Please join us for the free, online event, Where the Wild Things Were: Addressing the Disappearance of Wild Nature. Register now: https://lnkd.in/gYstdrhw
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Post Carbon Institute provides individuals and communities with the resources needed to understand and respond to the polycrisis of the 21st century’s interacting environmental and social challenges. We help build resilience to withstand the polycrisis, and support efforts to make society more ready to take decisive and appropriate action. Specifically, we: -- Grow collective understanding of the tools required to make sense of the polycrisis, especially systems thinking, energy literacy, and environmental literacy. --Promote community resilience as the best way to build thriving, relocalized neighborhoods, towns, and cities capable of withstanding coming disruptions. --Support a growing movement of innovators and early adopters who can develop best practices and provide leadership both now and during future crises.
Post Carbon Institute的外部链接
800 SW Washington Avenue
Suite 5
US,Oregon,Corvallis,97333
Please join us for the free, online event, Where the Wild Things Were: Addressing the Disappearance of Wild Nature. Register now: https://lnkd.in/gYstdrhw
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Anyone reading this right now is likely inhabiting the world of high-energy modernity – enjoying the benefits, and increasingly feeling the consequences, of a fossil-fueled frenzy of mechanization, industrialization, and exploitation of people and nature. But modernity is more than just the highly complex physical, social, and economic fabric of our lives. It is a story, as?Vanessa Andreotti?and?Dougald Hine?argue in their seminal books,?Hospicing Modernity?and?At Work in the Ruins?– a story of inevitable growth and progress so deeply embedded in the consciousness of our culture and institutions that is not conscious at all. For much of humanity and the more-than-human world, that story has already been a tragedy. But now both the story and the real-world manifestations of modernity may be expiring. Please join Dougald, Vanessa, and Post Carbon Institute’s Asher Miller, for a free 90-minute, live, online conversation to explore the promise and consequences of modernity, the implications of its decline, and how we – individually and collectively – hospice what is dying and give care to what may emerge. https://lnkd.in/gvHRWujm
Our Mutual Aid 101 Learning Series starts tonight, 2/19 at 4 PM PT/7PM ET! https://lnkd.in/eQi_hfqZ
Shareable's #MutualAid 101 Learning Series launches in one week—and our lineup of presenters is here! The series is free, virtual, and open to all. ? Sign up for the sessions at: https://lnkd.in/eCAgPHiU
Our website resilience.org experienced a pretty severe and sophisticated Denial of Service attack yesterday, getting by Cloudflare and knocking us out for about six hours. Hard to know the motivation behind the attack but hopefully not a sign of the future.
We are so grateful to our sponsor, Wildlife Conservation Network, for sharing information about our free, online event on February 13! Register today to join the conversation: https://lnkd.in/gYstdrhw And be sure to check out the incredible work Wildlife Conservation Network is doing!
Our friends at Resilience are hosting the free, online event Where the Wild Things Were on February 13, 2025! Guest speakers Lesley Hughes, Professor Emerita of Biology at Macquarie University, and Doug Tallamy, T. A. Baker Professor of Agriculture in the Department of Entomology and Wildlife Ecology at the University of Delaware, will discuss how a fresh perspective on conservation could help scientists, activists, community groups, and individuals be more effective in protecting and regenerating wild nature. Register now: https://hubs.ly/Q036jc270 Post Carbon Institute
PCI Advisor Elizabeth Sawin will be leading this interactive workshop on #multisolving as a response to the many social and environmental challenges our communities face.
Our February #OpenDialogues are open for registration. Looking forward to our rescheduled session with Elizabeth Sawin Multisolving Institute on #MultiSolving designed to share practical tools and approaches that you can apply in your own work. Featuring case discussions, small group work, and opportunities to connect with others to explore and share how #philanthropy and #civilsociety are using #multisolving approaches in different regions and contexts. Elizabeth Sawin Gerard ("Gerry") Salole Tom Lent Cindy-Lee Cloete Liana Varon Stanley Wu Omega Pam Pence Do feel invited to join us. Details and link to register on zoom below. ??? Date: February 19th, 2025 ? Time: 2:00 PM GMT (London) / 3:00 PM CET (Paris) / 4:00 PM SAST (Johannesburg) / 9:00 AM ET (New York) ?? Register:?https://shorturl.at/axyuG For more info visit: https://shorturl.at/oGdmu #SystemsThinking #ClimateAction #SocialImpact #Sustainability #CollaborativeLeadership #SystemsChange #Innovation #resilience #climateaction #noregretsactions Questions in advance? Drop a comment below! ??
Very short notice but TOMORROW (Friday Jan 24), one of our favorite podcast and event guests, Dr. Lyla June Johnston, will be joining this discussion on the histories of bioregionalism, hosted by our friends r3.0.
UPDATE: I'm excited to announce the addition of Dr. Lyla June Johnston to the "Histories of Bioregioning" session on Fri 24 January 11am-12:30pm ET, to kick off r3.0's 2025 series of monthly Open Dialogues on the global bioregioning movement. She joins Karie Crisp & Brandon Letsinger to explore how the millennial-long, intertwining histories of bioregioning can help inform current practice in the movement, and help map our future trajectories toward earth regeneration and cultural intelligence. Here's the idea of flow as of now -- subject to change as Lyla June, Karie, and Brandon percolate on this: Lyla June?will get us started with deep contextualization of millennial-scale Indigenous regenerative ecosystem design / management at the bioregional scale, in particular stressing the?ongoing?nature of this knowledge and practice; Brandon?will follow to provide historical grounding of the wave of bioregioning starting in the 1970s, anchored in his encyclopedic knowledge of the textual archives of the movement and drawing on his in-depth participation in the movement for two decades; and Karie?will follow with a more specific angle focusing on the history of the Planet Drum Foundation social ecosystem, in particular integrating the voices she’s documented in her 50-year retrospective of its work, filtered through her doctoral work on the political ecology of bioregioning. In our curation, we at r3.0 are choosing to start from this deep history to help inform today's practitioners in the bioregioning movement of the wisdom that's accumulated over millennia from human entanglement with earth's ecosystems in sustainable and regenerative ways. As well, these Open Dialogue sessions set foundations for our Conference on 9/10 September -- Catalyzing Bioregional Resilience & Regeneration: Learning to Reinhabit Earth Together -- and the parallel Confluences that we're inviting and supporting bioregions to host alongside our Conference, culminating in a global Debrief of Confluences on 11 September, followed by monthly Continental Confluence Debriefs thereafter, to plant seeds for Bioregional, Continental, and Planetary Congressing in the coming years...(See our Open Dialogue from last year that dips into the history of bioregional congressing linked in the comments below...) Please mark your calendars to join us here: https://lnkd.in/eYaybeCz Meeting ID: 844 4572 6155 Passcode: 119797 ? And please feel free to add questions or historical aspects you'd like to explore in the comments section below.
We're giving away a set of Doug Tallamy's books! Attend our FREE online event, Where the Wild Things Were, to be entered automatically. Thursday, February 13, 2025 https://lnkd.in/gYstdrhw