist, essayist and scholar; Andri Snær Magnason, renowned Icelandic novelist, poet, filmmaker and environmental activist.
April 8th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm | Magnes Museum
Panelists
Climate grief along with intersectional traumas resulting from legacies of social injustice shape our nervous systems and can shrink our ability to act wholeheartedly, but our hope in these complex, chaotic times lies in the fact that if we can “compost” our “hard” emotions (grief, rage, fear and confusion) and traumas, we can harness the resulting energy to fuel our movement for climate justice. The very fear and grief that can incapacitate us can be transformed into creativity and courage if we can ignite the power of vulnerability in our quest for belonging, healing, resilience and effective collective action. This interactive session is intended for those who desire a direct embodied experience of what it might mean to be witnessed or to see and hear another as we “compost” our grief and anxieties in the presence of a receptive, committed and compassionate community. Facilitated by Ladybird Morgan.
PLEASE NOTE: Because of the nature of this session, we will be closing the entrance door at 5 minutes after the start time.
April 8th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm | San Pablo Room, Residence Inn
Panelists
It is not surprising that Indigenous Peoples are leading the way in the “Rights of Nature” movement given that the idea that trees, waters, and ecosystems have a right to flourish reflects Indigenous worldviews. In this panel, we’ll hear from Indigenous leaders whose tribes have adopted Rights of Nature frameworks to protect sacred territories. They will share practical strategies for organizing and implementing Rights of Nature campaigns within international legal frameworks. Join us to learn more about the movement, and how you can be a part of it. Moderated by Brittany Gondolfi. With: Samantha Skenandore; Danielle Greendeer and Erin Matariki Carr.
April 8th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm | Goldman Theater, Brower Center
Panelists
Join author Madeline Ostrander; environmental scientist Rachel Morello-Frosch; Richmond, CA City Council Member Doria Robinson; and youth organizer and Sierra Club Emerging Voices award-winner Alfredo Angulo for a discussion about lessons from frontline and environmental justice communities—and how their voices are vital to understanding how to face the climate crisis and develop solutions. We’ll explore how such communities are advocating for stronger climate policies, building collective strength to fight against industrial pollution and launching groundbreaking grassroots initiatives in this time of climate emergency.
April 8th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm | Crystal Ballroom, Hotel Shattuck Plaza
Panelists
4:45 pm: Loveworthy: Birth Equity & Justice – Honoring Our Relationships to the Web of Life
Presented in collaboration with Full Spectrum Capital Partners
Old knowledge about how to welcome new beings into the world and honor the sacred cycles of life and death, held by wisdom keepers in our communities, is returning around the globe. Faced with the significant harm created by the medical-industrial complex on Black, Indigenous, people of colorBIPOC people giving birth, midwives, doulas and public health practitioners are coming together to create community birth centers and networks of community care that are becoming cornerstones of wellness around the world. This reclamation of the sacredness of birth is a part of the broader shift to center the care and creativity of women and gender-non binary people whose wisdom is the basis of growing a “care economy.” Hosted by Indra Lusero, Director of Elephant Circle. With: Leseliey Welch, MPH, MBA, co-founder of Birth Detroit and Birth Center Equity; Tenesha Duncan, co-founder and Managing Director of Orchid Capital; Kiki Jordan, Midwife and founder of Birthland Midwifery.
April 8th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm | Campanile Room, Hotel Shattuck Plaza
Panelists
The vast landscape of the Internet and social media define and dominate much of contemporary life, yet the cyber ecosystem is fraught with profound systemic flaws that pose immense challenges for societies, communities and individuals. How does the monopoly power of a tiny handful of “Surveillance Capitalist” behemoths radically exacerbate wealth and power inequities? Have powerful new AI-based tracking systems made personal privacy obsolete and total socio-political control by authoritarian regimes far more likely? How can we arrest this Age of Disinformation? What can be done? Join a group of leading experts who are wrestling with these and other related questions as they explore the rapidly shifting world of info-tech and what we need to do to prevent the most dystopian outcomes. With: Randima Fernando, co-founder of the Center for Humane Technology; Luca Belli, founder of Sator Labs and a UC Berkeley Tech Policy Fellow; Cindy Cohn, Executive Director of the Electronic Frontier Foundation. Moderated by Kellen Klein, former Course Manager at Center for Humane Technology.
April 8th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm | Golden Bear Room, Hotel Shattuck Plaza
Panelists
4:45 pm: Solving the Climate Crisis in One Generation
Presented in collaboration with One Earth
According to the groundbreaking, highly influential organization, One Earth, the solutions to the climate crisis already exist, and there are three pillars of collective action we need to embrace to implement them: a just transition to 100% renewable energy; protection and restoration of half the world’s lands and oceans; and a shift to regenerative food and fiber systems. These goals are daunting, but the good news is that millions of people and organizations around the world are already driving this transformation. How are all these movements connected? How does work in each area grow and thrive with a coherent understanding of the larger systems of change? Join leaders in the three key fields outlined above in a vibrant conversation to explore how both big-picture thinking and slews of on-the-ground practical projects can play a role in solving the climate crisis in time. Hosted by: Justin Winters, co-founder and Executive Director of One Earth. With: Samuel Gensaw III (Yurok) Director of the Ancestral Guard; Cynthia Daley, Ph.D., founder/Director of the Center for Regenerative Agriculture and Resilient Systems at Cal State Chico; and Danny Kennedy, entrepreneur and founder of New Energy Nexus.
April 8th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm | Freight & Salvage
Panelists
This Open Mic, our final event of the weekend, centers youth voices, showcases youth talent and offers a powerful and sacred space for truth and healing. Open to all youth who have something that they would like to share, it will be rowdy, sweet, high energy, thoughtful and whatever else youth want to bring to the stage. MC’d by the dynamic Hip Hop and R&B artist, Jada Imani.
April 8th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm | Tamalpais Room, Brower Center
Panelists
Our media partner YES! Media – publisher of YES! Magazine – is hosting a casual connection space from 6:00 pm – 7:30 pm every day of the Bioneers conference. Come to decompress, refresh, and share with YES! what inspiring stories you’re hearing at Bioneers, and cool things you’re working on at home! Plus pick up some free YES! Magazines! Join them at Hotel Shattuck Plaza, Suite 310.
April 8th | 6:00 pm to 7:30 pm
Minoo Moallem signing copies of Between Warrior Brother and Veiled Sister and Persian Carpets: The Nation as a Transnational Commodity
Madeline Ostrander signing copies of At Home on an Unruly Planet: Finding Refuge on a Changed Earth
April 8th | 6:15 pm to 6:45 pm | Pegasus Bookstore (Lobby of Magnes Museum)
Panelists
Cara Romero: Following the Light profiles the art and inspiration of Bioneers’ Indigeneity Program Co-Director and award-winning photographer, Cara Romero. Q&A with featured artist, Cara Romero.
April 8th | 6:40 pm to 7:25 pm | Goldman Theater, Brower Center
Long Line of Ladies tells the story of the return of women’s coming of age ceremonies among the Yurok tribe of Northern California. Q&A with featured culture-bearer, Pimm Allen.
April 8th | 7:30 pm to 8:10 pm | Goldman Theater, Brower Center
Join us at the Bioneers After Party to celebrate, hang out and dance. Bring your friends, it’s open to the public. DJ Sandina aka “La Positiva” will be spinning uplifting music, from conscious Hip-Hop, R&B to Afro-Latin rhythms and Reggae, along with ancestral sounds by special guest Eric Terena. The Drop 84 (2284 Shattuck Ave).
April 8th | 8:00 pm to 1:00 am
Panelists
Indigeneity shorts present an accurate portrait of the Native American experience by tackling stereotypes, exploring contemporary issues, and celebrating Indigenous contributions to America. Q&A with producer/writer/director, Alexis Bunten.
April 8th | 8:15 pm to 8:45 pm | Goldman Theater, Brower Center
Events Listed by Venue
Ashby Room, Residence Inn Berkeley Ballroom, Residence Inn Campanile Room, Hotel Shattuck Plaza Conference Room in Magnes Museum Crystal Ballroom, Hotel Shattuck Plaza Freight & Salvage Golden Bear Room, Hotel Shattuck Plaza Goldman Theater, Brower Center Grief Altar Tent Kinzie Room, Brower Center Magnes Museum On Allston Way between Shattuck and Oxford Pegasus Bookstore (Lobby of Magnes Museum) San Pablo Room, Residence Inn Tamalpais Room, Brower Center Terrace outside Tamalpais Room, Brower Center Zellerbach HallKeep Your Finger on the Pulse
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