Explore the daily In Person schedule for the 2022 Bioneers Conference
All times are in Pacific Daylight Time
Full Schedule Coming Soon
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Friday, May 13th all times PDT
May 13th | 8:30 am to 1:00 pm | PoFA Theater
May 13th | 9:15 am to 9:23 am | PoFA Theater
Panelists
Nina Simons, co-founder of Bioneers and its Chief Relationship Strategist is also co-founder of Women Bridging Worlds and Connecting Women Leading Change. She co-edited the anthology book, Moonrise: The Power of Women Leading from the Heart, and most recently wrote Nature, Culture & The Sacred: A Woman Listens for Leadership.
Description of Keynote Address Coming Soon.
May 13th | 9:35 am to 9:50 am | PoFA Theater
Keynote
Introduction by Kenny Ausubel, Bioneers Founder
Sixteen years ago Jason F. McLennan launched the Living Building Challenge, the world’s most progressive and advanced green building program, to show that our buildings could serve as one of the key paths toward a regenerative future. Since then, numerous Living Buildings that demonstrate a better, more inspiring way of living and working have been built around the world. Although these projects create ripples of change and are living proof of regeneration in action, and in spite of these and other great models, we continue to build and live in ways that degrade the planet. Why? Jason McLennan explores why physical demonstrations of better solutions are not enough to create change when society has not grappled with its deeper systemic trauma. If we are to participate fully in regenerating the conditions for life on the planet, a deeper process of reconciliation is necessary. To heal the planet, Jason argues, we must fundamentally heal our culture.
May 13th | 9:50 am to 10:11 am | PoFA Theater
Introduced by
Keynote
Introduction by john a. powell, Director of the Othering and Belonging Institute
True solidarity requires stitching together what appears separate into a powerful, magnificent whole. The honed, deliberate, transformative practice of solidarity produces an exhilarating recognition of our interconnectedness and interdependence—essentials for thriving democracy. Angela Glover Blackwell, a renowned civil rights and public interest attorney, longtime leading racial equity advocate, and founder (in 1999) of the extraordinarily effective and influential national research and action institute that advances racial and economic equity by “Lifting Up What Works,” PolicyLink, discusses transformative solidarity and why it’s necessary for a thriving multiracial democracy.
May 13th | 10:15 am to 10:38 am | PoFA Theater
Introduced by
Keynote
May 13th | 10:58 am to 11:09 am | PoFA Theater
Keynote
California is the world’s largest consumer of oil from the Amazon rainforest. This extraction contributes to climate change, causes deforestation, pollutes the oceans, displaces Indigenous peoples stewarding the Amazon Forest’s last remaining biodiversity, and harms people at every end of the supply chain, including the marginalized communities living in the shadow of toxic refineries right here. We are honored to be able to offer our main stage to two leading Indigenous Amazonian forest-protectors, sisters Nina and Helena Gualinga, who work closely with our friends at Amazon Watch as they appeal to Californians (and all of us) to #EndAmazonCrude and demand corporate responsibility for people and planet.
May 13th | 11:09 am to 11:24 am | PoFA Theater
Keynote
Gen Z has come of age in a world fraught with systemic injustice, a looming climate emergency, and constant attacks on democracy itself. With a generational psyche bred online, young people are able to communicate, learn, organize, and take action in ways never seen before. Maxx Fenning, founder and President of PRISM, a nonprofit organization that works to expand access to LGBT-inclusive education and sexual health resources for young people in South Florida, discusses his experiences standing on the shoulders of a decades-long fight for LGBT rights and how to help pass on the torch to this new wave of young activists.
May 13th | 11:29 am to 10:37 am | PoFA Theater
Keynote
Introduction by Zainab Salbi, co-founder, Daughters for Earth
The world-renowned National Geographic Explorer in Residence Enric Sala launched the National Geographic Pristine Seas project in 2008 to explore and help inspire the protection of the last wild places in the ocean, an absolutely critical last-ditch effort to prevent the complete unraveling of global marine ecosystems. Made up of an extraordinary team of scientists, conservationists, filmmakers and policy experts, Pristine Seas has helped protect 6 million square kilometers of ocean habitat (more than twice the size of India!). Partnering with 122 different organizations and agencies across 23 countries, its work has inspired the establishment of some of the largest marine reserves in the world. Enric will discuss the vital importance of healthy oceans to humanity’s future and what Pristine Seas hopes to accomplish in the years ahead.
Enric Sala will be presenting his keynote address virtually to the Bioneers Conference.
May 13th | 11:32 am to 11:54 am | PoFA Theater
Introduced by
Keynote
Introduction by Kenny Ausubel, Bioneers Founder
Between the Ukrainian crisis and the resulting fossil fuel shortages and price surges in Europe, compounded by the intensification of climate change terrifyingly visible all around us, the U.S. seems stuck in an impossible conundrum: More domestically produced oil and gas is needed in the short term, but the science couldn’t be clearer that production needs to rapidly wind down in order to avoid catastrophe. Drillers claim that over time new technology will allow them to decarbonize hydrocarbons, but there’s absolutely no reason or evidence to believe them. Fossil fuel companies have long sought to confuse and mislead the public and have intensely lobbied against any meaningful climate action. They need to be stopped, but business-as-usual climate policy offers few good options. As one of the nation’s greatest investigative journalists and experts on climate politics, Kate Aronoff explores how policymakers’ toolbox will have to be expanded so that we can carry out a managed, orderly decline and ultimate end of the fossil fuel era, while giving us all a stake in our energy future.
May 13th | 11:54 am to 12:15 pm | PoFA Theater
Introduced by
Keynote
David Solnit, an “engaged artist” and longtime activist, is a master political puppeteer and print-maker widely renowned for using the arts in movements and campaigns to win positive change. In this hands-on, participatory workshop, we will work together with David and two of his assistants to screen print and hand paint art that will be used in actions by Climate Justice groups. Don’t miss this exciting opportunity to participate with one of the greatest practitioners of “direct action art” in the creation of pieces that will actually be used by activists fighting on the frontlines to protect people and the planet.
May 13th | 1:00 pm to 4:00 pm | On the Mezzanine
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 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. With Shilpa Jain, Executive Director of YES!, who has facilitated dozens of transformative leadership gatherings around the world with hundreds of young leaders from over 80 countries. Facilitated by Lauren Dalberth Hage and Dave Hage of Weaving Earth.
May 13th | 2:45 pm to 4:15 pm | Community of Mentors
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.
In this session poet/artist Alixa Garcia will use what she calls “Creativity Infused Somatic Practices” to help us start our process as we delve into the imaginal spaces within and all around us. We will seek to make a home for our intuition and invite our inner visionary to come out and play as we move through a somatic experience designed to help anchor our soul commitments throughout our three bodies: emotional, sensing, and energetic. We will then debrief as we engage in stimulating collective inquiry. Facilitated by Amy Lenzo and David Shaw.
May 13th | 2:45 pm to 4:15 pm | Conversation Café
Panelists
The revitalization of traditional Native foods is part of a “re-indigenization” renaissance happening from coast to coast. Many people are unaware that a key strategy of the American genocide against Indigenous peoples was to destroy native food sources, create dependency, and replace healthy diets with nutrient deficient commodities. In this panel, Native leaders in the Bay Area will discuss how they have been shaping this movement to revitalize Indigenous foods. In addition to improving health, Indigenous foods local to place foster community wellness and intergenerational healing by bringing people together, providing fun activities for youth, and decolonizing urban spaces. Join us to learn what you can do to be a part of this movement and how to decolonize your own diet. With: Crystal Wahpepah, Wahpepah’s Kitchen; Sara Moncada, The Cultural Conservancy. Moderated by Cara Romero.
May 13th | 2:45 pm to 4:15 pm | Indigenous Forum
Panelists
How can we, as a society, move from “othering” to belonging. What and whom does othering actually benefit? How can we expand the circle of human concern and concern for nature? How can we live into our innate interconnection to create true inclusivity and wholeness? How do we build the structures, institutions, policies, cultures and stories that will support that inclusivity? Join Angela Glover Blackwell, Founder-in Residence at PolicyLink, which works to improve access and opportunity for all low-income people and communities of color, and john a. powell, renowned law professor, activist, and founder of the Othering and Belonging Institute at UC Berkeley, for a deep one-on-one conversation about these critically important, existential questions.
Note: This remarkable dialogue will be preceded by a special private screening of “From Othering to Belonging: The Circle of Human Concern,” a cathartic episode from the new docu-series “Changing of the Gods” directed by Kenny Ausubel and Louie Schwartzberg. The episode is a transformative passage through the valley of the shadow of Othering that illuminates the complex dynamics of the human psyche, ruthless political manipulations by elites using “divide-and-conquer” strategies to maintain their wealth and power, and the rising social movements for truth, reconciliation and healing.
May 13th | 2:45 pm to 4:15 pm | PoFA Theater
Panelists
Under the new reality of covid, climate chaos, and the impact of war tearing through Eastern Europe’s breadbasket, the interdependence of global agricultural and social systems have never been so universally apparent. Despite the growing precariousness of our complex socio-economic and political systems, life and “business as usual” go on, for now, but how do business leaders who view the world differently—who straddle status quo and ethical action—bridge globalization with local conscientiousness? How do they structure their businesses to honor the places and empower the people where they do business while rising up to meet the challenges of climate change?
In this session you’ll hear from visionary business leaders who have a track record of doing just that in a wide range of domains, from regenerative agroforestry systems in Ghana to compostable packaging in the U.S. to the transformation of community economics through cooperative labor and sourcing locally while promoting healthy living. They will share their stories and strategies in their efforts to structure business as a force for good. Hosted by Erin Axelrod, Partner/Worker-Owner, LIFT Economy. With: Gero Leson, VP of Special Operations, Dr. Bronner’s; Reem Hassani, Artist, CBO and Co-founder, Numi Tea, and Numi Foundation; Nikia Durgin, Worker-Owner at Mandela Grocery Cooperative.
May 13th | 2:45 pm to 4:15 pm | Chestnut Room
Panelists
Come join a guided conversation to explore how surviving and thriving in these difficult times requires expanding our ability to be present with grief and find support in community. Since Bioneers last met in person we have all experienced grief, be it from losses in our efforts to save species and ecosystems; in our work for social and environmental justice; or in our personal lives from COVID and systemic violence – all within a mainstream culture that numbs pain, denies death and hides mourning. Through contemplative exercises, intimate sharing and guided group conversation, we will reveal the gifts of connection and healing available to all of us when we take time to honor our losses and tend to our grief in community. Facilitated by death doulas/end-of-life guides Anneke Campbell and Birgitta Kastenbaum.
May 13th | 2:45 pm to 4:15 pm | Council Circle
Panelists
The essential role of the arts in social movements is as powerful today as it’s ever been. From murals that launch national political resistance movements to anthems that power activist marches, the spark of human creativity has always supported the burning desire for justice, peace, environmental sanity and human rights. Join some extraordinary artists and change-makers for a conversation about how art and human creativity are essential in efforts to transform and rebuild today’s deeply troubled and intensely complicated world. Hosted by Sarah Crowell, Artistic Director Emerita of the legendary dance troupe Destiny Arts. With: David Solnit, activist visual artist extraordinaire; Samara Gaev, founder and Artistic Director of Truthworker Theater Company.
May 13th | 2:45 pm to 4:15 pm | Bay Room
Panelists
This will be a hands-on art-making workshop co-led by youth facilitators. We will engage in the creation of a Singing Tree Mural from start to finish during the conference. It will be the 107th Singing Tree mural for a forest of trees made by over 21,000 people from 52 countries. We will also learn about the neurobiology and eco-based approach of the “Peace Building Through Art” program as we work. Paint clothes will be provided. Hosted by Laurie Marshall, founder of Unity Through Creativity Foundation and The Singing Tree Project. Facilitated by Lili Lopez, certified Singing Tree Facilitator and Bisi Obateru, Nigerian musician and artist, with student facilitators: Jerwey Guo, co-leader, Restorative Justice Singing Tree; Serena Ornelas, co-creator, Ukrainian Singing Tree of Strength and Freedom; Amanda Panoplos, co-creator, The Lemon Cherry Singing Tree of Peace.
May 13th | 2:45 pm to 4:15 pm | Youth Unity Center
Panelists
“The People’s Food and Farm Project” is a multi-stakeholder effort growing across the San Francisco Bay Area to address gaps and injustices in the food system. What will it take to build food sovereignty across the region? What policies can be enacted to ensure all residents are nourished? What is working well that should be invested in? This community visioning process may result in a ballot initiative for a new public funding mechanism that would support a bioregional governance entity for regional food and farming. This session is for you if you are a resident of the Bay Area, if your work is related to food, or if you simply have a desire to contribute to a vision for a just and sustainable food system! Join Julian Mocine-McQueen and Kristin Rothballer, Senior Fellows with Center for Whole Communities and community engagement leads for this effort, along with other members of the broad coalition behind this effort.
May 13th | 2:45 pm to 4:15 pm | Interactive/Experiential Room
Panelists
There are compelling social and political reasons to challenge the immense power and unprecedented scale of the corporate monopolies that dominate so much of the global economy, but there is an even more urgent imperative for reining them in: If we don’t, the worst scenarios of climate disruption will be impossible to avoid. These corporate juggernauts stifle creativity and competition, exacerbate already obscene wealth inequities, radically exploit racial disparities and divides, corrupt the political system, and keep the current ecocidal status quo firmly locked in place, especially in the energy sector. In this session, May Boeve, Executive Director of 350.org, among the most dynamic international climate activist organizations on the planet, engages in a lively dialogue with Kate Aronoff, one of the nation’s most renowned climate journalists and activists, author of Overheated: How Capitalism Broke the Planet—And How We Fight Back, as they explore what we will need to do to restore our democracy and authentically address climate change and climate injustice.
May 13th | 2:45 pm to 4:15 pm | Marina Theater
Panelists
As the world continues to grapple with the reality of the changing climate and the ever-more evident destructive consequences of capitalism and colonization, it is normal to feel an increase in anxiety about what our future may hold. This is even more true for Native people. Indigenous peoples are responsible for protecting and maintaining some 80% of the world’s remaining biodiversity as part of their deep cultural and spiritual connections to many of the lands, waters, species and biomes of the planet. Colonization didn’t just bring the displacement of First Peoples; it led to intense degradation of the critical ecosystems they were intrinsically connected to. As the climate emergency exacerbates this threat, Indigenous communities find themselves experiencing a more visceral and different form of eco-anxiety. Join Eriel Tchekwie Deranger as she invites us to explore holding this reality, yet also to discover how Indigenous ways of knowing can be a salve to these powerful tensions, as they can point the way to climate solutions and help us move from anxiety to inspiration. What might it look and feel like to live in a world where Indigenous peoples were thriving? How can we work through this collective emergency and crisis together with healing in mind?
May 13th | 4:30 pm to 6:00 pm | Interactive/Experiential Room
Panelists
Our laughably inefficient buildings account for some 40% of all U. S. primary energy use and associated greenhouse gas emissions. At the same time, our built environment also very often sickens, oppresses and alienates the humans who inhabit it. In this historic session, Bioneers is thrilled to be able to bring together for the first time two of the most visionary architects of our time, who, coming on very different career paths, are both at the forefront of radically expanding our sense of what a truly healthy, nature-honoring and socially equitable built environment could look like. Deanna Van Buren the co-founder and Executive Director of Designing Justice + Designing Spaces, is a leading figure in the movement to build “restorative” infrastructure that addresses in its very design the root causes of mass incarceration—poverty, racism, unequal access to resources, and the criminal justice system itself. Jason McLennan, arguably the most influential “green” architect of our era, has set a high bar, showing us what truly “living,” genuinely regenerative buildings can be. Can these two very different but equally imperative re-visionings of how we rethink the built environment be reconciled/synthesized? This conversation will be moderated/hosted by Dawn Danby, co-founder of Spherical.
May 13th | 4:30 pm to 6:00 pm | PoFA Theater
Panelists
The hierarchical, dominator, winner-take-all forms of leadership that brought us colonialism, patriarchy, white supremacy and capitalism have led us to the brink of global ecological, economic and social collapse. No surprise, then, that research shows significant improvements in most social and ecological systems and in addressing the climate crisis when the status, education, reproductive rights and leadership of women increase. Come hear from a remarkable group of women approaching leadership from diverse backgrounds and angles, as they share what they see as emergent directions in movement-building, healing and transformative change. With: Osprey Orielle Lake, founder/Executive Director, Women’s Earth and Climate Action Network (WECAN); Shilpa Jain, Executive Director, YESworld; Leila Salazar-Lopez, Executive Director, Amazon Watch; Nina Simons, co-founder, Bioneers.
May 13th | 4:30 pm to 6:00 pm | Bay Room
Panelists
Gail Pelletier, a member of the Treaty 6 Pukatawagan Cree Nation and a Cross Lake and Guy Hill Indian Residential School survivor, along with her son, Bioneers board member, author, director and campaigner, Clayton Thomas-Müller; and her grandson, thirteen year-old Jaxson Thomas-Müller, will share how they are practicing mindfulness and intention while their family is moving through and healing from the trauma of 150 years of Canada’s genocidal residential school policy. Join them to learn how working toward truth and reconciliation and healing from the violence of colonization and the intergenerational impacts of Indian Residential School Syndrome is a multigenerational endeavor.
May 13th | 4:30 pm to 6:00 pm | Marina Theater
Panelists
San Francisco is arguably America’s most progressive city, at the cutting edge of intersectional culture change for social and environmental good. City leaders, officials and local NGOs have made land acknowledgments, removed racist murals, established an American Indian Cultural District, and, hand-in-hand with Native leaders, formed partnerships to restore public lands. In this session, some leading figures in the Bay Area Native community will lead a frank discussion about how to revitalize cities through these kinds of “re-indigenization” efforts. Join us to learn about the unique issues that San Francisco’s urban Indian communities face through stories about successes and mistakes that have been made on the road to reconciliation. With: Jonathan Cordero, Association of Ramaytush Ohlone; Quirina Geary, Chairwoman of Tamien Nation; Sharaya Souza, San Francisco American Indian Cultural District. Moderated by Alexis Bunten.
May 13th | 4:30 pm to 6:00 pm | Indigenous Forum
Panelists
4:30 pm: Prayer, Witnessing & Action: Healing Ourselves, Our Relations and the Earth
Bioneers’ Council Sessions
Join with fellow Bioneers in Council, to explore how we can respond to these troubled times with prayer and action, as we engage in healing ourselves and our relations with others and with the Earth. The heart of Council practices—listening, learning, living and thinking like a circle—are needed more than ever in our families, our nation and around the world. These circles are spaces where people can gather for deep listening, witnessing, and the nurturing of collective wisdom. Each circle will provide an opportunity to sit with others and share feelings and perspectives that have emerged in this period of change and challenge. Our intention is that we speak and listen from the heart, one at a time. Bearing witness is essential in this practice and many may choose not to speak, instead offering their presence as participation. We will provide a safe space for being present, confidentially, as we explore our commitments to weave the fabric of the future. The Council sessions will be co-hosted by experienced circle holders Ladybird Morgan, The Humane Prison Hospice Project; and Will Scott, Weaving Earth.
May 13th | 4:30 pm to 6:00 pm | Council Circle
Panelists
4:30 pm: Regenerative Agriculture 2.0: The Pie Ranch Model
Renewing Ecosystems, Rebuilding Communities, and Healing Historical Harms
In this session we will hear about the inspiring model of Pie Ranch, an exemplary socially and eco-conscious enterprise that incorporates: cutting-edge land management; working with disenfranchised urban youth; recruiting BIPOC farmers (historically most often left out of equity-building in agriculture); becoming a distribution hub for local farmers to feed farmworker and other food insecure communities during the pandemic; and building reciprocal relationships with the Amah Mutsun tribe, drawing on its long-lived land stewardship and regeneration prowess to repair some of the ranch’s ecosystems damaged by recent fires. With: Jered Lawson, co-founder, Pie Ranch; Valentin Lopez, Chairman of the Amah Mutsun Tribal Band; Nancy Vail, co-founder, Pie Ranch; Leonard Diggs, Pie Ranch Director of Operations and Farming Education. Moderated by Arty Mangan, Bioneers’ Restorative Food Systems Director.
May 13th | 4:30 pm to 6:00 pm | Chestnut Room
Panelists
Come join Samara Gaev and members of the Truthworker Theatre Company in a dynamic, interactive workshop that will call upon modalities of theater, writing, storytelling and collaboration to unpack pressing issues in our communities, including: trauma, healing, power, privilege, inequity and social justice. Drawing from Augusto Boal’s renowned “Theatre of the Oppressed” pedagogy, the workshop will offer community members, educators, activists, and organizers tools for leveraging stories that so often go untold, as well as tools for engaging their constituencies. Sourcing the collective wisdom in the room, we will creatively cultivate a brave space for radical self reflection, testimony, systems analysis, community building, and the articulation of our visions for change. Truthworker Theatre Company will also be catalyzing this workshop with an original performance excerpted from their provocative trilogy, which depicts the prison industrial complex through the lens of a dozen youth directly impacted by mass incarceration.
May 13th | 4:30 pm to 6:00 pm | Youth Unity Center
Panelists
Bioneers co-founder Kenny Ausubel will host 2 separate, special Bioneers-only screenings of several episodes of his newly premiered 10-episode series, Changing of the Gods. This truly unique film looks at epic cycles of social upheaval over the centuries and explores surprising, seemingly synchronistic correlations between periods of intense rebellion and radical social transformation in human history and certain planetary alignments. The film raises profound, fundamental questions: Do we live in a conscious cosmos? Which revolutionary impulses are being triggered at the moment and what is their impact going to be? And where do we currently stand in the grand sweep of these historical cycles? Kenny and guests will be on hand to introduce the episodes and to answer questions.
May 13th | 6:30 pm to 9:00 pm | Marina Theater
Panelists
9:00 pm: Calling All Willing Agents of Citizen Trickster
A Special Friday the 13th Event with Caroline Casey and Amikaeyla Gaston
Tonight the inimitable “visionary activist astrologer” and “astro-mythological meta-narrator” Caroline Casey, host of the beloved 26-year running Visionary Activist radio show on Pacifica, teams up with her longtime collaborative ally, the brilliant vocalist/musician Amikaeyla Gaston, founder of the International Cultural Arts & Healing Sciences Institute, to coax us into declaring the war on life over and fully inhabiting our animistic science wizard/pragmatic mystic selves in order to dramatically expand our repertoire of skills and responses and align ourselves with Nature’s evolutionary trickster genius to outwit the fossil fools and usher in an age of abundant life and light. Venus will magnetize, Mars will animate, we’ll offer our songs to the Orishas of water and wisdom, and we will spiral together into the memosphere.
May 13th | 9:00 pm to 10:30 pm | Indigenous Forum
Panelists
As the Arctic polar ice cap melts, reaching the North Pole has become increasingly dangerous, but an expedition of women from the Arab World and Europe, led by explorer Felicity Aston, strapped on their skis and pulled their sledges true North, determined to succeed against all odds. Filmmaker Holly Morris and an all-women crew documented this daring, unprecedented group as they navigated everything from frostbite and polar bears to sexism and self-doubt. An extraordinary story of resilience, survival and global citizenry—in what may have been the last-ever over-ice expedition to the top of the world.
May 13th | 9:00 pm to 10:00 pm | Marina Theater
Saturday, May 14th all times PDT
May 14th | 8:30 am to 1:00 pm | PoFA Theater
Kenny Ausubel, CEO and founder (in 1990) of Bioneers, is an award-winning social entrepreneur, journalist, author and filmmaker. Co-founder and first CEO of the organic seed company, Seeds of Change, his film (and companion book) Hoxsey: When Healing Becomes a Crime helped influence national alternative medicine policy.
Title and Description of Keynote Address Coming Soon.
May 14th | 9:22 am to 9:38 am | PoFA Theater
Keynote
Introduction by Kenny Ausubel, Bioneers Founder
There has long been an intense debate about differences between men and women: Are these differences due predominantly to biology or to culture? Do we find similar differences among our fellow primates? Do apes learn sex roles, too, or is “gender” uniquely human? World-renowned primatologist Frans de Waal is one of the few scientists thoroughly familiar with both of our closest ape relatives: chimpanzees, predominantly male-dominated and prone to violence; and bonobos, female-dominated and far more peaceful. He argues that a distinction between “gender” (cultural) and “sex” (biological) can be very useful in helping us explore the interplay between nature and nurture in human life. He will draw from his groundbreaking new book, DIFFERENT, to offer new insights about the long-running debates about sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, and the limitations of a strict binary.
May 14th | 9:37 am to 10:11 am | PoFA Theater
Introduced by
Keynote
Introduction by Nina Simons, Bioneers co-founder and Chief Relationship Strategist
As climate change and the destruction of Earth’s lands, waters and wildlife accelerate, women around the world are the most impacted, but they are also very often the frontline warriors fighting to protect our future.Unfortunately, their work and leadership are often not seen, appreciated, or funded. In order to address that marginalization, female leaders in the women’s rights, environmental and philanthropic sectors came together to found Daughters for Earth (under the auspices of the visionary philanthropic organization, One Earth). A co-founder and leader of this new initiative is Zainab Salbi, a widely celebrated humanitarian, author, thought leader and journalist. When she was 23, she began her trajectory by founding Women for Women International, a groundbreaking organization that helped hundreds of thousands of women survivors of conflicts. Now she has gone on to an illustrious career in media and activism, including Daughters for Earth. Zainab will explore the interconnection between our personal search for healing and how we face the challenges of climate change.
May 14th | 10:11 am to 10:32 am | PoFA Theater
Introduced by
Keynote
How is our queerness, our gender blessing, and/or our identity a portal to ancient truths and liberated futures? Who are we and who are we becoming? Where do our identities intersect with movements for justice and flourishing? Come gather together in a ritual space for speaking our experiences and beholding one another in a space dedicated for LGBTQ2SIA+ folx. Hosted by Solace Pesach and Angus Baguinho of the Weaving Earth Center for Relational Education.
May 14th | 10:30 am to 11:30 am | Youth Unity Center
Panelists
Introduction by J.P. Harpignies, Bioneers Senior Producer
What if cities were designed so that they could absorb excess rainfall, neutralize floods, and turn their streets green and beautiful in the process? Kongjian Yu is doing just that, as he will report from China. This award-winning leader in ecological urbanism and landscape architecture, and founder of the planning and design firm, Turenscape in Beijing, has become world-renowned for his “sponge cities” and other revolutionary nature-based solutions. These approaches are being implemented in well over 200 cities in China and beyond. Yu’s extraordinary city-wide systems of stormwater-retaining ponds, wetlands, and parks draw from both ancient Chinese hydrological wisdom and cutting-edge design to offer the whole world a model of inspired climate adaptation in an era of rising seas and extreme rainfall events.
Kongjian Yu will be presenting his keynote address virtually to the Bioneers Conference.
May 14th | 10:33 am to 10:54 am | PoFA Theater
Introduced by
Keynote
May 14th | 11:15 am to 11:25 am | PoFA Theater
Keynote
Introduction by Eriel Tchekwie Deranger, co-founder and Executive Director of Indigenous Climate Action
Cree legends talk about the nefarious winter spirit Witigo’ and how it can possess you to such an extent that you become an all-consuming cannibal stricken with insatiable greed and hunger. 350.org‘s Cree Campaigner and best-selling author of Life in the City of Dirty Water: A Memoir of Healing, Clayton Thomas-Müller, will discuss how this sort of possession offers us an excellent metaphor for the mindset that has brought us the ravages of ruthless extractive capitalism and the oppression of First Peoples and other historically disenfranchised groups; and he will propose some answers to the question: What is it going to take for us to move through and heal from the violence of colonization?
May 14th | 11:55 am to 12:16 pm | PoFA Theater
Introduced by
Keynote
David Solnit, an “engaged artist” and longtime activist, is a master political puppeteer and print-maker widely renowned for using the arts in movements and campaigns to win positive change. In this hands-on, participatory workshop, we will work together with David and two of his assistants to screen print and hand paint art that will be used in actions by Climate Justice groups. Don’t miss this exciting opportunity to participate with one of the greatest practitioners of “direct action art” in the creation of pieces that will actually be used by activists fighting on the frontlines to protect people and the planet.
May 14th | 12:30 pm to 4:00 pm | On the Mezzanine
Panelists
1:30 pm: Truthworker Theatre Company Presents: RE:FRAMED / FOR:GIVEN / RE:MEMBERED
A Special Lunchtime Performance
Truthworker Theatre Company, directed by Samara Gaev, uses rhyme, hip-hop theater, dance, multimedia, cutting edge technology, and personal testimony to raise awareness and inspire deeper critical engagement. In this special performance for Bioneers, the company will perform excerpts from its provocative trilogy that depicts the prison industrial complex through the lens of a dozen youth directly impacted by mass incarceration, viscerally engaging with such themes as the school-to-prison pipeline, youth criminalization, the impacts of solitary confinement, and the challenges of re-entry into society. Truthworker’s deeply personal performances center redemption, forgiveness, and responsibility to humanize those most negatively impacted by systemically unjust and racist policies.
May 14th | 1:30 pm to 2:00 pm | Marina Theater
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 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. With Alixa García, an award-winning poet, climate organizer and filmmaker, as well as a visual artist, musician, science-fiction writer and essayist. Facilitated by Lauren Dalberth Hage and Dave Hage of Weaving Earth.
May 14th | 2:45 pm to 4:15 pm | Community of Mentors
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.
In order to meet the temperature limit of the Paris Agreement there need to be broad changes to multiple sectors of society. In this session, conversation starter Ashoka Finley will start us off by sharing an overview of where and how these interventions might need to be implemented and what that would require, and in our subsequent conversation we’ll explore how we might collectively build a roadmap of necessary action. Bioneers offers us a unique setting in which to convene a diverse set of changemakers to create more possibilities and build towards collective action. Facilitated by Amy Lenzo and FireHawk Hulin.
May 14th | 2:45 pm to 4:15 pm | Conversation Café
Panelists
Join us in an interactive experience, anchored by ritual elements, to re-imagine how we can support ourselves and each other in facing the overwhelming losses—personal, ecological, political—of these times. Through connecting with our senses and our creativity, we will tap into our strengths and vulnerabilities and together create an altar display and ritual to honor our individual and collective grief. Please bring a photo or responsibly foraged gift from nature to place on the altar, and we will have paper for those who want to write or draw an offering. Facilitated by death doulas/end-of-life guides Anneke Campbell and Birgitta Kastenbaum.
May 14th | 2:45 pm to 4:15 pm | Council Circle
Panelists
Although there have been breakthrough successes in some of our social and environmental struggles, others seem stubbornly resistant to change. Recent wins have occurred in labor organizing, Native nations reclaiming lands, independent journalism and in some progressive politics. Yet the defense of land, water and cultures against extractive industries and resistance to the onslaughts of the far-right and to erosions of racial and gender equity are not going nearly as well. In this session, three seasoned movement leaders discuss what it will take to lift up what’s working and strategize how we can collectively work to transform what isn’t. With: Taj James, founder at the Movement Strategy Center and Principal at Full Spectrum Capital Partners; Enei Begaye, Executive Direct of Native Movement; and Joshua Kahn Russell, Executive Director of The Wildfire Project.
May 14th | 2:45 pm to 4:15 pm | Bay Room
Panelists
In this 90-minute experiential session, Kerry Brady, founder of Ecology of Awakening, and Joshua Sylvae, PhD, Somatic Experiencing® teacher and founder of (r)evolve, will introduce you to practices that draw on the self-organizing nature of the mammalian nervous system to support us in being clear and effective agents of change. By collaborating with the regenerative wisdom of our biology, we awaken our innate resilience and build our capacity to stay present and available—to ourselves, each other, and the whole. The presenters will offer an initial theoretical framework, and then invite an embodied exploration of skills and capacities to encourage our most creative selves to arise on behalf of our world and all its inhabitants.
May 14th | 2:45 pm to 4:15 pm | Interactive/Experiential Room
Panelists
Around the world increasingly authoritarian regimes of various stripes have seemed to have the wind in their sails this past decade, from Xi in China to Putin’s neo-czarist megalomania to Saudi and Iranian petro-theocracies to Erdogan to Sisi to Orban to Bolsonaro to Maduro, etc., etc. And the Trumpian years culminating in the January 6th 2021 insurrection suddenly awakened many of us to the fact that the previously unimaginable prospect of some sort of autocracy here at home was no longer out of the question. How realistic are those fears? Can the history of right-wing movements at home and internationally teach us about how best to avoid the worst-case scenarios, or are there new elements in the current political situation that history can’t help us illuminate? In this session, Bioneers Senior Producer J.P. Harpignies will interview Lawrence Rosenthal, one of the nation’s leading experts on the far right, founder/Chair and Lead Researcher of the groundbreaking Berkeley Center for Right-Wing Studies, to explore in depth these critically important questions.
May 14th | 2:45 pm to 4:15 pm | Chestnut Room
Panelists
A “Just Transition” to a post-fossil fuel economy will require solutions led by Indigenous Peoples hand-in-hand with communities that have been historically cut off from a sacred relationship to the planet. To be “just,” this transition will have to equally address environmental and social issues. Instead of expanding such ill-conceived initiatives as “carbon-trading markets,” a Native-led transition must reject the commodification of nature. In this panel, Kandi and Loren White will share Indigenous approaches to the Just Transition movement. They will discuss how this movement will demand all of us assume a greater responsibility to place, honor the power of leadership rooted in tribal sovereignty and forward Indigenous values to ensure that future generations inherit a planet capable of sustaining regenerative ecosystems. With: Kandi White and Loren White of the Indigenous Environmental Network; and Jayce Chiblow and Jacob Crane with Indigenous Climate Action. Moderated by Cara Romero.
May 14th | 2:45 pm to 4:15 pm | Indigenous Forum
Panelists
The mechanistic view of animals of the last few centuries is on its way out as claims about human uniqueness in the cognitive domain have fallen one by one. From tool-using crows to cooperating fish, many unexpected new capacities across the animal kingdom have come to light. There is now overwhelming evidence that many animals monitor their own knowledge (“metacognition”) and can reflect on both past and future. It is increasingly clear that our old one-dimensional model of a scale of cognitive capacities that goes from “lower” to “higher” life forms doesn’t fit the data. The world-renowned primatologist/ethologist Frans de Waal will draw from his deep experience studying cooperation and empathy among primates to explore with us the concept of “convergent evolution” and the new science of Evolutionary Cognition. He will offer us a radically expanded vision of how intelligence evolves and is distributed among our planet’s creatures.
May 14th | 2:45 pm to 4:15 pm | Marina Theater
Panelists
The “Rights of Nature” movement seeks to protect rivers, mountains, and entire ecosystems and the life forms supported within them by recognizing and enshrining their rights in formal legal codes and constitutions. This legal framework offers a radically different worldview from current legal premises. Instead of being seen as property, nature as a whole and its various components would be formally recognized to have inherent rights to exist, persist, flourish and evolve, and these would be protected under the law. For over 15 years, the Rights of Nature movement has caught fire across the U.S. and the rest of the world in some of the most and least expected places, from tribal lands to “progressive” cities, to coal country, to Latin American nations. In this session some of the leading activist attorneys leading the movement in Indian Country and beyond will update us on their successes and the challenges ahead. With: Frank Bibeau; Thomas Linzey; Samantha Skenandore. Moderated by Alexis Bunten.
May 14th | 2:45 pm to 4:15 pm | PoFA Theater
Panelists
As we strive to build a better future, we have to acknowledge and appreciate the efforts our ancestors contributed in the past. In this workshop, we will be challenged to think of ways we might want to draw from some of those past efforts as we seek to rebuild our future. To build a sustainable future, we need to dismantle the foundational systems of oppression and replace them with ones rooted in equity and sustainability, but to do that we have to recognize past struggles toward those goals and learn from both their achievements and shortcomings. In this session we’ll discuss this idea and engage in creative writing and in imagining a world we want to live in and what it will take to get there. Facilitated by young poet Aniya Butler, Lead Circle Member, Youth vs Apocalypse.
May 14th | 2:45 pm to 4:15 pm | Youth Unity Center
Panelists
Indigenous peoples in the north have been feeling the disastrous effects of climate change far longer than the rest of the planet’s population. According to NASA record sets, the Arctic is warming up to four times faster than the rest of the planet, disturbing terrestrial and marine ecosystems, destroying villages, and disrupting healthy ways of life. Some of the most innovative solutions to the climate crisis born of the practicality and ingenuity rooted in Native knowledge systems are emerging from the circumpolar north. In this panel, leaders at the Native Conservancy, Indigenous Climate Action, and Native Movement will share their strategies for addressing climate change in the policy, civil society and economic sectors. With: Dune Lankard (Eyak), Native Conservancy; Eriel Deranger (Athabaska Chippeweyan First Nation), Indigenous Climate Action; Ruth Miller (Dena’ina Athabaskan/Russian Ashkenazi Jewish), Native Movement. Moderated by Alexis Bunten.
May 14th | 4:30 pm to 6:00 pm | Indigenous Forum
Panelists
4:30 pm: Basins of Beaver Relations
Co-sponsored with the Occidental Arts and Ecology Center
A vital part of aquatic ecosystems across the continent, the North American beaver came close to extinction in California by the early 1900s, but thanks to the good work of wide range of advocates, this ecosystem engineer is being encouraged to make a comeback. Urban and rural communities are learning to partner with beavers to revive watershed health, recover endangered species and increase resiliency to drought, wildfire and floods. In this session, two visionary watershed and beaver restoration specialists from the Occidental Arts and Ecology Center’s WATER Institute, Kate Lundquist and Brock Dolman, will share enlightening and entertaining stories about this “keystone” species’ remarkable biology, its benefits to other watershed residents and how it is transitioning from most reviled rodent to climate change hero.
May 14th | 4:30 pm to 6:00 pm | Chestnut Room
Panelists
Women all over the globe, especially in the “developing world,” are the ones who most often bear the brunt of having to contend with the radical disruptions visited upon their families and communities by climate change and environmental degradation, yet women’s voices are far too often ignored. Furthermore, climate change and physical and psycho-spiritual health are almost always discussed as separate issues, but the personal and the political, the heart and the mind are not just interconnected, they are all one. In this session, a panel of leading women activists will explore the impact of climate change on women and how to assure their full inclusion in all climate solutions, how these struggles relate to the personal search for healing, and what it will take to create authentic global change. With: Zainab Salbi, co-founder, Daughters for Earth; Nina Simons, co-founder, Bioneers; Justin Winters, co-founder and Executive Director, One Earth; Kahea Pacheco, Co-Director, Women’s Earth Alliance (WEA); Helena Gualinga, co-founder of Polluters Out.
May 14th | 4:30 pm to 6:00 pm | PoFA Theater
Panelists
Youth take center stage, grab the mic and share their talents to express their traumas and triumphs at this open forum hosted by R&B, hip hop artist and community organizer, Jada Imani.
May 14th | 4:30 pm to 6:00 pm | Youth Unity Center
Panelists
4:30 pm: Prayer, Witnessing & Action: Healing Ourselves, Our Relations and the Earth
Bioneers’ Council Sessions
Join with fellow Bioneers in Council, to explore how we can respond to these troubled times with prayer and action, as we engage in healing ourselves and our relations with others and with the Earth. The heart of Council practices—listening, learning, living and thinking like a circle—are needed more than ever in our families, our nation and around the world. These circles are spaces where people can gather for deep listening, witnessing, and the nurturing of collective wisdom. Each circle will provide an opportunity to sit with others and share feelings and perspectives that have emerged in this period of change and challenge. Our intention is that we speak and listen from the heart, one at a time. Bearing witness is essential in this practice and many may choose not to speak, instead offering their presence as participation. We will provide a safe space for being present, confidentially, as we explore our commitments to weave the fabric of the future. The Council sessions will be co-hosted by experienced circle holders Ladybird Morgan, The Humane Prison Hospice Project; and Will Scott, Weaving Earth.
May 14th | 4:30 pm to 6:00 pm | Council Circle
Panelists
Filmmaking has been radically transformed in the digital age. Film equipment is lighter and cheaper, and documentary filmmakers can capture footage of significant events as they occur and can reach audiences directly via online platforms. Yet there are still many impediments to making and distributing topical films that challenge the status quo, and the glut of information and media can make reaching large numbers of viewers challenging. In this session, several prominent filmmaker-activists discuss their strategies for making movies that matter and positioning them so they can contribute to real change on the ground. With: Clayton Thomas Mueller (In the City of Dirty Water), Mark Kitchell (Berkeley in the ‘60s; Evolution of Organic, Fierce Green Fire), and Alex Binder of the media collective Unicorn Riot. Hosted by Bioneers co-founder and filmmaker Kenny Ausubel (Changing of the Gods).
May 14th | 4:30 pm to 6:00 pm | Bay Room
Panelists
Decarbonizing energy use is critical to addressing climate catastrophe and ensuring a livable future for all life on Earth. Although we have the technologies and know-how to create an equitable clean energy economy, what will it take to address the practical, real-world operational and implementation challenges needed to make it happen? For those working to accelerate the just transition to clean energy, or who want to be inspired by what’s actually already possible including a shift to renewable public power systems, this panel of entrepreneurs and innovators explores the on-the-ground opportunities to overcome the powerful, entrenched structural barriers to a clean energy future. From overcoming dominant market players, to overhauling systems, to increasing community capacities for clean energy and economic self-determination, the next wave of energy innovation is underway and is close to home! With: Denise Rushing, Managing Director-California for New Energy Nexus; Mariel Nanasi, Executive Director and President of New Energy Economy; Brandi Mack, the Board Chair for People Power Solar Cooperative.
May 14th | 4:30 pm to 6:00 pm | Marina Theater
Panelists
While many of us are awake and seeking to respond to our dire ecological and social crises, a large portion of our population is still focused on self-centered needs, enmeshed in a false reality, numb to the existential challenges confronting our world. This societal narcissism which we’re swimming in is perilous to us, to our communities, and to the Earth. In this experiential session, we will examine the patterns of this collective narcissism, their relation to our stories, and how we may be able to transform them for the wellness of all sentient beings. Participants should be prepared to engage in meditation, movement, and interactive dialogue, as well as to work with the surfacing of heavy emotions. Facilitated by Jeanine Canty, Professor of Transformative Studies, California Institute of Integral Studies.
May 14th | 4:30 pm to 6:00 pm | Interactive/Experiential Room
Panelists
This will be an evening of art, music, and conversation for the LGBTQ2SIA+ community. With celebration and conviviality, we will celebrate the ongoing legacies of brilliance and resilience of queer liberation and intersecting struggles for justice. Come gather to nourish our connections and imagine new possibilities. This is a space dedicated for LGBTQ2SIA+ folx, but allies are welcome. Hosted by Solace Pesach of the Weaving Earth Center for Relational Education.
May 14th | 6:00 pm to 7:30 pm | Conversation Café
Panelists
Unicorn Riot is a decentralized non-profit media organization of journalists that seeks to engage and amplify stories of social and environmental struggles from the ground up. We present two examples of their work: Beyond the Barricades: A Look at George Floyd Square (10minutes), an on-site reportage of the intense community engagement that occurred on the four-block area in South Minneapolis on and around the site of George Floyd’s murder; and Seizing the Means of Production: A Spotlight on Vio.Me(12minutes), an inside look at an environmentally-friendly cleaning products factory in Greece that the workers seized when it went bankrupt and have successfully operated for six years. There will be a short introduction by Niko Georgiades from Unicorn Riot and a little bit of time for Q+A after the screenings.
May 14th | 6:30 pm to 7:00 pm | Marina Theater
Panelists
Come hang out with your fellow Bioneers, share a meal and connect with each other after a day full of amazing programming! We’ve gathered an incredible community here this weekend, come meet up and connect. There will be a cash bar, and food will be available for purchase.
May 14th | 6:30 pm to 8:30 pm | On the Mezzanine
Renowned, award-winning veteran documentary filmmaker Mark Kitchell, who specializes in social histories of social change movements, including such beloved classics as: Berkeley in the Sixties, A Fierce Green Fire, and Evolution of Organic, will introduce the 4-minute trailer and a 12-minute excerpt of his brand new film, The Emerald Triangle, the first social history of cannabis. There will be a short Q+A session following the screening.
May 14th | 7:05 pm to 7:35 pm | Marina Theater
Panelists
In this inspiring, award-winning film narrated by actress Rosario Dawson, filmmakers Rob Herring and Ryan Wirick introduce us to some remarkable activists and innovators in the restorative/regenerative food movement and explore such issues as the dynamic growth of local food economies, agro-ecological approaches to working with nature rather than trying to subdue it, and the need for all of us to come together to help regenerate our planet’s dying soils and participate in the restoration of the Earth.
May 14th | 7:35 pm to 9:25 pm | Marina Theater
(This is a special conference cut of this documentary film prepared exclusively for Bioneers 2022 registrants. The feature length version will premiere at festivals and be broadcast on PBS nationwide in 2023.)
GIVE LIGHT showcases the voices of Indigenous midwives from five continents as they relate their life stories and discuss the joys and challenges of their profession, interwoven with testimony from medical anthropologists, historians and Western midwives and doulas. The film looks at the state of childbirth around the world and explores the fundamental question: Are Indigenous midwifery traditions dying out due to the persuasions of modern medical treatments or could a revival of midwifery actually offer far better birth outcomes and far more meaningful rites of passage in many parts of the world? Director Steph Smith will be with us for a short introduction and a Q&A following the film.
BIONEERS VIEWERS: Sign up on our website GIVELIGHT.info for upcoming film festival premieres. Consider partnering with us for a conference or community virtual screening. We would love to hear from you: empowermidwives@gmail.com.
May 14th | 9:25 pm to 10:00 pm | Marina Theater
Panelists
Sunday, May 15th all times PDT
May 15th | 8:40 am to 1:00 pm | PoFA Theater
May 15th | 9:00 am to 9:13 am | PoFA Theater
Introduction by Arty Mangan, Restorative Food Systems Program Director, Bioneers.
Many of us have reached a point in our work at which we realize the food system is not working. Leaders keep on relying on band-aid solutions, autocratic jargon and political hypocrisy to tackle the problems of hunger and poverty. Yet our society’s way of feeding and treating people just isn’t sustainable, especially when the United Nations predicts that by 2050 we will have an additional 2 billion people on this planet, most ending up in urban areas. The simple truth is that we can’t talk about a fair, just, and equitable food system without radical new thinking and putting in a lot work. What sort of work needs to be done and who will be the people to do it? Karen Washington, one of the most renowned and influential food activists of our era shares her wisdom and her analysis of why the food system doesn’t need to be fixed but has to be dramatically transformed.
May 15th | 9:33 am to 10:54 am | PoFA Theater
Introduced by
Keynote
Introduction by Alexis Bunten, Co-Director of Bioneers’ Indigeneity Program
Nick Estes, Ph.D. (Kul Wicasa/Lower Brule Sioux), is Assistant Professor of American Studies at the University of New Mexico and a member of the Oak Lake Writers Society, a group of Dakota, Nakota and Lakota writers. In 2014, he was a co-founder of The Red Nation in Albuquerque, NM, an organization dedicated to the liberation of Native people from capitalism and colonialism. He serves on its editorial collective and writes its bi-weekly newsletter. Nick Estes is also the author of: Our History Is the Future: Standing Rock Versus the Dakota Access Pipeline, and the Long Tradition of Indigenous Resistance.
May 15th | 9:54 am to 10:16 am
Introduced by
Keynote
Introduction by Nina Simons, Bioneers co-founder and Chief Relationship Strategist
Samuel Myers, a leading figure in the study of the impacts on human health of the accelerating disruptions to Earth’s natural systems, will share the guiding principles and implications of this newly emergent, rapidly growing field, recently dubbed “Planetary Health.” Every dimension of human health and wellbeing is under threat from our ongoing degradation of Earth’s life-support systems. Planetary Health research is providing rigorous evidence that urgently stabilizing our planet’s natural systems is essential if we are going to have any chance of safeguarding a livable future for humanity. Dr. Myers will explain the goals and work of the broad global coalitions around The Planetary Health Alliance (of which he is the founding director) coming together to drive home the inextricable links between human and environmental health and to develop policies and actions to protect our biosphere.
May 15th | 10:30 am to 10:51 am | PoFA Theater
Introduced by
Keynote
What is the role of youth of color in environmental and social movements? The Youth of Color Caucus is a safe space and open forum where youth of color have an opportunity to sit, 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. Facilitated by Brandi Mack along with youth leaders Alondra Aragon and Minkah Smith.
May 15th | 11:00 am to 1:00 pm | Youth Unity Center
Panelists
May 15th | 11:03 am to 11:13 am | PoFA Theater
Keynote
Building power and achieving success in the global youth climate movement require international solidarity, communication, and organizing. Relationships with allied groups and organizations are key to making change. An international youth organizer since the age of 13, Alexandria Villaseñor shares the unique ways in which a multicultural, geographically distributed youth movement is building trust, negotiating compromises, distributing decision-making and centering the stories, experiences and leadership of those most impacted in each action and campaign. From grassroots movements to national organizations, Alexandria will show us how youth intend to win the climate fight by working together.
May 15th | 11:05 am to 11:15 am | PoFA Theater
Keynote
Kevin J. Patel is a social entrepreneur from Los Angeles, CA. He founded OneUpAction International, an organization that supports and empowers youth to implement climate solutions. Kevin has created the first-of-its-kind Youth Climate Commission in LA County to amplify youth voices on the climate crisis. Kevin is a UN Togetherband Ambassador for Goal 7, 13, & 14. He is a National Geographic Young Explorer. He also serves on the Youthtopia_World : Circle of Youth Council, the Ikea Ingka Young Leaders Forum, ClimatePower Creative Advisory Board and the Environmental Media Association’s Activist Board. Kevin is currently pursuing his undergraduate degree in Political Science at Loyola Marymount University.
May 15th | 11:16 am to 11:26 am
Keynote
May 15th | 11:58 am to 12:10 pm | PoFA Theater
Keynote
2:45 pm: Black Food: Celebration and Struggle
A Bi-Coastal Conversation
Chef/author extraordinaire Bryant Terry joins renowned, pioneering New York urban farmer Karen Washington in a conversation about the influence of Black culture on American culinary traditions and farming and what we need to do to radically transform our food system so that it can bring health and equity rather than disease and deprivation to communities of color. This is a historic occasion: Two of the leading lights of the movement to bring healthful food to disenfranchised urban communities and revitalize Black culinary traditions come together from opposite coasts on a stage for the first time. Bryant, in the Black vegan vanguard for many years, Chef-in-residence at MOAD (Museum of the African Diaspora) in San Francisco, and Karen Washington, the revered and highly influential godmother of urban farming, will discuss their work, the current situation of our food system, and their strategies to build a movement that will take us where we need to go.
May 15th | 2:45 pm to 4:15 pm | Chestnut Room
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 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. With Samara Gaev, founder and Artistic Director of Truthworker Theatre Company, activist, educator, theater director and performer with 16 years’ experience using performance for cross-cultural healing and social change. Facilitated by Lauren Dalberth Hage and Dave Hage of Weaving Earth.
May 15th | 2:45 pm to 4:15 pm | Community of Mentors
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.
There is a very real chance that we might not make our climate targets in the near term, resulting in unprecedented changes to life on this planet. In this session, conversation starter Ashoka Finley will explore how we might build additional resilience in the infrastructure and systems we rely on for our survival to face this reality. In our subsequent conversation we’ll seek to collectively build a roadmap of necessary action in the face of missed climate milestones. Bioneers offers us a unique setting in which to convene a diverse set of changemakers to create more possibilities and build towards collective action. Facilitated by Amy Lenzo and FireHawk Hulin.
May 15th | 2:45 pm to 4:15 pm | Conversation Café
Panelists
2:45 pm: Healing the Divide: from MeToo to WeTogether
Discovering new pathways of healing, harmony and connection across the genders
This interactive session introduces the Gender Equity and Reconciliation International (GERI) program and provides an experiential taste of its methodology. Developed over 30 years across six continents, GERI applies principles derived from South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation process to gender and sexual injustice to build trust and compassionate communication through interactive activities and group processes. Together, women, men, and people of all genders and sexual orientations can jointly confront sensitive and often taboo issues— without shame or 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 establishing “beloved community.” With: GERI co-founders Cynthia Brix and Will Keepin and GERI facilitators Silvia Araya-Fischer, Garrett Evans and Hugo Sanchez.
May 15th | 2:45 pm to 4:15 pm | Bay Room
Panelists
Indigenous Peoples already do “green jobs,” integrate cultural values into business activities, and protect 80% of the world’s remaining biodiversity. In order to transform our economies through Indigenous-led solutions, we need to uplift movements and stories inspired by Indigenous resistance. To do this, we must change the culture of philanthropy and “impact investing,” which still largely circulates in privileged circles. In this panel, Sikowis (Plains Cree/Saulteaux), Nick Estes (Lower Brule Sioux Tribe), and Alexis Bunten (Unangan/Yupik) will discuss colonial-capitalism and how Indigenous-led strategies can offer us a pathway towards an equitable and regenerative future.
May 15th | 2:45 pm to 4:15 pm | PoFA Theater
Panelists
2:45 pm: Prayer, Witnessing & Action: Healing Ourselves, Our Relations and the Earth
Bioneers’ Council Sessions
Join with fellow Bioneers in Council, to explore how we can respond to these troubled times with prayer and action, as we engage in healing ourselves and our relations with others and with the Earth. The heart of Council practices—listening, learning, living and thinking like a circle—are needed more than ever in our families, our nation and around the world. These circles are spaces where people can gather for deep listening, witnessing, and the nurturing of collective wisdom. Each circle will provide an opportunity to sit with others and share feelings and perspectives that have emerged in this period of change and challenge. Our intention is that we speak and listen from the heart, one at a time. Bearing witness is essential in this practice and many may choose not to speak, instead offering their presence as participation. We will provide a safe space for being present, confidentially, as we explore our commitments to weave the fabric of the future. The Council sessions will be co-hosted by experienced circle holders Ladybird Morgan, The Humane Prison Hospice Project; and Will Scott, Weaving Earth.
May 15th | 2:45 pm to 4:15 pm | Council Circle
Panelists
This workshop will be led by young people who have been trained to facilitate restorative justice circles in Oakland. They will discuss/explain what these healing circles look like and what the process has done for them on a personal level. RJOY Youth Interns provide healing spaces infused with art and therapeutic modalities designed to allow circle participants to feel safe, heard, and supported. Many young people do not have safe spaces to talk about things that they cannot necessarily share with their parents or authority figures. Restorative Justice healing circles provide a space free of judgement, ridicule, or exposure to more trauma when showing a true sense of vulnerability. With: Restorative Justice for Oakland Youth (RJOY).
May 15th | 2:45 pm to 4:15 pm | Youth Unity Center
Storytelling, one of our species’ most ancient and powerful tools, has been used since the dawn of time to impart wisdom, share knowledge, pass on cultural touchstones and traditions and help communities bond, but we are living in a period of breakdown when our storytelling is fractured and desperately in need of revitalization. In this workshop we will explore what a meaningful story is and how to engage with storytelling as a sacred art that has a capacity to repair and restore. We will explore six considerations for how to heal the climate narrative, and by the end of our time together, we will be equipped with practical skills that will permit us to leave behind destructive and broken narratives and spot and nurture the stories that bring us healing and new, life-affirming, life-enhancing visions. With: Leah Lamb, writer/storyteller/eco-activist/educator/thespian/wilderness guide/ceremonialist.
May 15th | 2:45 pm to 4:15 pm | Interactive/Experiential Room
Panelists
For many years, cities and sub-national regions have been the shining lights of climate change mitigation and adaptation. Although the radical climate action our world so desperately needs has been largely blocked by special interests at the national and international levels, some states, provinces, regions and cities around the world have taken up the gauntlet and pushed ahead with truly holistic approaches. They’ve collaborated at different scales on leading-edge policies and projects that integrate the immediate need for climate adaptation alongside emissions reductions and a full-fledged push toward building authentic and equitable community resilience. Cities don’t always have the resources and leverage available to nation-states, but they are vital to the billions of citizens globally within their sphere of influence. Often they truly lead the way by highlighting groundbreaking models of how to design a just, sustainable society. In this session, visionary, highly influential organizers at a variety of levels share their strategies. With: Cindy Montañez, CEO of Tree People; Trathen Heckman, founder of Daily Acts; others TBA. Hosted by Teo Grossman, Senior Director of Programs and Research at Bioneers.
May 15th | 2:45 pm to 4:15 pm | Marina Theater
Panelists
This final session in the Youth Space is dedicated to reflection and incorporation. Together, we will consider some key questions: What is it you are taking with you? How will you integrate what you have experienced at Bioneers into your life? How can Bioneers expand and improve its youth programming to support you further on your path? What would be helpful to have witnessed by peers and mentors before you head home? All youth are welcome to attend and engage in the conversation! Facilitated by the Bioneers Youth Leadership Program Coordination team from Weaving Earth.
May 15th | 4:30 pm to 6:00 pm | Youth Unity Center
Indigenous women entrepreneurs are implementing some of the most innovative solutions for community wellness despite facing rampant discrimination, violence and lack of access to social goods. For Native Peoples, economic empowerment is not only about dollars—it also has to challenge stereotypes, embody responsibility to future generations and strengthen relationships to ancestral homelands. This panel will highlight the inspiring work of the organization Native Women Lead, a non-profit that seeks to help build a connected community of Native/Indigenous women and to nurture them as they foster, start, and grow their own businesses everywhere; and its partner, New Mexico Community Capital. Topics discussed will include how to challenge current systems while working within them, new models for economic empowerment in communities incorrectly written off as “high risk,” centering Indigenous women’s voices through media; and much more. Featuring Liz Gamboa (Mexican/Apache) and Alicia Ortega (Pojoaque/ Santa Clara Pueblos). Hosted by Cara Romero (Chemehuevi).
May 15th | 4:30 pm to 6:00 pm | Indigenous Forum
Panelists
Bioneers co-founder Kenny Ausubel will host 2 separate, special Bioneers-only screenings of several episodes of his newly premiered 10-episode series, Changing of the Gods. This truly unique film looks at epic cycles of social upheaval over the centuries and explores surprising, seemingly synchronistic correlations between periods of intense rebellion and radical social transformation in human history and certain planetary alignments. The film raises profound, fundamental questions: Do we live in a conscious cosmos? Which revolutionary impulses are being triggered at the moment and what is their impact going to be? And where do we currently stand in the grand sweep of these historical cycles? Kenny and guests will be on hand to introduce the episodes and to answer questions.
May 15th | 4:30 pm to 6:00 pm | Marina Theater
Panelists
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