Daily Schedule for the 2026 Bioneers Conference
All times are in Pacific Daylight Time
Overall schedule subject to change.
Wednesday, March 25th
Join Bay Area Green Tours for the Urban Foodscape and Watershed Tour, a full-day, pre-conference experience that brings regenerative solutions to life and is designed to spark inspiration and hope.
Visit a vibrant urban farm and school garden, and learn about the local watershed, the original San Francisco shoreline, and nature-based solutions for sea-level rise and stormwater management.
Meet local climate and food-justice changemakers and experience real-world climate action firsthand. Enjoy guided conversations on practical solutions for climate resilience and learn how East Bay communities are building a more equitable food system.
Lunch is not included. Attendees can bring their lunch or purchase it at Prescott Market in West Oakland whose goal is to unite local residents, food makers, artisans, entrepreneurs, and local businesses.
Space is limited — reserve your spot today, and experience the power of community-driven innovation in action. No Bioneers Conference ticket required.
March 25th | 9:00 am to 5:00 pm
Note: A separate Early bird registration $145 fee is required for this event.
Thursday, March 26th
March 26th | 8:50 am to 9:05 am | Zellerbach Hall
Deb Lane

Drummer and Water Conservation Administrator
Deb Lane has been playing the drums for most of her life. Formerly a member of the Santa Cruz World Beat Band, Pele Juju, she performs with artists throughout the Bay Area and beyond. In addition to her musical endeavors, Deb is a leader in water-use efficiency and works as a Water Conservation Administrator.
Afia Walking Tree

Percussionist, Educator and Facilitator
Afia Walking Tree, M.Ed., a Jamaican-born feminist percussionist, educator, and facilitator working at the “crossroads of rhythm, land, and liberation,” is an adjunct professor at the California Institute of Integral Studies (CIIS), an Artist-in-Residence with the African American Policy Forum, and One Billion Rising/V-Day’s Jamaica Coordinator. Afia has returned to Jamaica to steward a 25-acre regenerative land-based sanctuary and learning hub (Solidarity Yaad), where she curates nature-immersed healing journeys and eco-experiences rooted in ancestral wisdom, agroforestry, food security, and community care, prioritizing BIPOC women, and gender-expansive, queer, and trans-masculine people.
March 26th | 9:05 am to 9:15 am | Zellerbach Hall
Corrina Gould

Tribal Chair | Confederated Villages of Lisjan Nation
Corrina Gould, born and raised in the village of Huichin (now known as Oakland CA), is the Tribal Chair for the Confederated Villages of Lisjan Nation and co-founded and is the Lead Organizer for Indian People Organizing for Change, a small Native-run organization; as well as of the Sogorea Te’ Land Trust, an urban Indigenous women-led organization within her ancestral territory. Through the practices of “rematriation,” cultural revitalization and land restoration, the Land Trust calls on Native and non-Native peoples to heal and transform legacies of colonization and genocide and to do the work our ancestors and future generations are calling us to do.
Western science has long resisted and even ridiculed the idea that our planet is alive, but many scientists now recognize that Earth and life continually coevolve and that, together, they form a single, interconnected, living system. Ferris Jabr, NYT bestselling author and one of our most celebrated scientific writers, will explain how, over billions of years, microbes, plants, fungi, and animals radically altered the continents, oceans, and atmosphere, transforming what was once a lump of orbiting rock into our cosmic oasis. Life breathed oxygen into the atmosphere, dyed the sky blue, made fire possible, converted barren crust into fertile soil, and perhaps even helped construct the continents. Over time, life became critical to the planet’s capacity to regulate its climate and maintain balance. Life is Earth and Earth is life.
March 26th | 9:15 am to 9:36 am | Zellerbach Hall
Ferris Jabr

Bestselling Author and NY Times Magazine Writer
Ferris Jabr, a contributing writer for The New York Times Magazine, is the author of the bestselling Becoming Earth, which reviewers have described as an “infectiously poetic” “masterwork” that “earns its place alongside the best of today’s essential popular science books.” Ferris has also written for The New Yorker, The Atlantic, National Geographic, and Scientific American and has received fellowships and grants from Yale, MIT, UC Berkeley, the Pulitzer Center, and the Whiting Foundation. His work has been anthologized in four editions of The Best American Science and Nature Writing series.
Now in his 50th year working as a media creator, actor and musician, Gary Farmer has been a groundbreaking figure in prying open doors for Indigenous contributors to the performing arts, helping found a magazine and radio and TV networks in Canada highlighting Native creators and voices, as well as appearing in many TV series and several legendary films including Powwow Highway, Dead Man and Smoke Signals. Today Gary will explore why it is more important than ever for Native people to control their own narratives, in an era in which our collective survival will depend on our learning to put the Earth first. It is time for Turtle Island TV!
March 26th | 9:40 am to 10:01 am | Zellerbach Hall
Gary Farmer

Renowned First-Nations Actor and Musician
Gary Farmer, an actor and musician born on Six Nations land along the Grand River, Ohsweken, Ontario, is widely recognized as a groundbreaking figure in the development of Indigenous media in Canada. The founding Director of Aboriginal Voices Radio Network, he was also the Publisher of Aboriginal Voices Magazine from 1993 to 2003. As an actor Gary has been nominated for three Independent Spirit Awards for Best Supporting Male Actor in: Powwow Highway, Dead Man, and Smoke Signals, and, most recently, he is a regular on two popular television series—Resident Alien and Reservation Dogs.
March 26th | 10:25 am to 10:37 am | Zellerbach Hall
Garth Stevenson

Musician and Composer
Garth Stevenson, a highly accomplished double bassist and composer especially known for creating music in direct communion with the natural world, traveled to Antarctica with the legendary biologist Dr. Roger Payne in 2010 to study whale communication and was able to imitate those calls on his double bass, attracting a dozen sei whales to their icebreaker. He has continued that work, most recently during a 2025 trip to Baja, Mexico to play for humpback whales, an extraordinary episode that was captured on film by National Geographic director Andy Mann.
March 26th | 11:00 am to 11:22 am | Zellerbach Hall
Michele Bratcher Goodwin

Professor of Constitutional Law and Global Health Policy | Georgetown University
Michele Bratcher Goodwin, an acclaimed bioethicist, constitutional law scholar, and prolific author, is credited with helping to establish and shape the field of health law. Currently the Linda D. & Timothy J. O’Neill Professor of Constitutional Law and Global Health Policy and the Co-Faculty Director of the O’Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law at Georgetown, Goodwin’s previous positions include: Chancellor’s Professor at the University of California, Irvine and founding Director of the Center for Biotechnology and Global Health Policy as well as teaching at Harvard’s Law and Medical schools. Dr. Goodwin, who directed the first ABA accredited health law program in the nation and established the first law center focused on race and bioethics, has won slews of prestigious awards for her scholarship, and her writing has appeared in many of the country’s leading academic law reviews. She is the author/editor of six books, including: Policing the Womb: Invisible Women and the Criminalization of Motherhood.
Terry Tempest Williams, one of our nation’s living literary treasures and a guiding light for many of us regardingethics and citizenship, will share how she emerged from a dream during the pandemic in 2020 with a renewed vow she had forgotten. In this time of political and climate chaos, as we seek beauty and cohesion wherever we can find its glimmer, Terry focused on “The Glorians,” the overlooked presences—animal, plant, memory, moment—that reveal our shared vulnerability and interconnectedness with the natural world and how they can inspire us to carry forward with grace. “The Glorians are reaching out to us,” she writes,” inviting us to dream a new world into being.”
March 26th | Noon to 12:24 pm
Terry Tempest Williams

Award-Winning Author and Naturalist
Terry Tempest Williams, a writer, educator, and environmental activist known for her lyrical and impassioned prose, is the author of over twenty creative nonfiction books including the environmental literature classic, Refuge – An Unnatural History of Family and Place, and: The Open Space of Democracy, Finding Beauty in a Broken World, When Women Were Birds, and Erosion – Essays of Undoing. Her most recent book is the The Glorians – Visitations from the Holy Ordinary (spring ’26). A Recipient of Guggenheim and Lannan literary fellowships, Ms. Williams’ work has appeared widely, including in The New York Times, The New Yorker, The Progressive, and Orion, and has been translated worldwide. A member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, she is currently Writer-in-Residence at the Harvard Divinity School.
Across the world, mothers and children are bearing the brunt of humanitarian catastrophe — from Gaza and Sudan to other conflict zones where medical systems are collapsing. And here in the U.S., maternal health inequities remain staggering, with Black women three times more likely to die from pregnancy-related causes than white women. This session brings together frontline medical workers responding to these crises both globally and locally. Hosted by Sandra Adler Killen,Emergency Room and Pediatric RN who has worked in underserved communities in the U.S. and internationally, including most recently in Gaza. With: Brandi Gates-Burgess, founder and Executive Director of Breast Friends Lactation and Support Services; and Dr. Cindy Nelly, global health consultant with 25+ years’ experience delivering care and building health systems in conflict and disaster zones.
March 26th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm
Panelists
Sandra Adler Killen

Emergency Room and Pediatric RN
Sandra Adler Killen, an Emergency Room and Pediatric RN and Internationally Board-Certified Lactation Consultant (IBCLC), has, since 2009, dedicated her career to supporting underserved communities in the U.S. and internationally, with projects spanning Mexico, Syria, and Lebanon. In 2024, she deployed to Gaza as a trauma RN, providing frontline care for mass casualties with the Palestine Red Crescent Society (PRCS) and recently completed her third deployment with GINA—the Gaza Infant Nutritional Alliance—where she focused on pediatric care, lactation support, and capacity-building initiatives. Sandra is also part of an international telehealth lactation consultant team offering remote care and guidance to thousands of mothers and babies in Gaza.
Cindy Nelly

Faculty Member and Clinician | University of Florida
Dr. Cindy Nelly, DNP, APRN, CNM, is a faculty member and clinician at the University of Florida and a global health consultant with 25+ years’ experience delivering care and building health systems in austere environments affected by conflict, natural disasters, and large-scale displacement. Her work spans over 15 countries and focuses on emergency clinical care, workforce training, and operational leadership. Most recently, she has supported frontline health services in Gaza, strengthening emergency, maternal, and women’s health capacity while partnering with local and international teams to sustain care under extreme constraints.
Brandi Gates-Burgess

Founder and Executive Director | Breast Friends Lactation and Support Services
Bio coming soon.
In this “on-our-feet” workshop, we will use play to tap into our unconscious, loosen energetic blockages, and add new skills to our toolkit of collaboration and partnership. Come discover powerful but joyous ways to unleash our creativity, boost our wellbeing, enhance our social skills, and revitalize our souls.With: Elsa Menendez, who has decades of experience in conflict management, inclusive leadership practices, social and arts activism, and international theater at the intersections of art, ecology and embodied learning.
March 26th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm
Panelists
Elsa Menendez

Deputy Director | City of Albuquerque’s Department of Arts and Culture
Elsa Menendez is the Deputy Director of the City of Albuquerque’s Department of Arts and Culture and a core trainer with Sonderworx/DAC for the Albuquerque Community Safety Department, where she trains behavioral health first responders in conflict management, communication, and inclusive leadership practices. With 40+ years in international theatre, Elsa has worked as a writer, director, producer and performer, including as Artistic Director of Tricklock Company and Producer of the Revolutions International Theatre Festival. A certified life coach, she co-founded Women Leading Change and serves on the board of Biomimicry for Social Innovation. Elsa previously worked for U.S. Senator Martin Heinrich and the National Hispanic Cultural Center. She is currently studying Polyvagal Theory and is a core member of the Eco-Performance Institute, exploring the intersections of art, ecology, and embodied learning.
More than two billion people globally suffer from micronutrient deficiencies, and several USDA studies show that there have been significant declines in essential nutrients in a number of food crops over the past 50 years, as the juggernaut of industrialized agriculture has swept the globe. Fortunately, emerging research is finding that healthy farm soils increase the nutrient density of plants, which implies that authentic regenerative farming practices, along with their many benefits to farmers and ecosystems, can reverse that degenerative 50-year trend and help us create a genuinely healthy food system. With: Mary Purdy of the Nutrient Density Alliance and Dan Kittredge of the Bionutrient Food Association. Moderated by Arty Mangan, Director of the Bioneers Restorative Food Systems program.
March 26th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm
Panelists
Mary Purdy

Managing Director | Nutrient Density Initiative
Mary Purdy, MS, RDN, an integrative eco-dietitian, working at the intersection of sustainable food systems and climate and human health, spent 13+ years in clinical practice, taught for 8 years at Bastyr University in Seattle, and is currently Managing Director of the Nutrient Density Initiative that works to connect the dots between soil health and nutrient-rich food. Also on the adjunct faculty at The Culinary Institute of America's Master’s Program in Sustainable Food Systems, she speaks widely on nutrition, sustainability and regenerative agriculture. With 130+ podcast episodes and two books under her belt, Mary is a leading voice on how to foster resilient, just, and healthy food systems.
Arty Mangan

Restorative Food Systems Director | Bioneers
Arty Mangan, Director of the Bioneers Restorative Food Systems program, worked as farm worker and local food entrepreneur. He has also worked with Indigenous farmers growing traditional crops and with Black farmers developing ecological agricultural trainings. His current focus is on the intersection of climate and regenerative agriculture. Mangan is a former board president of the Ecological Farming Association.
For 500 years, our ancestors faced annihilation, and yet we Indigenous inhabitants of this continent are still here, so it’s no surprise many other people are turning to us for help in finding ways to address the biggest crises of our time. We have been able to hold onto our ways of being and seeing, some of us continuously and some after awakening from a long slumber. We are learning how to heal from intergenerational trauma by feeding our spirits and bodies through remembering. The aftermath of the apocalypses our peoples have endured is both a warning and a beacon of hope that all people can learn from. Moderated by Cara Romero (Chemehuevi), Director of the Bioneers Indigeneity Program. With: renowned actor and musician Gary Farmer (Cayuga); activist, writer/filmmaker Julian NoiseCat (Secwepemc); other TBA.
March 26th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm
Panelists
Gary Farmer

Renowned First-Nations Actor and Musician
Gary Farmer, an actor and musician born on Six Nations land along the Grand River, Ohsweken, Ontario, is widely recognized as a groundbreaking figure in the development of Indigenous media in Canada. The founding Director of Aboriginal Voices Radio Network, he was also the Publisher of Aboriginal Voices Magazine from 1993 to 2003. As an actor Gary has been nominated for three Independent Spirit Awards for Best Supporting Male Actor in: Powwow Highway, Dead Man, and Smoke Signals, and, most recently, he is a regular on two popular television series—Resident Alien and Reservation Dogs.
Julian Brave NoiseCat

Filmmaker and Journalist | Sugarcane
Julian Brave NoiseCat (member, Canim Lake Band Tsq’escen, and descendant, Lil'Wat Nation of Mount Currie), formerly a political strategist, policy analyst and cultural organizer who played a major role, in, among other achievements, commemorating the 50th anniversary of the 1969 Alcatraz Occupation and getting Deb Haaland appointed Interior Secretary (the first Native American cabinet secretary in U.S. history), is a writer, journalist, and the first Indigenous North American filmmaker ever nominated for an Academy Award (for his co-direction of Sugarcane). NoiseCat’s journalism has appeared in dozens of leading national publications and has been recognized with many awards. His first book, We Survived the Night, was a national bestseller in Canada and an indie bestseller in the U.S., and Julian is also a champion powwow dancer who played hockey for three of the oldest teams in the game: Columbia University, the Oxford University Blues and the Alkali Lake Braves.
Cara Romero

Executive Director | Bioneers
Cara Romero (Chemehuevi), Executive Director and Program Director of the Bioneers Indigeneity Program, previously served her Mojave-based tribe in several capacities, including as: first Executive Director at the Chemehuevi Cultural Center, a member of the tribal council, and Chair of the Chemehuevi Education Board and Chemeuevi Headstart Policy Council. Cara is also a highly accomplished photographer/artist.
How do we sustain ourselves in the midst of upheaval and uncertainty? By cultivating an inner strength rooted in our belonging to one another, Earth, and all of life! In this interactive session, we’ll explore soul care practices that allow us to face the intense challenges of these difficult times from a place of wholeness, so that we can become more effective agents of sacred transformation. Facilitated by author, activist, and counselor Liza J. Rankow, Ph.D., MHS.
March 26th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm
Panelists
Liza Rankow

Interfaith Minister, Educator, Activist and Author
Liza J. Rankow, Ph.D., an interfaith minister, educator, activist, and author whose lifework centers the deep healing that is essential to personal and social transformation, has been a spiritual counselor and teacher for more than three decades, working with individual clients, facilitating healing retreats, and offering classes and workshops in a variety of community and academic settings. Her new book is Soul Medicine for a Fractured World: Healing, Justice, and the Path of Wholeness.
In an era of national polarization and digital fragmentation, some of the most powerful solutions are emerging at the community level—where authentic connection meets tangible change. This dynamic panel brings together two critical threads of democratic renewal: innovative leaders who are reimagining how we build community in digital spaces, and local elected officials who are translating that community power into transformative policy wins. This panel will bridge the often-separated worlds of online community-building and “real-world” governing, showing how they can reinforce each other by using democratic “from the ground up” renewal strategies and tools. Come discover how building rooted, resilient communities can offer an antidote to national dysfunction. Hosted by Reena Szczepanski, Civic (Re)Solve. With: Panelists TBA.
March 26th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm
Panelists
Reena Szczepanski

Justice, Equality and Public Health Activist
Reena Szczepanski has spent her career working for justice, equality, and public health, starting in her teenage years doing work/study as a caregiver for babies affected by HIV/AIDS and eventually managing the New Mexico Department of Health’s Hepatitis Program. She later became Executive Director of Emerge New Mexico, a statewide organization dedicated to training women to run for office and led the Drug Policy Alliance New Mexico to many legislative victories, including the state’s medical cannabis law, substance abuse treatment, and criminal justice reform. Reena then served as the Chief of Staff to Speaker Brian Egolf, and in 2022 was herself elected to the New Mexico House of Representatives and was elected House Majority Leader by her colleagues. She is the first Asian American elected to legislative leadership in the history of New Mexico.
In this intimate emergent conversation between two dear old friends, Terry Tempest Williams, one of the most sublime American writers to ever emerge from the deserts of the Southwest as well as a dedicated activist, conservationist, passionate lover of the natural world and one of our nation’s moral North Stars, will explore with Bioneers’ very own co-founder Nina Simons how to balance the personal and the political, the sacred and the mundane, the head and the heart, in this exceptionally challenging period in our history.
March 26th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm
Panelists
Terry Tempest Williams

Award-Winning Author and Naturalist
Terry Tempest Williams, a writer, educator, and environmental activist known for her lyrical and impassioned prose, is the author of over twenty creative nonfiction books including the environmental literature classic, Refuge – An Unnatural History of Family and Place, and: The Open Space of Democracy, Finding Beauty in a Broken World, When Women Were Birds, and Erosion – Essays of Undoing. Her most recent book is the The Glorians – Visitations from the Holy Ordinary (spring ’26). A Recipient of Guggenheim and Lannan literary fellowships, Ms. Williams’ work has appeared widely, including in The New York Times, The New Yorker, The Progressive, and Orion, and has been translated worldwide. A member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, she is currently Writer-in-Residence at the Harvard Divinity School.
Nina Simons

Co-Founder and Chief Relationship Strategist | Bioneers
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. An award-winning social entrepreneur, Nina teaches and speaks internationally, and previously served as President of Seeds of Change and Director of Strategic Marketing for Odwalla.
Each afternoon, members of the Coalition to Dismantle the Doctrine of Discovery invite you to a community circle designed to help us grieve our individual and collective losses. By naming our losses and mourning together, we can open to grief’s potential for solace, regeneration and transformation. We will engage in breathing practices, journaling, sharing, and a simple ritual using a communal altar to which we are invited to bring offerings that honor our losses, including photos and/or responsibly foraged gifts from nature. Facilitated by Erin Selover, Limei Kat Chen and Sheri Hostetler.
Note: The room will be open each day for an hour starting at 2pm, before the session begins at 3, for those who want to come and sit quietly and/or write messages for the altar, but the room will be closed once each session begins to assure privacy.
March 26th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm
Panelists
Erin Selover

Buddhist Retreat Teacher | Spirit Rock Meditation Center
Erin Selover, a residential Buddhist retreat teacher at Spirit Rock Meditation Center in Northern California, somatic trauma therapist, and Rites of Passage guide currently living at the Occidental Arts and Ecology Center, is also: co-founder of the Celtic Wheel Sangha; a member of the Coalition to Dismantle the Doctrine of Discovery’s Buddhist Working Group to Protect Oak Flat; and board member of the cooperative nonprofit, Nourishing Futures.
Limei Kat Chen

Community Organizer, Researcher and Mindfulness Teacher
Limei Kat Chen, a Bay-Area-based queer Chinese diasporic community organizer, researcher, and mindfulness teacher who draws from several lineages (including the Plum Village tradition, Tantric Buddhism, Daoism, and Earth-based teachings), is active in the Buddhist Coalition for Oak Flat in solidarity with the Apache groups fighting to protect that sacred site and also organizes in the Bay Area with the Interfaith Movement for Human Integrity and 18 Million Rising, working to support survivors of violence and to use art and music as healing medicines.
Sheri Hostetler

Lead Pastor | First Mennonite Church of San Francisco
Sheri Hostetler, Lead Pastor at First Mennonite Church of San Francisco since 2000 and one of the founders of what is now called Inclusive Mennonite Pastors, a coalition of pastoral leaders seeking LGBTQ+ justice in the church, is co-founder of the Coalition to Dismantle the Doctrine of Discovery, which calls on Christian and Christian-descended people to address the extinction, enslavement, and extraction done on Indigenous lands. Co-author of So We and Our Children May Live: Following Jesus in Confronting the Climate Crisis (2023) and co-host of the Dismantling the Doctrine of Discovery Podcast, Sheri is also a spiritual director, a permaculturist descended from long lines of Amish-Mennonite farmers, and a poet whose work has appeared in A Cappella: Mennonite Voices in Poetry and Poetry of Presence: An Anthology of Mindfulness Poems.
Very few activists and civil society leaders focused on zoning until they began to understand its immense power to shape our cities. Far too often zoning boards in the pockets of corporate interests make decisions that lead to exclusion and extraction. Zoning plays a key role in who bears the burdens and who reaps the benefits of development, including deciding where toxic facilities are sited and if affordable housing is possible. It has proven incredibly challenging, even for cities that want to do the right thing, to bring Environmental Justice issues and historically disenfranchised communities into planning processes with equity, collaboration, and transparency.
In 2016, California adopted a landmark law (SB1000) requiring every city in the state to adopt an Environmental Justice Element of its general plan. As a result, for the last decade cities across the state have been challenged to acknowledge environmental racism and injustice and to make plans to address them. Berkeley is in the midst of this, with the Ecology Center leading an Equitable Community Engagement process designed to upend one-way, transactional, and extractive planning and to build a model for trust-building, deep listening, relationship building, and accountability.
In this session, local community activists, city planners, and grassroots community members will share the new approaches at play in Berkeley, and how other communities can draw from its process to listen, engage, and respond to those most often left out of and most impacted. As the saying goes: ” If you’re not at the table, you’re on the menu.” Hosted by Martin Bourque, Executive Director, Ecology Center. With: With: Pilar Zuniga, Community Engagement Program Director, Ecology Center; others TBA.
March 26th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm
Panelists
Martin Bourque

Executive Director | Ecology Center
Martin Bourque, the Executive Director of the Ecology Center in Berkeley since 2000, has led that cutting-edge non-profit to become a high-impact engine for change locally, regionally and nationally, helping move progressive agendas in such domains as transparency in plastic recycling, pollution reduction, food and farming, access and equity, consumerism, and zero waste.
Pilar Zuniga

Community Engagement Program Director | Ecology Center
Bio coming soon.
Sacred Contract, an organization committed to re-imagining our relationship to land by restoring a sacred and culturally-aligned relationship between humans and the rest of nature, designed and then stewarded the process of a mountain in Colorado becoming the first in the world to transition from human ownership to “owning itself.” In this panel, board members of Sacred Contract will explain: how “land sovereignty” differs from traditional land conservation models; the role of majority Indigenous-led Land Guardian councils; and how the “land that owns itself” concept could potentially radically enhance ecosystems’ protection against destructive extractive assaults. With: Jennifer Menke of Regenerative Earth; Cassandra Ferrera and Abi Huff of the Center for Ethical Land Transition; and Thomas Linzey, attorney with the Center for Democratic and Environmental Rights.
March 26th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm
Panelists
Jennifer Menke

Founder and Executive Director | Regenerative Earth
Jennifer Menke, founder and Executive Director of Regenerative Earth and co-founder of Sacred Contract, is: a lecturer for the University of Colorado's Masters of Environment program; guest lecturer at the University of International Cooperation (UCI); and a facilitator for the Bio-leadership Fellowship. She has throughout her career used systems-mapping, facilitation, and strategic design to help local communities, Indigenous tribes, governments, foundations, businesses, and organizations develop and implement collaborative strategies to meet conservation targets, give rights to nature, enhance community wellbeing, and stimulate regenerative economies.
Cassandra Ferrera

Co-Founder | Center for Ethical Land Transition
Cassandra Ferrera, a co-founder (in 2021) of the non-profit Center for Ethical Land Transition dedicated to the “land justice” movement, i.e., the process of achieving repair, healing and justice rooted in sacred relationship with land, previously had 22 years’ experience as a real estate agent and consultant supporting groups in cooperative stewardship and land decommodification. She is a resident of the Landwell Community in Northern California.
Abi Huff

Operations and Reunion Program Co-Director | Center for Ethical Land Transition
Abi Huff is the Operations and Reunion Program Co-Director at the Center for Ethical Land Transition whose purpose is to support Black, Indigenous, and diasporic communities with pro-bono, solidarity-based land transition facilitation.
Thomas Linzey

Senior Legal Counsel | Center for Democratic and Environmental Rights
Thomas Linzey, Senior Legal Counsel for the Center for Democratic and Environmental Rights, widely recognized as the founder of the contemporary community rights movement, drafted the very first “rights of nature” law in the world (in Pennsylvania in 2006), and consulted on the very first rights of nature constitutional provisions (in Ecuador). Linzey co-founded the Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund, sits on the Board of Advisors of the New Earth Foundation and is the author of several books, including: Be The Change: How to Get What You Want in Your Community and On Community Civil Disobedience in the Name of Sustainability. Linzey’s work has been featured widely, including in leading publications including the NY Times, Mother Jones and the Nation magazine.
In this experiential session, we will explore through collective coloring the theme of “interbeing”—the renowned Buddhist figureThich Nhat Hanh’s teaching on our deep interconnectedness as a living antidote to separation and despair. We’ll begin with a grounding embodiment practice before coloring pages from Chetna Mehta’s coloring book, Cultivating Compassion in Times of Fascism, to help us boost our capacity for compassion, for one another, the land, our more-than-human kin, andfor ourselves. This space will seek to offer us a nervous system sanctuary amid the intense stimulation of the larger conference—an opportunity to slow down, color, and remember that color, presence, and collective care can be forms of resistance and repair. With: Chetna Mehta, multidisciplinary artist, founder of Mosaiceye Collective.
March 26th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm
Panelists
Chetna Mehta

Founder | Mosaiceye Collective
Chetna Mehta, a granddaughter of Indian and South African diasporas, is a multidisciplinary artist, facilitator, and “creativity doula” who seeks to weave somatic healing, decolonial/ecological frameworks, and expressive arts into a liberatory practice. The founder of Mosaiceye Collective, which provides resources, programs and spaces where women and non-binary changemakers can play, transform, and engage in expansive collaboration, Chetna is the author and illustrator of the Cultivating Compassion in Times of Fascism Coloring Book.
In 2025, following the largest dam removal project in U.S. history, an intertribal cohort of Indigenous youth became the first people in a century to descend a 310-mile stretch of the Klamath River. Their journey to the sea was a ceremony, a protest, and a living testament to the resilience of Indigenous peoples and the ongoing decolonization of the watershed. This intergenerational panel brings together some of these youth paddlers, elders, and legal advocates who will share the story of this historic “First Return” descent. Witnessing salmon return to their ancestral waters for the first time in over 100 years ignited profound hope and serves as an inspiring example of how significant environmental victories can transform the lives, identities, and opportunities of young people who experience them firsthand.
The conversation will also highlight the ongoing work that still needs to be addressed. While four dams have been removed, two major dams in the upper basin still degrade water quality and threaten the survival of the nearly extinct C’waam (Lost River sucker) and Koptu (shortnose sucker) species, as well as the long-term viability of the recently returned salmon (Ciyaa’ls). Hosted by Juliette Jackson, JD, author of Stop Killing the Klamath. With: The Klamath Youth Council: Coley Miller, Travis Jackson, Melia McNair, and Scarlett Jewel Hoches Schroeder.
March 26th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm
Panelists
The work of ecological and social healing requires that we reconnect with our deepest selves, our lineages, our communities, and the places where we live, but many of us straddle traditions drawn from places and contexts that feel far away from our current realities. In this interactive session, two of the authors of the second edition of Ecological and Social Healing: Multicultural Women’s Voices will share practices and processes we can use to weave our ancestral knowledge into the places we currently inhabit. Come prepared to: work with your own ancestral stories; engage in dialogue and experiential practices; be creative; and show up with respect and compassion for the larger community. Facilitated by: Jeanine M. Canty, PhD, professor of Transformative Studies, CIIS; Sara H. Salazar, Ph.D., Associate Professor, CIIS.
March 26th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm
Panelists
Jeanine Canty

Professor of Transformative Studies | California Institute of Integral Studies (CIIS)
Jeanine M. Canty, Ph.D., Professor of Transformative Studies at the California Institute of Integral Studies (CIIS) whose teaching intersects issues of social and ecological justice, ecopsychology, and the process of worldview expansion and change, is author of: Returning the Self to Nature: Undoing Our Collective Narcissism and Healing Our Planet; and editor of and a contributor to the collections: Ecological and Social Healing: Multicultural Women’s Voices and Globalism and Localization: Emergent Approaches to Ecological and Social Crises.
Sara Salazar

Associate Professor | California Institute of Integral Studies
Sara H. Salazar, Ph.D., Associate Professor at the California Institute of Integral Studies in San Francisco, a Xicana scholar and educator whose transdisciplinary work is centered on decolonial theory and praxis, feminist philosophy, and critical pedagogies, conducts research on: Chicana spirituality, art, and activism; radical mothering practices; Indigenous food systems; and Restorative Justice.
Over 140 labor and community organizations have come together across the country to launch the “Living Wage for All” campaign, advancing bold visions and actions to address the affordability crisis through raising the minimum wage closer to the actual cost of living (at least $25 nationwide and $30 in higher-cost regions) with no exceptions. Working people across the country are questioning the plea to ‘join us to save democracy’ when democracy has not worked for them, as they have to work multiple jobs and still aren’t able to make ends meet. Come and hear about how this coalition is demonstrating that democracy can deliver on working people’s top concern, their survival, in order to restore faith in the idea that democracy is worth saving, and how you can join this campaign. With: Saru Jayaraman,President, One Fair Wage; others TBD.
March 26th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm
Panelists
Saru Jayaraman

President | One Fair Wage
Saru Jayaraman (JD, Yale, MPP Harvard), an academic at UC Berkeley and a renowned labor activist, is President of One Fair Wage, which organizes to raise wages and end sub-minimum wages nationwide. She has won numerous awards for her activism, including being named: one of CNN’s “Top10 Visionary Women,” a White House Champion of Change, a James Beard Foundation Leadership Award winner, and a San Francisco Chronicle ‘Visionary of the Year.’ Saru, who is interviewed and cited frequently in major media outlets, is author of: Behind the Kitchen Door; Forked: A New Standard for American Dining; and One Fair Wage: Ending Subminimum Pay in America.
Each afternoon, members of the Coalition to Dismantle the Doctrine of Discovery invite you to a community circle designed to help us grieve our individual and collective losses. By naming our losses and mourning together, we can open to grief’s potential for solace, regeneration and transformation. We will engage in breathing practices, journaling, sharing, and a simple ritual using a communal altar to which we are invited to bring offerings that honor our losses, including photos and/or responsibly foraged gifts from nature. Facilitated by Erin Selover, Limei Kat Chen and Sheri Hostetler.
Note: The room will be open each day for an hour starting at 2pm, before the session begins at 3, for those who want to come and sit quietly and/or write messages for the altar, but the room will be closed once each session begins to assure privacy.
March 26th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm
Panelists
Erin Selover

Buddhist Retreat Teacher | Spirit Rock Meditation Center
Erin Selover, a residential Buddhist retreat teacher at Spirit Rock Meditation Center in Northern California, somatic trauma therapist, and Rites of Passage guide currently living at the Occidental Arts and Ecology Center, is also: co-founder of the Celtic Wheel Sangha; a member of the Coalition to Dismantle the Doctrine of Discovery’s Buddhist Working Group to Protect Oak Flat; and board member of the cooperative nonprofit, Nourishing Futures.
Limei Kat Chen

Community Organizer, Researcher and Mindfulness Teacher
Limei Kat Chen, a Bay-Area-based queer Chinese diasporic community organizer, researcher, and mindfulness teacher who draws from several lineages (including the Plum Village tradition, Tantric Buddhism, Daoism, and Earth-based teachings), is active in the Buddhist Coalition for Oak Flat in solidarity with the Apache groups fighting to protect that sacred site and also organizes in the Bay Area with the Interfaith Movement for Human Integrity and 18 Million Rising, working to support survivors of violence and to use art and music as healing medicines.
Sheri Hostetler

Lead Pastor | First Mennonite Church of San Francisco
Sheri Hostetler, Lead Pastor at First Mennonite Church of San Francisco since 2000 and one of the founders of what is now called Inclusive Mennonite Pastors, a coalition of pastoral leaders seeking LGBTQ+ justice in the church, is co-founder of the Coalition to Dismantle the Doctrine of Discovery, which calls on Christian and Christian-descended people to address the extinction, enslavement, and extraction done on Indigenous lands. Co-author of So We and Our Children May Live: Following Jesus in Confronting the Climate Crisis (2023) and co-host of the Dismantling the Doctrine of Discovery Podcast, Sheri is also a spiritual director, a permaculturist descended from long lines of Amish-Mennonite farmers, and a poet whose work has appeared in A Cappella: Mennonite Voices in Poetry and Poetry of Presence: An Anthology of Mindfulness Poems.
Bioneers is delighted to bring together two of the most visionary thinkers at the cutting edge of our understanding of life on our planet. Ferris Jabr, bestselling author of one of the most masterful books of scientific journalism in years, Becoming Earth, has elevated the discourse surrounding the Gaia Hypothesis to a higher octave, elucidating Earth’s dynamic, self-regulating systems continuously transformed by biological processes. Forest Ecologist Suzanne Simard, a groundbreaking figure in the study of plant communication and intelligence, author of the highly influential, bestselling Finding the Mother Tree, is just now releasing her newest book, When the Forest Breathes. They will share their newest insights into how life shapes Earth and explore humanity’s immense responsibility to secure the vitality of the planet, especially in light of what we are discovering about the profound interconnectedness of all life and the myriad intelligences that permeate our world.
March 26th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm
Panelists
Ferris Jabr

Bestselling Author and NY Times Magazine Writer
Ferris Jabr, a contributing writer for The New York Times Magazine, is the author of the bestselling Becoming Earth, which reviewers have described as an “infectiously poetic” “masterwork” that “earns its place alongside the best of today’s essential popular science books.” Ferris has also written for The New Yorker, The Atlantic, National Geographic, and Scientific American and has received fellowships and grants from Yale, MIT, UC Berkeley, the Pulitzer Center, and the Whiting Foundation. His work has been anthologized in four editions of The Best American Science and Nature Writing series.
Suzanne Simard

Project Lead | Mother Tree Project and Program
Suzanne Simard, Ph.D., is a Professor of Forest Ecology at the University of British Columbia and leads the Mother Tree Project and Program. Her research—showing that forests are cooperative, connected networks—has revolutionized forest ecology. Her TED Talk has reached millions, and her bestselling book Finding the Mother Tree continues to capture global interest. Named one of TIME’s 100 most influential people in the world in 2024, she champions regenerative forestry rooted in Indigenous knowledge.
Three leading scholars/activists/attorneys and thought-leaders take stock of the current assault on social progress, women’s freedoms, racial and environmental justice, human rights, and democracy. Are we headed into a plunge towards a “Handmaid’s Tale”-like dystopian future, or is this the desperate last gasp of the patriarchy? They will share their analyses of the contours of this exceedingly challenging historical moment and their strategies to most effectively resist the toxic impulses threatening the very survival of our body politic. We can outlast this dark period of regression and emerge stronger to continue the multi-generational struggles for a far more gender-just society, one in which women finally achieve genuine, full equality, but we will need to mobilize all our skill and will and work together. With: Michele Goodwin, renowned constitutional legal scholar, bioethicist and author; Radhika Rao, Professor of Law and Harry & Lillian Hastings Research Chair, UC College of the Law, San Francisco; Ji Seon Song, Assistant Professor of Law, UC Irvine School of Law.
March 26th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm
Panelists
Michele Bratcher Goodwin

Professor of Constitutional Law and Global Health Policy | Georgetown University
Michele Bratcher Goodwin, an acclaimed bioethicist, constitutional law scholar, and prolific author, is credited with helping to establish and shape the field of health law. Currently the Linda D. & Timothy J. O’Neill Professor of Constitutional Law and Global Health Policy and the Co-Faculty Director of the O’Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law at Georgetown, Goodwin’s previous positions include: Chancellor’s Professor at the University of California, Irvine and founding Director of the Center for Biotechnology and Global Health Policy as well as teaching at Harvard’s Law and Medical schools. Dr. Goodwin, who directed the first ABA accredited health law program in the nation and established the first law center focused on race and bioethics, has won slews of prestigious awards for her scholarship, and her writing has appeared in many of the country’s leading academic law reviews. She is the author/editor of six books, including: Policing the Womb: Invisible Women and the Criminalization of Motherhood.
Radhika Rao

Professor of Law and Harry & Lillian Hastings Research Chair | UC College of the Law
Bio coming soon.
Ji Seon Song

Assistant Professor of Law | UC Irvine School of Law
Bio coming soon.
Bioneers Afterglow is a happy hour open to all conference attendees at the end of each day of presentations, providing a casual atmosphere with snacks, drinks, music and revelry. Party in the Cabaret, hang out in the Main Stage, or visit our fabulous Tea Lounge upstairs!
Important Note: This event is well-attended in a not-enormous space and has a festive atmosphere with a fairly elevated ambient noise level, so it is best for those accustomed to somewhat crowded bars or music venues. We will be providing alternatives throughout the conference for those seeking quieter and/or more structured networking opportunities.
March 26th | 6:15 pm to 8:30 pm | The Marsh Arts Center
Friday, March 27th
March 27th | 8:50 am to 9:05 am | Zellerbach Hall
Afia Walking Tree

Percussionist, Educator and Facilitator
Afia Walking Tree, M.Ed., a Jamaican-born feminist percussionist, educator, and facilitator working at the “crossroads of rhythm, land, and liberation,” is an adjunct professor at the California Institute of Integral Studies (CIIS), an Artist-in-Residence with the African American Policy Forum, and One Billion Rising/V-Day’s Jamaica Coordinator. Afia has returned to Jamaica to steward a 25-acre regenerative land-based sanctuary and learning hub (Solidarity Yaad), where she curates nature-immersed healing journeys and eco-experiences rooted in ancestral wisdom, agroforestry, food security, and community care, prioritizing BIPOC women, and gender-expansive, queer, and trans-masculine people.
Deb Lane

Drummer and Water Conservation Administrator
Deb Lane has been playing the drums for most of her life. Formerly a member of the Santa Cruz World Beat Band, Pele Juju, she performs with artists throughout the Bay Area and beyond. In addition to her musical endeavors, Deb is a leader in water-use efficiency and works as a Water Conservation Administrator.
March 27th | 9:20 am to 9:37 am
Kenny Ausubel

CEO and Co-Founder | Bioneers
Kenny Ausubel, CEO and co-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. He has edited several books and written four, including, most recently, Dreaming the Future: Reimagining Civilization in the Age of Nature.
The right to food and the right to land are fundamental to human freedom, dignity, and self-determination, but locally and globally, land and food have been leveraged as tools of oppression. Fortunately, they can also be portals for liberation. Renowned groundbreaking Black Kreyol farmer and food justice activist, Leah Penniman, founder of Soul Fire Farm and author of Farming While Black, offers us living proof that when Land is reunited with her people, mutual thriving can flourish in the form of solutions to climate chaos and food apartheid. Even in this era of intense state repression, community self-determination and solidarity can be foundational to building a powerful movement for land and food sovereignty.
March 27th | 9:40 am to 10:02 am | Zellerbach Hall
Leah Penniman

Farmer, Food Sovereignty Activist and Educator
Leah Penniman, a Black Kreyol farmer, author, mother, and food justice activist who has been tending the soil and organizing for an anti-racist food system for 25 years, currently serves as founding Co-Executive Director of Farm Operations at Soul Fire Farm in Grafton, New York, a Black & Brown-led project that works toward food and land justice. She is the author of: Farming While Black: Soul Fire Farm's Practical Guide to Liberation on the Land (2018) and Black Earth Wisdom: Soulful Conversations with Black Environmentalists (2023).
March 27th | 10:05 am to 10:27 am | Zellerbach Hall
Cristina Jiménez Moreta

Co-Founder | United We Dream
Cristina Jiménez Moreta, who came to the U.S. from Ecuador in 1998 and grew up undocumented in Queens, New York, is an award-winning community organizer, bestselling author, and leading social justice activist. Co-founder and former Executive Director of United We Dream (UWD), the largest immigrant youth-led organization in the country, she has led multiple national and local campaigns for immigrant justice, including playing a leadership role in the campaign to win and implement the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals Program (DACA). A distinguished lecturer at the City University of New York, Jiménez was awarded a MacArthur Fellowship and named one of Time 100’s most influential people. She is the author of a bestselling debut memoir Dreaming of Home (2025).
March 27th | 11:00 am to 11:10 am | Zellerbach Hall
Destani Wolf

Singer and Musical Educator
Destani Wolf, a Berkeley, CA-based singer and musical educator, celebrated by Jazz Times as “one of the West Coast’s most inventive vocalists…and an accomplished improviser,” has gained renowned for her powerful, soulful voice, impeccable control, effortless vocal range, and original, genre-defying songs. Hers has been a remarkable musical trajectory from performing at 15 at the Great American Music Hall to recording on over 40 albums including 3 that were GRAMMY-nominated, to being a lead vocalist of Cirque du Soleil, to currently being a Professor at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music and a member of the legendary Bobby McFerrin's MOTION.
Kyle Trefny was 18 years old in 2020 when skies in the San Francisco Bay Area and much of the Pacific Coast turned orange with wildfire smoke. He will share how that moment led him to become a wildland firefighter and to join other youth in creating FireGeneration Collaborative (FireGen), dedicated to imagining and building a future beyond intense wildfires and their devastating health impacts, a future of healthy communities and livelihoods that recenters Indigenous leadership in land management. Kyle will reflect upon the power of questions, of friendship, of breaking negative cycles, of art, of mentors and elders, and of taking leaps of faith in life.
March 27th | 11:15 am to 11:23 am | Zellerbach Hall
Kyle Trefny

Co-Founder | FireGeneration Collaborative (FireGen)
Kyle Trefny is an organizer, artist, wildland firefighter, and co-founder of FireGeneration Collaborative (FireGen), which started out with a GoFundMe campaign and a petition and became a dynamic, influential youth-led organization that has helped bring about the historic involvement of firefighters and Indigenous fire management practitioners in governance processes and engaged hundreds of young people in fire research. A faculty research assistant at the University of Oregon’s Ecosystem Workforce Program, Kyle is also active in movements for Indigenous sovereignty, queer rights, and climate justice and was a recipient of a 2024 Brower Youth Award.
March 27th | 11:40 am to 12:03 pm | Zellerbach Hall
Julian Brave NoiseCat

Filmmaker and Journalist | Sugarcane
Julian Brave NoiseCat (member, Canim Lake Band Tsq’escen, and descendant, Lil'Wat Nation of Mount Currie), formerly a political strategist, policy analyst and cultural organizer who played a major role, in, among other achievements, commemorating the 50th anniversary of the 1969 Alcatraz Occupation and getting Deb Haaland appointed Interior Secretary (the first Native American cabinet secretary in U.S. history), is a writer, journalist, and the first Indigenous North American filmmaker ever nominated for an Academy Award (for his co-direction of Sugarcane). NoiseCat’s journalism has appeared in dozens of leading national publications and has been recognized with many awards. His first book, We Survived the Night, was a national bestseller in Canada and an indie bestseller in the U.S., and Julian is also a champion powwow dancer who played hockey for three of the oldest teams in the game: Columbia University, the Oxford University Blues and the Alkali Lake Braves.
Renowned science fiction author, activist and journalist Cory Doctorow coined the term “enshittification” in 2022 to describe the degradation of online platforms. Today, he will draw from his most recent nonfiction book, Enshittification: Why Everything Suddenly Got Worse and What to Do About It, to assure us that it’s not our imaginations: the internet does indeed suck now. And this isn’t the result of great historical forces or iron laws of economics: it’s caused by specific policy choices made in living memory by named individuals, but Cory will argue that we aren’t helpless prisoners of the depraved foolishness of early 21st century policymakers. We can – and we must – break free of the prison they built for us, consigning their terrible ideas to the scrap-heap of history, so we can create a new, good internet that is fit to serve as the digital nervous system of this fraught young century.
March 27th | 11:45 am to 12:05 pm | Zellerbach Hall
Cory Doctorow

Technology Journalist and Science Fiction Author
Cory Doctorow, a renowned, award-winning science fiction author, activist, and journalist, is the author of dozens of books, most recently, Enshittification: Why Everything Suddenly Got Worse and What to Do About It, (nonfiction); and the novels Picks and Shovels and The Bezzle. His other notable books include the “solar-punk” novels Walkaway and The Lost Cause, and the tech policy books The Internet Con and Chokepoint Capitalism. Cory also: maintains a daily blog at Pluralistic.net; works for the Electronic Frontier Foundation; and is: an AD White Professor at Cornell University; an MIT Media Lab Research Affiliate; a Visiting Professor of Computer Science at Open University; a Visiting Professor of Practice at the University of North Carolina’s School of Library and Information Science; and a co-founder of the UK Open Rights Group.
We often tend to consider the impacts of one of the USA’s pervasively oppressive structural systems in isolation, when in fact each of them plays a part in exacerbating the concentration of resources, wealth and decision-making in this nation’s halting attempts at democracy. In this interview/emergent conversation, scholar, author, mother, activist and thought-leader on issues of race and gender, Anna Malaika Tubbs, will discuss how systems of capitalism, patriarchy, white supremacy and colonialism intersect and mutually reinforce each other, as well as explore the best strategies to move beyond these deeply embedded and destructive cultural influences.
March 27th | 3:00 pm to 4:00 pm
Panelists
Anna Malaika Tubbs

Author, Advocate, Consultant and Educator
Anna Malaika Tubbs, Ph.D., a bestselling author and leading multidisciplinary expert on race, gender, and equity, translates her academic knowledge into clear and engaging stories that have been widely published in major magazines and newspapers. She is the author of: The Three Mothers: How the Mothers of MLK Jr, Malcolm X, and James Baldwin Shaped a Nation (2021) and Erased: What American Patriarchy Has Hidden From Us (2025). Anna is also a frequent speaker whose TED Talk has been viewed some 2 million times.
Buddhism and modern science both tell us that our perceptions of the world can often be illusory. Among the most persistent and damaging of our illusions are that we are separate from one another and that the environment is something external to us. In reality, the connections between all living organisms and with the environment are deep and fundamental. Central among those connections is embodied cognition. In this session we will make use of that cognition to explore many of these fundamental connections through multiple lenses including Buddhism, evolution, and science of the mind. With: Carl Pilcher, Ph.D., former Director of the NASA Astrobiology Institute, whose interests include integrating ancient wisdom and non-dualist philosophies with a modern scientific world view.
March 27th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm
Panelists
Carl Pilcher

Associate Instructor | Dharma College
Carl Pilcher, Ph.D., retired from a decades-long career in space science, holds a B.S. and Ph.D. in Chemistry, the latter from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and an M.P.A. in International Relations from Princeton. He was on the astronomy faculty of the University of Hawaii for a dozen years before becoming a NASA administrator for almost 3 decades. His professional arc took him from planetary science to serving as Director of the NASA Astrobiology Institute. Carl also began studying ancient teachings in 2015 with a Hindu teacher and joined the Dharma College community as a student in late 2021. Central to his interests are integrating ancient wisdom, particularly of non-dualism, with a modern scientific world view.
This session filled with creative games and play, somatic practices, and a touch of polyvagal theory (which can help us positively influence the physiological/psychological states that underlie our daily behavior) is designed to help us refresh and reboot our nervous systems so we can be even more effective and joyous in our quests for social justice and climate action. With: Elsa Menendez, Deputy Director of the City of Albuquerque’s Department of Arts and Culture, with decades of expertise in conflict management, inclusive leadership practices, social and arts activism, and embodied learning.
March 27th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm
Panelists
Elsa Menendez

Deputy Director | City of Albuquerque’s Department of Arts and Culture
Elsa Menendez is the Deputy Director of the City of Albuquerque’s Department of Arts and Culture and a core trainer with Sonderworx/DAC for the Albuquerque Community Safety Department, where she trains behavioral health first responders in conflict management, communication, and inclusive leadership practices. With 40+ years in international theatre, Elsa has worked as a writer, director, producer and performer, including as Artistic Director of Tricklock Company and Producer of the Revolutions International Theatre Festival. A certified life coach, she co-founded Women Leading Change and serves on the board of Biomimicry for Social Innovation. Elsa previously worked for U.S. Senator Martin Heinrich and the National Hispanic Cultural Center. She is currently studying Polyvagal Theory and is a core member of the Eco-Performance Institute, exploring the intersections of art, ecology, and embodied learning.
A great deal of research has in the last few decades demolished the long dominant view that humans were the sole proprietors of intelligence and shown that the entire web of life engages in adaptive decision-making, something Indigenous people around the world have long known. Building on that work, some bold innovators have been finding a variety of fascinating ways to document and engage with the intelligence that permeates the natural world. In this session, hosted by Earthlings, Bioneers’ bi-weekly newsletter that explores that intelligence and tracks new discoveries about the “more-than-human” realms and our ever-evolving interactions with other sentient life, three groundbreaking figures, working in very different ways, share their extraordinary journeys and projects observing and engaging with some of our animal kin. With: Elodie Freymann, Ph.D.,a primatologist, botanist, social anthropologist, filmmaker, and conservation activist, who has done cutting-edge research on how wild chimpanzees self-medicate with medicinal plants; Garth Stevenson, musician/composer known for creating music in direct communion with the natural world, including, famously, with whales; other TBA. Hosted by J.P. Harpignies, Bioneers’ Senior Producer and co-editor of Earthlings.
March 27th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm
Panelists
Elodie Freymann

Primatologist, Botanist, Social Anthropologist, and Conservation Activist
Elodie Freymann, Ph.D., a primatologist, botanist, social anthropologist, filmmaker, scientific illustrator, and conservation activist, recently attracted global attention with her groundbreaking research on how wild chimpanzees in Uganda's Budongo Forest self-medicate with medicinal plants and how that use overlaps with local traditional healers’ pharmacopeias. She is now following up that research with the first systematic study of non-human self-medication in the Peruvian Amazon. Much of Elodie’s work blends the worlds of science and art to document how people interact and co-exist with the flora and fauna around them and how anthropogenic disturbances are disrupting these symbiotic relationships. She has received several awards for her work and is a Fellow at both The Explorers Club and The Linnean Society.
Garth Stevenson

Musician and Composer
Garth Stevenson, a highly accomplished double bassist and composer especially known for creating music in direct communion with the natural world, traveled to Antarctica with the legendary biologist Dr. Roger Payne in 2010 to study whale communication and was able to imitate those calls on his double bass, attracting a dozen sei whales to their icebreaker. He has continued that work, most recently during a 2025 trip to Baja, Mexico to play for humpback whales, an extraordinary episode that was captured on film by National Geographic director Andy Mann.
J.P. Harpignies

Senior Producer | Bioneers
J.P. Harpignies, Bioneers Senior Producer, affiliated with Bioneers since 1990, is a Brooklyn, NYC-based consultant, conference producer, copy-editor and writer. A former Program Director at the New York Open Center and a senior review team member for the Buckminster Fuller Challenge from 2010 to 2017, he has authored or edited several books, including Political Ecosystems, Delusions of Normality, Visionary Plant Consciousness, and, most recently, Animal Encounters.
The UN formally recognizes the human right to water and sanitation, but in the U.S. today more than two million people still live without running water or safe plumbing, and tens of millions more face chronic water quality violations, supply disruptions or unaffordable bills. These challenges cut across the country from poor urban neighborhoods and rural communities to tribal nations, and they fall hardest on people of color, low-income households, and other marginalized groups. And climate change is magnifying these inequities, but even amidst these challenges, communities and leaders across the country are advancing practical solutions and building grassroots power to protect and expand the right to water. This panel brings together water justice activists from across the country who will share on-the-ground stories, policy insights, and emerging models for change and explore what it will take to finally realize the human right to water for all. Hosted by Heather Cooley, Chief Research and Program Officer, Pacific Institute. With: Morgan Shimabuku, Senior Research Specialist, Pacific Institute; Dr. Khalid Osman, Assistant Professor, Stanford University; Monica Lewis-Patrick, President and CEO, We the People of Detroit.
March 27th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm
Panelists
Morgan Shimabuku

Senior Research Specialist | Pacific Institute
Morgan Shimabuku, Senior Research Specialist at the Pacific Institute where she focuses on water equity and access, climate resilience, and water-related violent conflict, has had a long career spanning the non-profit, for-profit, and government sectors, but all focused on water resources, environmental science, and water conservation and efficiency. In her current role she engages in data analysis and synthesis, technical and non-technical writing, stakeholder engagement and listening, and solution-oriented framing of results.
Monica Lewis-Patrick

President and CEO | We the People of Detroit
Monica Lewis-Patrick, President/CEO of We the People of Detroit, is an educator, entrepreneur, scholar, and human rights activist especially renowned for her tireless activism for safe, affordable water. A member of: the National Water Affordability Table, All About Water/Freshwater Future Subcommittee, PolicyLink’s Water Equity and Climate Resilience Caucus (WECR), End Water Poverty, and the Governance Board for Healing Our Waters/Great Lakes Coalition (HOW), Lewis-Patrick also co-chairs the Water Committee on the Michigan Advisory Council on Environmental Justice.
Heather Cooley

Chief Research and Program Officer | Pacific Institute
Bio coming soon.
Opening Ceremonial Protocol with Hawai’in Youth – Three youth groups will open our participation in this gathering with oli (chants) and hula dances rooted in ancestral intention and connection. The ceremony calls upon Wākea (Sky Father), and Papahānaumoku (Mother Earth) and includes Hula Kauluwehiokekai by Mary Kawena Puku’i that honors marine life and the vital role of limu (seaweed), reminding us of our interconnectedness and responsibility to care for all life on Earth and one another.
Tribal nations across Indian Country are transforming their legal systems and influencing the broader legal landscape by formally recognizing rivers as living relatives with inherent rights. This past year, the Colorado River and Rappahannock tribes advanced “Rights of Nature” laws to protect their waterways and reinforce their sovereignty, exemplifying a larger reinvigoration of Indigenous jurisprudence. This panel features leaders and water protectors who have been instrumental in landmark legal victories who will discuss: how these laws were crafted through community consultation and collaborative processes among elders, youth, scientists, and legal experts; share their ongoing efforts to empower tribes to advocate for their waterways as relatives; and ensure that rivers, fish, and ecosystems are acknowledged as kin with standing under the law. Hosted by attorney Samantha Skenandore (Ho-Chunk), leading national expert on Federal Indian Law. With: Anne Richardson, Rappahannock Tribe Chief; William E. Ray, Jr., Tribal Chairman, Klamath Tribes, others TBA.
March 27th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm
Panelists
Samantha Skenandore

Leading Indigenous Rights Advocate and Attorney
Samantha Skenandore, a member of the Ho-Chunk Nation who previously served as a Tribal Attorney for the Ho-Chunk Nation’s Department of Justice and clerked for the United States Department of Justice, Indian Resources Section, is a founding partner of Skenandore Wilson LLP with 20+ years’ multi-jurisdictional legal experience working with tribal governments and enterprises to build governmental and economic infrastructures across Indian Country. She works in a wide range of legal domains, including: tribal and corporate governance, business transactions, economic development, real estate, cultural resources, water rights, labor issues, and representing clients before members of Congress, congressional committees and federal agencies. Samantha has also been integral to the Bioneers’ Indigeneity Program, helping develop a toolkit to help frame legal considerations for tribal nations to consider adoption of “Rights of Nature" laws.
Chief Anne Richardson

Chief | Rappahannock Tribe
Chief Anne Richardson, Chief of the Rappahannock Tribe since 1998, is a 4th generation chief in her family and the first woman to lead a tribe in Virginia since the 1700s. She has a long legacy of community leadership and service and has been instrumental in building her people’s institutions and infrastructure, including working tirelessly to purchase some of the tribe’s ancestral lands along the river that bears their name, developing a “Master Plan for the Return to the River,” a groundbreaking sovereignty and conservation initiative. Among her many achievements Chief Richardson founded the Indigenous Conservation Council for the Chesapeake Bay and serves or has served on a number of state, regional and federal advisory committees and boards.
The last year has brought an era of fear for immigrant communities as newcomers are being demonized, large-scale, heavy-handed enforcement has been unleashed, and our noblest traditions of welcome and inclusion are being discarded. And yet, despite the deliberate attempts to isolate and separate us, immigrants and non-immigrants alike have often been stepping up together to protect rights, build alliances, and fight for a better future for all of us. In this session, three leading activists: Cristina Jimenez, formerly of United We Dream; Guerline Jozef of the Haitian Bridge Alliance; and Shaw San Liu of the Chinese Progressive Alliance join Manuel Pastor of USC’s Equity Research Institute in a conversation about what these moments of resistance and solidarity mean for the broader movements to protect our democracy.
March 27th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm
Panelists
Cristina Jiménez Moreta

Co-Founder | United We Dream
Cristina Jiménez Moreta, who came to the U.S. from Ecuador in 1998 and grew up undocumented in Queens, New York, is an award-winning community organizer, bestselling author, and leading social justice activist. Co-founder and former Executive Director of United We Dream (UWD), the largest immigrant youth-led organization in the country, she has led multiple national and local campaigns for immigrant justice, including playing a leadership role in the campaign to win and implement the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals Program (DACA). A distinguished lecturer at the City University of New York, Jiménez was awarded a MacArthur Fellowship and named one of Time 100’s most influential people. She is the author of a bestselling debut memoir Dreaming of Home (2025).
Guerline Jozef

Founder and Executive Director | Haitian Bridge Alliance (HBA)
Guerline M. Jozef, a globally recognized, award-winning human rights advocate, strategist, and thought leader, is the founder and Executive Director of Haitian Bridge Alliance (HBA), the only Black-led, women-led, Haitian-American-led organization serving migrants at the U.S.–Mexico border, and co-founder of the Black Immigrants Bail Fund and the Cameroon Advocacy Network. Jozef, whose work has been featured in many leading publications and news outlets, has testified before the UN, the U.S. Congress, and the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.
Manuel Pastor

Director | Equity Research Institute at USC
Manuel Pastor, Ph.D., a Distinguished Professor of Sociology and American Studies & Ethnicity at the University of Southern California, currently directs the Equity Research Institute at USC. The inaugural holder of the Turpanjian Chair in Civil Society and Social Change at USC, Pastor’s research has generally focused on issues of the economic, environmental and social conditions facing low-income urban communities – and the social movements seeking to change those realities. He has won countless awards for his scholarship and advocacy and is the author or co-author of many books, including: Just Growth; Solidarity Economics; and, most recently (with Chris Benner), Charging Forward: Lithium Valley, Electric Vehicles, and a Just Future.
Shaw San Liu

Executive Director | Chinese Progressive Association
Bio coming soon.
Each afternoon, members of the Coalition to Dismantle the Doctrine of Discovery invite you to a community circle designed to help us grieve our individual and collective losses. By naming our losses and mourning together, we can open to grief’s potential for solace, regeneration and transformation. We will engage in breathing practices, journaling, sharing, and a simple ritual using a communal altar to which we are invited to bring offerings that honor our losses, including photos and/or responsibly foraged gifts from nature. Facilitated by Erin Selover, Limei Kat Chen and Sheri Hostetler.
Note: The room will be open each day for an hour starting at 2pm, before the session begins at 3, for those who want to come and sit quietly and/or write messages for the altar, but the room will be closed once each session begins to assure privacy.
March 27th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm
Panelists
Erin Selover

Buddhist Retreat Teacher | Spirit Rock Meditation Center
Erin Selover, a residential Buddhist retreat teacher at Spirit Rock Meditation Center in Northern California, somatic trauma therapist, and Rites of Passage guide currently living at the Occidental Arts and Ecology Center, is also: co-founder of the Celtic Wheel Sangha; a member of the Coalition to Dismantle the Doctrine of Discovery’s Buddhist Working Group to Protect Oak Flat; and board member of the cooperative nonprofit, Nourishing Futures.
Limei Kat Chen

Community Organizer, Researcher and Mindfulness Teacher
Limei Kat Chen, a Bay-Area-based queer Chinese diasporic community organizer, researcher, and mindfulness teacher who draws from several lineages (including the Plum Village tradition, Tantric Buddhism, Daoism, and Earth-based teachings), is active in the Buddhist Coalition for Oak Flat in solidarity with the Apache groups fighting to protect that sacred site and also organizes in the Bay Area with the Interfaith Movement for Human Integrity and 18 Million Rising, working to support survivors of violence and to use art and music as healing medicines.
Sheri Hostetler

Lead Pastor | First Mennonite Church of San Francisco
Sheri Hostetler, Lead Pastor at First Mennonite Church of San Francisco since 2000 and one of the founders of what is now called Inclusive Mennonite Pastors, a coalition of pastoral leaders seeking LGBTQ+ justice in the church, is co-founder of the Coalition to Dismantle the Doctrine of Discovery, which calls on Christian and Christian-descended people to address the extinction, enslavement, and extraction done on Indigenous lands. Co-author of So We and Our Children May Live: Following Jesus in Confronting the Climate Crisis (2023) and co-host of the Dismantling the Doctrine of Discovery Podcast, Sheri is also a spiritual director, a permaculturist descended from long lines of Amish-Mennonite farmers, and a poet whose work has appeared in A Cappella: Mennonite Voices in Poetry and Poetry of Presence: An Anthology of Mindfulness Poems.
Climate disruption is accelerating; social cohesion feels increasingly fragile; yet, even in the midst of intense uncertainty, the possibility for renewal remains. There can still be a “Great Turning”—though we may first need to face the great unravelling together. In this interactive session, Dr. Bob Dozor will bring together insights from Buddhist contemplative practice, Western philosophy, science, literature, and Indigenous wisdom to explore how we might restore balance—within ourselves and with the living Earth.
Through guided reflections, dialogue, and experiential practices, we will examine how our embodiment—our senses, emotions, and actions—shapes our capacity to connect with and care for our environment. This is an invitation to discover how deep awareness and compassion can become a foundation for ecological resilience. Join us for this powerful inquiry into the interdependence of inner and outer worlds and into how awakening mind and heart can support the flourishing of all life on Earth.
March 27th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm
Panelists
Bob Dozor

Medical Director | Integrative Medical Clinic of Santa Rosa
Bob Dozor, M.D., Medical Director of the Integrative Medical Clinic of Santa Rosa and the Nyingma Senior Retreat Center at Ratna Ling, holds a B.A. in the History and Philosophy of Science from the University of Chicago and an M.D. from UC, San Francisco. He has been a student of Buddhism since the 1960s and a dedicated student of Venerable Tarthang Tulku since 1972.
Movement is the most immediate portal to nervous system regulation, opening us to states of calm, connection and self-compassion, and the spine, the core “wild moving center” in our body, is also a pathway of our intuitive wisdom. In many ancient traditions it’s a pathway for Spirit. In this session, we will learn how to “bathe” our spine in breath and sound to restore its free-flowing movement, center our nervous systems, and invite greater ease, comfort, range, rhythm, and possibility in our expression, emotion and action. With: Amber Gray, longtime, widely-traveled human rights psychotherapist, innovative movement artist, master trainer and educator, Continuum teacher, and public health professional.
March 27th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm
Panelists
Amber Gray

Activist, Academic, Artist, Therapist, Dancer and Teacher
Amber Elizabeth Gray, Ph.D., is a widely traveled, highly experienced human rights psychotherapist, innovative movement artist, board certified dance/movement therapist, master trainer and educator, Continuum teacher, and public health professional with a decades-long track record working on social justice. An innovator in the use of somatic psychology and movement–based therapies with survivors of trauma, torture, war, and human rights abuses in a number of nations, she also draws from eco-psychology, contemplative psychotherapy, cognitive behavioral therapy, EMDR, somatic experiencing, and narrative exposure therapy in her clinical work and is the originator of the Poto Mitan Trauma & Resiliency Framework.
Although they receive less than 1% of climate funding, women-led climate justice grassroots projects around the world are generating cascading benefits, from greater gender and economic equity and less gender violence to improved biodiversity and ecosystems’ health. Simultaneously, the centrality to many Indigenous peoples’ cultures of traditional relationships to place and to honoring all of life as sacred are a tremendous resource in strengthening efforts to protect and renew biodiversity and water resources. Join an emergent conversation to explore what these two vastly under-resourced constituencies have to offer in the quest to co-create regenerative landscapes and futures. Hosted by Osprey Orielle Lake, founder and Executive Director of Women’s Earth and Climate Action Network (WECAN). With: Zainab Salbi, co-founder of Daughters for Earth; Dilafruz Khonikboyeva, Executive Director of Home Planet Fund.
March 27th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm
Panelists
Dilafruz Khonikboyeva

Executive Director | Home Planet Fund
Dilafruz Khonikboyeva, of indigenous Pamiri ancestry from Khorog, Tajikistan, is the Inaugural Executive Director of Home Planet Fund. Previously a political appointee in the Biden-Harris Administration who spent five years with the Aga Khan Development Network and eight years responding to conflict and climate crises, she is a transformational conflict expert, focused on civil war, environment and resource conflicts. Dilafruz has also served on the board of her alma mater, the Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter School for Peace and Conflict Resolution at George Mason University and led the Climate Change Working Group for Women of Color Advancing Peace, Security and Conflict Transformation (WCAPS).
Zainab Salbi

Co-Founder | Daughters for Earth
Zainab Salbi, a humanitarian, author, and media host who has dedicated her life to women’s rights and global freedom, is co-founder of Daughters for Earth, a philanthropic fund and a movement focused on supporting, celebrating, and mobilizing women to protect and restore our Earth. At age 23, she founded Women for Women International, which helped more than 460,000 women survivors of war rebuild their lives. Honored with the TIME100 Impact Award, she has been recognized by Oprah Winfrey, People, and Harper’s Bazaar for her groundbreaking leadership on behalf of women worldwide.
Osprey Orielle Lake

Founder and Executive Director | Women’s Earth and Climate Action Network
Osprey Orielle Lake, the founder and Executive Director of the Women’s Earth and Climate Action Network (WECAN), works internationally with grassroots, BIPOC and Indigenous leaders, policymakers, and diverse coalitions to build climate justice, resilient communities, and a just transition to a decentralized, democratized clean-energy future. Osprey, who sits on the executive committee for the Global Alliance for the Rights of Nature and on the steering committee for the Fossil Free Non-Proliferation Treaty, is the author of The Story is in Our Bones: How Worldviews and Climate Justice Can Remake a World in Crisis.
Whales hold deep significance for a number of Indigenous cultures. They are often revered as spirits, ancestors, and relatives who hold wisdom to care for the oceans and for humans. As some whale species have become critically endangered due to hunting, noise pollution, and climate change, Indigenous Peoples around the world are fighting to defend them through both traditional and novel means. In this panel, we will hear from Indigenous leaders fighting to protect whales. Topics include: the cultural and spiritual foundations of these movements; ways that Indigenous and Western sciences are being applied in tandem; and legal mechanisms rooted in Indigenous principles to protect whales. Moderated by Alexis Bunten (Yupu’ik/Unangan), Co-Director of the Bioneers Indigeneity Program. With: Chair of the Ngātiwai Trust Board, Aperahama Edwards (Ngātiwai); other TBA.
March 27th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm
Panelists
Aperahama Edwards

Māori Leader, Theologian and Indigenous Rights Advocate
Aperahama Edwards is a Māori (of the Ngātiwai tribe) leader, theologian, and Indigenous rights advocate whose work is grounded in Māori knowledge, practices and worldviews that recognize the living personhood of the natural world and that reframe environmental protection as a relationship of kinship and obligation rather than ownership, challenging extractive systems and advocating Indigenous-led guardianship. A champion for the Māori language and its revitalization, he is also a strong advocate for the Māori-led declaration affirming whales as sentient ancestors with inherent rights.
Alexis Bunten

Co-Director, Indigeneity Program | Bioneers
Alexis Bunten, Ph.D., (Aleut/Yup’ik), Co-Director of Bioneers’ Indigeneity Program, has been a researcher, media-maker, manager, consultant, and curriculum developer for organizations including the Sealaska Heritage Institute, Alaska Native Heritage Center, and the FrameWorks Institute. She has published widely about Indigenous and environmental issues, and is the author of So, how long have you been Native?: Life as an Alaska Native Tour Guide.
Are we living in truly unprecedented times, or are we simply witnessing recurring historical patterns? A century ago, the world looked much the same as today: emergence from a devastating pandemic; rising authoritarianism; extreme wealth inequality; rapid technological changes; mass migration; and social upheaval. What followed was the Great Depression and World War II. How do we avoid repeating such a dark history and chart a different course? In this session, Kevin John Fong, author ofThe Five Elements: An East Asian Approach to Achieve Organizational Health, Professional Growth, and Personal Well-Being, will use the lens of the Five Elements framework, an ancient wisdom tradition, to explore lasting solutions that can emerge when we cultivate trust, honor everyone’s contributions, and create genuine belonging, so that we can forge a transformative path forward.
March 27th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm
Panelists
Kevin John Fong

Founder | Kahakulei Institute
Kevin John Fong, founder of the Kahakulei Institute (whose mission is to “weave people and possibilities to cultivate communities of belonging”), is the author of The Five Elements: An East Asian Approach to Achieve Organizational Health, Professional Growth, and Personal Well-Being. He has lectured about and taught the “Five Elements” approach to problem-solving to hundreds of organizations and thousands of people from Silicon Valley to rural Mississippi, from primary schools in New Mexico to the White House.
Regenerative landscaping is an ecological approach to land management that goes far beyond mere sustainability to restore and improve soil health, enhance biodiversity, and create resilient landscapes that sequester carbon, optimize water flows, and support local wildlife. It makes use of native plants, composting, rainwater harvesting and other methods to heal the land by working with natural processes with a minimum of human intervention. It is also is an creative practice that integrates imagination, local context and physical material to achieve harmonies: of earth and water, plants and sunlight, animals and people. In this session, Erik Ohlsen, renowned certified permaculture designer/practitioner and teacher, author of The Regenerative Landscaper: Design and Build Landscapes That Repair the Environment, will share his insights into how we can reconnect with the nuanced understanding of how natural systems function and the beneficial processes ecosystems provide to humans and begin our own journeys of regeneration. Moderated by Arty Mangan, Director of the Bioneers Restorative Food Systems program.
March 27th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm
Panelists
Erik Ohlsen

Founder | Permaculture Artisans
Erik Ohlsen, a master of regenerative design, internationally-recognized Permaculture teacher, landscape contractor, award-winning author, farmer, herbalist, and practitioner of Nordic folk traditions, has founded numerous organizations that regenerate ecosystems, including his award-winning landscape design and contracting firm, Permaculture Artisans, established in 2006. Erik has committed decades to repairing ecosystems and connecting people with the land throughout the globe, designing and implementing hundreds of regenerated landscapes and farms, growing food and capturing millions of gallons of water per year.
Arty Mangan

Restorative Food Systems Director | Bioneers
Arty Mangan, Director of the Bioneers Restorative Food Systems program, worked as farm worker and local food entrepreneur. He has also worked with Indigenous farmers growing traditional crops and with Black farmers developing ecological agricultural trainings. His current focus is on the intersection of climate and regenerative agriculture. Mangan is a former board president of the Ecological Farming Association.
The microbiologist and humanist René Dubos said that “each civilization creates its own diseases,” but it’s also true that every civilization can create the conditions for its own health. Today we are confronting a slew of public health threats including: the climate crisis, chemical and plastic manufacturing, food and economic insecurity, oil and gas extraction, and water shortages arising from fracking and data centers. This panel featuring three of the most renowned public health visionaries of our era will explore how we can empower communities with scientific knowledge, legal tools and organizing strategies, (including the precautionary principle) to stop the further toxification of our environment and restore our ecosystems to foster conditions conducive to health. Hosted by Carolyn Raffensperger, MA, JD Executive Director of SEHN. With: Ted Schettler, MD, MPH, a physician and SEHN’s Science Director; and Sandra Steingraber, Ph.D., a biologist and SEHN’s Senior Scientist and bestselling author.
March 27th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm
Panelists
Carolyn Raffensperger

Executive Director | Science and Environmental Health Network
Carolyn Raffensperger, Executive Director of the Science and Environmental Health Network, which, since 1998 has been the leading proponent in the U.S. of the Precautionary Principle as a basis for environmental and public health policy, was formerly an archeologist but, horrified at the destruction of the lands in which she was working, went to law school and became an activist to protect ecosystems and future generations. A co-convener of the historic 1998 Wingspread Conference on the Precautionary Principle and the Women’s Congresses for Future Generations held in 2012, 2014, and 2026, Carolyn co-edited Precautionary Tools for Reshaping Environmental Policy (2006) and Protecting Public Health and the Environment: Implementing the Precautionary Principle (1999).
Ted Schettler

Science and Environmental Health Network | Science Director
Ted Schettler MD, MPH, the Science Director of the Science and Environmental Health Network, who has a medical degree from Case Western Reserve University and a master’s degree in public health from Harvard, is the author of: The Ecology of Breast Cancer and the co-author of several books, including: Generations at Risk: Reproductive Health and the Environment; In Harm's Way: Toxic Threats to Child Development, and: Environmental Threats to Health Aging. He has also published many articles in peer-reviewed journals and has served on advisory committees of the U.S. EPA and the National Academy of Sciences.
Sandra Steingraber

Senior Scientist | Science and Environmental Health Network
Bio coming soon.
The current federal administration is seeking to dramatically roll back decades of progress on protecting and revitalizing our public lands and waters, threatening to sell and/or open to extractive industries and developers enormous swathes of our common heritage while eviscerating any regulation of pollution or toxicity. In this panel several key organizations working to push back, limit the damage and build movements to expand the commons not shrink it, and protect and regenerate biodiversity not hasten the extinction crisis, will share their analyses and strategies. With: Sharmeen Morrison, Senior Attorney in Earthjustice’s Biodiversity Defense Program; Katie Umekobo, Managing Director, Lands, Nature at NRDC; others TBA.
March 27th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm
Panelists
Sharmeen Morrison

Senior Attorney | Earthjustice
Sharmeen Morrison, J.D., a Senior Attorney with Earthjustice’s Biodiversity Defense Program, which engages in national litigation to confront the major drivers of biodiversity loss, has litigated cases to protect greater sage-grouse from oil and gas drilling in Wyoming, manatees from nutrient pollution in Florida’s Indian River Lagoon, golden-cheeked warblers from urban sprawl in Texas Hill Country, and insect pollinators from pesticide overuse nationwide.
Each afternoon, members of the Coalition to Dismantle the Doctrine of Discovery invite you to a community circle designed to help us grieve our individual and collective losses. By naming our losses and mourning together, we can open to grief’s potential for solace, regeneration and transformation. We will engage in breathing practices, journaling, sharing, and a simple ritual using a communal altar to which we are invited to bring offerings that honor our losses, including photos and/or responsibly foraged gifts from nature. Facilitated by Erin Selover, Limei Kat Chen and Sheri Hostetler.
Note: The room will be open each day for an hour starting at 2pm, before the session begins at 3, for those who want to come and sit quietly and/or write messages for the altar, but the room will be closed once each session begins to assure privacy.
March 27th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm
Panelists
Erin Selover

Buddhist Retreat Teacher | Spirit Rock Meditation Center
Erin Selover, a residential Buddhist retreat teacher at Spirit Rock Meditation Center in Northern California, somatic trauma therapist, and Rites of Passage guide currently living at the Occidental Arts and Ecology Center, is also: co-founder of the Celtic Wheel Sangha; a member of the Coalition to Dismantle the Doctrine of Discovery’s Buddhist Working Group to Protect Oak Flat; and board member of the cooperative nonprofit, Nourishing Futures.
Limei Kat Chen

Community Organizer, Researcher and Mindfulness Teacher
Limei Kat Chen, a Bay-Area-based queer Chinese diasporic community organizer, researcher, and mindfulness teacher who draws from several lineages (including the Plum Village tradition, Tantric Buddhism, Daoism, and Earth-based teachings), is active in the Buddhist Coalition for Oak Flat in solidarity with the Apache groups fighting to protect that sacred site and also organizes in the Bay Area with the Interfaith Movement for Human Integrity and 18 Million Rising, working to support survivors of violence and to use art and music as healing medicines.
Sheri Hostetler

Lead Pastor | First Mennonite Church of San Francisco
Sheri Hostetler, Lead Pastor at First Mennonite Church of San Francisco since 2000 and one of the founders of what is now called Inclusive Mennonite Pastors, a coalition of pastoral leaders seeking LGBTQ+ justice in the church, is co-founder of the Coalition to Dismantle the Doctrine of Discovery, which calls on Christian and Christian-descended people to address the extinction, enslavement, and extraction done on Indigenous lands. Co-author of So We and Our Children May Live: Following Jesus in Confronting the Climate Crisis (2023) and co-host of the Dismantling the Doctrine of Discovery Podcast, Sheri is also a spiritual director, a permaculturist descended from long lines of Amish-Mennonite farmers, and a poet whose work has appeared in A Cappella: Mennonite Voices in Poetry and Poetry of Presence: An Anthology of Mindfulness Poems.
Bioneers Afterglow is a happy hour open to all conference attendees at the end of each day of presentations, providing a casual atmosphere with snacks, drinks, music and revelry. Party in the Cabaret, hang out in the Main Stage, or visit our fabulous Tea Lounge upstairs!
Important Note: This event is well-attended in a not-enormous space and has a festive atmosphere with a fairly elevated ambient noise level, so it is best for those accustomed to somewhat crowded bars or music venues. We will be providing alternatives throughout the conference for those seeking quieter and/or more structured networking opportunities.
March 27th | 6:15 pm to 8:30 pm | The Marsh Arts Center

Renowned musician, composer and eco-activist Garth Stevenson has appeared on some 50 albums, collaborated with leading musicians from all over the globe, and counts among his mentors the legendary biologist Roger Payne, the first to record humpback whales in the 1960s. Garth has played his double bass not only for people around the world but also among seals, penguins, icebergs, and in the bow of small boats where he imitates whale calls on his bass. He will perform music based on those extraordinary interspecies exchanges accompanied by stunning video footage.
Note: This event is not included in the conference registration, so Bioneers attendees must register separately for it.
March 27th | 8:30 pm to 10:30 pm | Freight & Salvage
Note: A separate $45 fee is required for this event.
Saturday, March 28th
March 28th | 8:50 am to 9:05 am | Zellerbach Hall
Deb Lane

Drummer and Water Conservation Administrator
Deb Lane has been playing the drums for most of her life. Formerly a member of the Santa Cruz World Beat Band, Pele Juju, she performs with artists throughout the Bay Area and beyond. In addition to her musical endeavors, Deb is a leader in water-use efficiency and works as a Water Conservation Administrator.
Afia Walking Tree

Percussionist, Educator and Facilitator
Afia Walking Tree, M.Ed., a Jamaican-born feminist percussionist, educator, and facilitator working at the “crossroads of rhythm, land, and liberation,” is an adjunct professor at the California Institute of Integral Studies (CIIS), an Artist-in-Residence with the African American Policy Forum, and One Billion Rising/V-Day’s Jamaica Coordinator. Afia has returned to Jamaica to steward a 25-acre regenerative land-based sanctuary and learning hub (Solidarity Yaad), where she curates nature-immersed healing journeys and eco-experiences rooted in ancestral wisdom, agroforestry, food security, and community care, prioritizing BIPOC women, and gender-expansive, queer, and trans-masculine people.
March 28th | 9:20 am to 9:35 am | Zellerbach Hall
Nina Simons

Co-Founder and Chief Relationship Strategist | Bioneers
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. An award-winning social entrepreneur, Nina teaches and speaks internationally, and previously served as President of Seeds of Change and Director of Strategic Marketing for Odwalla.
John Warner, one of the co-founders of the entire field of “Green Chemistry” who co-authored its defining text and co-articulated its core principles, works to create commercial technologies inspired by nature. An inventor with over 300 patents who has received countless prestigious awards, he has also been, with his wife, Amy Cannon, a thought leader and prime mover of green chemistry education. In this talk, he will share his vision of how we can draw from the molecular design genius of nature, which has been running countless rigorous chemistry experiments for nearly 4 billion years, to create benign products and technologies that provide for human needs without contaminating the biosphere and endangering our health.
March 28th | 9:40 am to 10:02 am | Zellerbach Hall
John Warner

Inventor and Co-Founder of the Field of Green Chemistry
John Warner, Ph.D., one of the founders of the field of Green Chemistry who co-authored its defining text “Green Chemistry: Theory and Practice” (with Paul Anastas), is a chemistry inventor and entrepreneur who works to create commercial technologies inspired by nature consistent with the principles of green chemistry. He holds over 350 industrial chemistry patents, and his inventions have served as the basis for several new companies in photovoltaics, neurochemistry, construction materials, water harvesting, and cosmetics. John, who has received many prestigious awards from within the chemistry industry, government, academia and civil society organizations, has had a distinguished academic career, including as a tenured full-professor at UMASS Boston and Lowell. In 2007 he co-founded (with Amy Cannon) Beyond Benign, a non-profit dedicated to sustainability and green chemistry education. He holds academic appointments at Monash University in Australia, Chulalongkorn University in Thailand, Somaiya University in India, University of Birmingham in the UK, Rochester Institute of Technology in the US, and Technical University of Berlin in Germany where they have named the “John Warner Center for Start Ups in Green Chemistry.” John also currently serves as CEO and CTO of Technology Greenhouse.
As we today once again face the aggression of authoritarian oligarchy, there is a great deal we can learn from how food workers confronted fascism a century ago. Socialist and anarchist movements around the world gave birth to innovative solidarity strategies that permitted them to survive a fascist onslaught, care for their communities, and put food on the table in times of disease and war. Raj Patel, one of the world’s leading experts on sustainable food systems and a tireless advocate for food justice, will share what his research about these inspiring movements tells us about how we too can draw on the best human impulses to build economic systems built on solidarity and mutual aid.
March 28th | 10:05 am to 10:28 am | Zellerbach Hall
Raj Patel

Activist, Journalist, and Filmmaker
Raj Patel, an award-winning author, film-maker and academic, is a Research Professor in the Lyndon B Johnson School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas, Austin who has worked for the World Bank and WTO but also protested against them around the world and testified about the causes of the global food crisis to the US, UK and EU governments. A member of the International Panel of Experts on Sustainable Food Systems and of the council of Progressive International, he has written extensively for a range of scholarly journals in economics, philosophy, politics and public health and also contributes frequently to a range of other publications, including The Guardian, Financial Times, New York Times, and Scientific American. He is the author of: Stuffed and Starved: The Hidden Battle for the World Food System and The Value of Nothing, and co-author of: A History of the World in Seven Cheap Things and (with Rupa Marya) of: Inflamed: Deep Medicine and The Anatomy of Injustice. His first film, co-directed with Zak Piper, is the award-winning documentary The Ants & The Grasshopper. He also co-hosted the food politics podcast The Secret Ingredient.
March 28th | 10:50 am to 11:00 am | Zellerbach Hall
The Destiny Arts Youth Performance Company

The Destiny Arts Youth Performance Company (DAYPC) is a diverse group of teens that collaborates with professional artists to create dynamic, original productions. Combining hip hop, modern and aerial dance, theater, song, and rap, company members take the stage to tell stories that stem from their lived experiences and express their visions for a world transformed. Since 1993, DAYPC has performed original work for up to 25,000 audience members annually, garnering critical acclaim and widespread community support for both their technical prowess and their commitment to advancing inclusivity, equity, and justice.
March 28th | 11:02 am to 11:10 am | Zellerbach Hall
March 28th | 11:25 am to 11:48 am | Zellerbach Hall
Samantha Skenandore

Leading Indigenous Rights Advocate and Attorney
Samantha Skenandore, a member of the Ho-Chunk Nation who previously served as a Tribal Attorney for the Ho-Chunk Nation’s Department of Justice and clerked for the United States Department of Justice, Indian Resources Section, is a founding partner of Skenandore Wilson LLP with 20+ years’ multi-jurisdictional legal experience working with tribal governments and enterprises to build governmental and economic infrastructures across Indian Country. She works in a wide range of legal domains, including: tribal and corporate governance, business transactions, economic development, real estate, cultural resources, water rights, labor issues, and representing clients before members of Congress, congressional committees and federal agencies. Samantha has also been integral to the Bioneers’ Indigeneity Program, helping develop a toolkit to help frame legal considerations for tribal nations to consider adoption of “Rights of Nature" laws.
Michael Pollan, one of the nation’s most influential non-fiction writers and investigative journalists, is the author of nine previous bestselling books, including How to Change Your Mind; In Defense of Food; The Omnivore’s Dilemma; and The Botany of Desire. Today, hewill trace his six-year quest to solve the greatest mystery in nature: how, and why, are we conscious? That Odyssey, which he describes in his newest book, A World Appears: A Journey into Consciousness, is an enthralling tale that begins in a brain lab in Seattle, and ends, of all places, in a cave in the mountains of New Mexico, where he discovers that explaining consciousness may be less important than learning to practice it, fully, in our everyday lives.
March 28th | Noon to 12:25 pm | Zellerbach Hall
Michael Pollan

Bestselling Author and Journalist
Michael Pollan is a writer, teacher and activist. His most recent book, A World Appears: A Journey into Consciousness, was published earlier this year. He is the author of nine previous books, including: This is Your Mind on Plants, How to Change Your Mind, Cooked, Food Rules, In Defense of Food, The Omnivore’s Dilemma, and The Botany of Desire, all bestsellers. Pollan has taught writing at Harvard and UC Berkeley and has been a Guggenheim and Radcliffe Fellow. In 2010 Time Magazine named him one of the 100 most influential people in the world.
In this experiential workshop we’ll draw from The Art of Radical Listening: Revealing Collective Wisdom for Change, co-authored by our two facilitators: rainforest protector/environmental activist, founder of Health in Harmony, Kinari Webb, M.D.; and musician, educator, and organizer, Rev. Patricia Plude; to discover how we can use the groundbreaking method of “Radical Listening” to deepen our connections with each other and reveal our collective wisdom, equipping us with tools and insights that can make us far more effective as we work to guarantee a more thriving and just future for all. Come and learn to listen for life.
March 28th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm
Panelists
Patricia Plude

Co-Pastor | First Mennonite Church of San Francisco
Rev. Dr. Patricia Plude, a musician, community organizer, and lifelong educator, (including twelve years as a professor at Santa Clara University), is co-pastor of First Mennonite Church of San Francisco, where for twenty-five years she and her colleagues have sought to model transformative, justice-oriented, feminine leadership. She is the co-author (with Dr. Kinari Webb) of The Art of Radical Listening: Revealing Collective Wisdom for Change.
Kinari Webb

Founder | Health in Harmony
Kinari Webb, MD., is a leading figure in rainforest conservation and public health who, recognizing the link between human and environmental health, founded the organization, Health in Harmony (HIH), to address rainforest devastation in West Kalimantan, Indonesia. Inspired by studying orangutans in 1993, she returned after graduating from Yale School of Medicine and began work in Sukadana, West Kalimantan, Indonesia in 2007 with a focus on listening to rainforest communities’ own proposed solutions. HIH now works in 9.4 million hectares of rainforest in Indonesia, Madagascar, and Brazil. Honored with Ashoka and Rainier Arhnold Fellowships and profiled in numerous media outlets, Webb's work has garnered international recognition. She is the author of: “Guardians of the Trees: A journey of hope through healing the planet” and co-author (with Rev. Patricia Plude) of: “The Art of Radical listening: Revealing collective wisdom for change.”
Bioneers is delighted to be able to bring together two groundbreaking figures in the struggle for an equitable and healthy food system, one working on the global architecture of that system, the other a hands-on farmer and educator exemplifying how solidarity can empower dispossessed communities to reclaim their food sovereignty. Raj Patel is one of the world’s leading experts on sustainable food systems and a tireless activist against neocolonial, extractive agriculture; Leah Penniman is the visionary founder of Soul Fire Farm and author of Farming While Black. In this fascinating conversation, they will explore how, even in this reactionary period, we can build effective movements to regenerate our soils, ecosystems, ancestral cultures, and communities, and nourish our bodies and souls. Moderator TBA.
March 28th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm
Panelists
Raj Patel

Activist, Journalist, and Filmmaker
Raj Patel, an award-winning author, film-maker and academic, is a Research Professor in the Lyndon B Johnson School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas, Austin who has worked for the World Bank and WTO but also protested against them around the world and testified about the causes of the global food crisis to the US, UK and EU governments. A member of the International Panel of Experts on Sustainable Food Systems and of the council of Progressive International, he has written extensively for a range of scholarly journals in economics, philosophy, politics and public health and also contributes frequently to a range of other publications, including The Guardian, Financial Times, New York Times, and Scientific American. He is the author of: Stuffed and Starved: The Hidden Battle for the World Food System and The Value of Nothing, and co-author of: A History of the World in Seven Cheap Things and (with Rupa Marya) of: Inflamed: Deep Medicine and The Anatomy of Injustice. His first film, co-directed with Zak Piper, is the award-winning documentary The Ants & The Grasshopper. He also co-hosted the food politics podcast The Secret Ingredient.
Leah Penniman

Farmer, Food Sovereignty Activist and Educator
Leah Penniman, a Black Kreyol farmer, author, mother, and food justice activist who has been tending the soil and organizing for an anti-racist food system for 25 years, currently serves as founding Co-Executive Director of Farm Operations at Soul Fire Farm in Grafton, New York, a Black & Brown-led project that works toward food and land justice. She is the author of: Farming While Black: Soul Fire Farm's Practical Guide to Liberation on the Land (2018) and Black Earth Wisdom: Soulful Conversations with Black Environmentalists (2023).
Women are central to the Great Law of Peace and Governance within the Six Nations, whose federalist structure valuing peace, justice and collective wellbeing inspired democracy in the United States. A timely new book, American Indigenous Democracy: A Call to Interdependence, focuses on the teachings of Haudenosaunee traditional thinking, its influence at the foundation of the American republic, and its continuing power and relevance. This session will highlight women’s leadership and governance rooted in peace and matrilineal values by featuring revered contemporary leaders, author-activists, elders and clan mothers who are also key contributors to the text. They will speak to the themes of women’s leadership, governance rooted in peace and matrilineal values and wisdom from their own life’s work and activism. Moderated by Jose Barreiro (Taíno), editor of the book. With contributing authors: Katsi Cook (Mohawk); Beverly Cook (Saint Regis Mohawk); Michelle Shenandoah (Oneida); and Louise Herne McDonald (Mohawk).
March 28th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm
Panelists
Katsi Cook

Executive Director | Spirit Aligned Leadership Program
Tekatsi:tsia’kwa Katsi Cook (Wolf Clan member of the Akwesasne Mohawk Nation), an Onkwehonweh traditional midwife, lifelong advocate of Indigenous midwifery and Native women’s health throughout the life-cycle (drawing from the longhouse traditionalist teaching that “woman Is the first environment”), is Executive Director of the Spirit Aligned Leadership Program. Her work over many decades has spanned a range of worlds and disciplines at the intersections of environmental reproductive health and justice, research, and policy. Katsi’s groundbreaking environmental research of Mohawk mother’s milk revealed the intergenerational impact of industrial chemicals on the health of her community, and she is a major figure in a movement of matrilineal awareness and “rematriation” in Native life.
Jose Barreiro

Author and Activist
Jose Barreiro (Hatuey), an author and activist, is a Taino elder and a journalist who has covered Indian Country issues and themes for four decades. Among many other achievements, Barreiro directed several major multi-year exhibitions at the Smithsonian-National Museum of the American Indian between 2006 and 2017, including: "Taino: Native Heritage and Identity in the Caribbean," and “The Great Inka Road: Engineering an Empire." A resident of Akwesasne Mohawk Nation, Barreiro retired from the Smithsonian Institution, as a Scholar Emeritus, in 2017, but serves as an advisor to several Indigenous community projects in Guatemala, Cuba and Peru.
When UN leaders failed to pass a meaningful global plastics treaty, young organizers from across Hawaiʻi and Louisiana’s Cancer Alley came together to confront plastic pollution from both ends of the pipeline, i.e.—where it’s produced, and where it washes ashore. In this skill-building interactive, participants in the Bioneers Native Youth Ambassador Program from communities severely harmed by the plastic cycle will share their proven strategies to modify personal behavior, advocate for sustainable plastic policies, build zero-waste systems, and advance efforts to phase out single-use plastics. This youth-led interactive is for anyone living on the frontlines of endemic pollution or climate catastrophe—and for anyone who wants to learn from and support them. With: Lael Kylin Judson from Rural Roots Louisiana and Kona Smith and Chazlyn Mukeini from Recycle Hawaii.
March 28th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm
Panelists
Lael Kylin Judson

| Rural Roots Louisiana
Lael “Kylin” Judson, a junior honor student at The Dunham School in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and a resident of Ascension Parish, has lost loved ones to pollution-related illnesses and works with Rural Roots Louisiana on Environmental Justice issues centered around Cancer Alley, a region disproportionately impacted by industrial toxicity. Kylin aspires to becoming an Environmental Lawyer dedicated to addressing systemic inequities and protecting vulnerable communities.
Each afternoon, members of the Coalition to Dismantle the Doctrine of Discovery invite you to a community circle designed to help us grieve our individual and collective losses. By naming our losses and mourning together, we can open to grief’s potential for solace, regeneration and transformation. We will engage in breathing practices, journaling, sharing, and a simple ritual using a communal altar to which we are invited to bring offerings that honor our losses, including photos and/or responsibly foraged gifts from nature. Facilitated by Erin Selover, Limei Kat Chen and Sheri Hostetler.
Note: The room will be open each day for an hour starting at 2pm, before the session begins at 3, for those who want to come and sit quietly and/or write messages for the altar, but the room will be closed once each session begins to assure privacy.
March 28th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm
Panelists
Erin Selover

Buddhist Retreat Teacher | Spirit Rock Meditation Center
Erin Selover, a residential Buddhist retreat teacher at Spirit Rock Meditation Center in Northern California, somatic trauma therapist, and Rites of Passage guide currently living at the Occidental Arts and Ecology Center, is also: co-founder of the Celtic Wheel Sangha; a member of the Coalition to Dismantle the Doctrine of Discovery’s Buddhist Working Group to Protect Oak Flat; and board member of the cooperative nonprofit, Nourishing Futures.
Limei Kat Chen

Community Organizer, Researcher and Mindfulness Teacher
Limei Kat Chen, a Bay-Area-based queer Chinese diasporic community organizer, researcher, and mindfulness teacher who draws from several lineages (including the Plum Village tradition, Tantric Buddhism, Daoism, and Earth-based teachings), is active in the Buddhist Coalition for Oak Flat in solidarity with the Apache groups fighting to protect that sacred site and also organizes in the Bay Area with the Interfaith Movement for Human Integrity and 18 Million Rising, working to support survivors of violence and to use art and music as healing medicines.
Sheri Hostetler

Lead Pastor | First Mennonite Church of San Francisco
Sheri Hostetler, Lead Pastor at First Mennonite Church of San Francisco since 2000 and one of the founders of what is now called Inclusive Mennonite Pastors, a coalition of pastoral leaders seeking LGBTQ+ justice in the church, is co-founder of the Coalition to Dismantle the Doctrine of Discovery, which calls on Christian and Christian-descended people to address the extinction, enslavement, and extraction done on Indigenous lands. Co-author of So We and Our Children May Live: Following Jesus in Confronting the Climate Crisis (2023) and co-host of the Dismantling the Doctrine of Discovery Podcast, Sheri is also a spiritual director, a permaculturist descended from long lines of Amish-Mennonite farmers, and a poet whose work has appeared in A Cappella: Mennonite Voices in Poetry and Poetry of Presence: An Anthology of Mindfulness Poems.
In this session Bioneers ally Taproot Earth, a climate justice organization with roots in Louisiana, will bring together Indigenous women leaders from around the world to share their Earth-honoring perspectives and describe the extraordinary pilgrimage they undertook to gather waters from the Nile, Mississippi and Amazon rivers and return them to East Africa where the oldest human bones are found as a necessary spiritual component of their climate justice, Indigenous sovereignty and Black liberation struggles. Hosted by Colette Pichon Battle, Esq., Taproot Earth. With: Phoenix Rose, Ifa spiritual leader from Louisiana; others TBA
March 28th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm
Panelists
Colette Pichon Battle

Co-Founder | Taproot Earth
Colette Pichon Battle, a generational native of Bayou Liberty, Louisiana, is an award-winning lawyer and prominent climate justice organizer. In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, when Black and Indigenous communities were largely left out of federal recovery systems, Colette led the Gulf Coast Center for Law and Policy (GCCLP) to provide relief and legal assistance to Gulf South communities of color. After 17 years at GCCLP’s helm, as frontline communities from the Gulf South to the Global South face ever more devastating storms, droughts, wildfires, heat, and land loss, she co-founded Taproot Earth to create connections and power across issues, movements, and geographies.
In a current moment characterized by intertwined hostilities and manufactured borderlines, how can we lean into the wisdom of the nonbinary to aid us in building lasting solidarities that transcend identity politics? These times call for bold visions to dissolve the devastating effects of a politics of separation. In this heartful emergent conversation, we will center storytelling grounded in queer and trans lives, spiritual wisdom traditions, and Indigenous ecological knowledge. Hosted by Sonali Sangeeta Balajee, founder of SSOMA (Spiritual Social Medicinal Apothecary). With: Willow Defebaugh, Editor-in-Chief, Atmos; Carol Cano, founder and Executive Director of Braided Wisdom; and Kate Morales, multi-faceted cultural worker, founder of the Somatic Scribing Lab.
March 28th | 3:00 pm to 4:15 pm
Panelists
Sonali Sangeeta Balajee

Founder | Spiritual Social Medicinal Apothecary (SSoMA)
Sonali Sangeeta Balajee, an artist, organizer, and mindfulness/yoga instructor, is the founder of: the Spiritual Social Medicinal Apothecary (SSoMA), a spiritual and political project; and Our Bodhi Project, which focuses on healthy movement-building through enlivening the connection between social and spiritual wellness. Sonali previously spent 13 years in U.S. local government, creating, leading, and managing social justice and racial equity initiatives and has had a long community organizing background focused on climate and racial justice, youth development, death-and-dying, and HIV/AIDS-related advocacy and service. She also currently serves on the boards of Bioneers and Worldtrust.
Willow Defebaugh

Co-Founder and Editor-in-Chief | Atmos
Willow Defebaugh, Brooklyn-based co-founder and Editor-in-Chief of Atmos Magazine, an award-winning climate and culture media platform that tells stories about the environment through a lens of creativity, is also the author of The Overview, a deep ecology newsletter and book. A lifelong student of nature who graduated with a degree in creative writing from the University of Michigan, her work has been widely published, including in: Vogue, Harper's Bazaar, Teen Vogue, V Magazine, Interview, i-D, BBC, The Guardian, them, and New York Magazine.
Kate Morales

Founder | Somatic Scribing Lab
Kate Morales braids visual media, performance art, ritual, theater and play in the pursuit of collective eco-social healing. Founder (in 2022) of the Somatic Scribing Lab, a hub for politicized artists and facilitators, Kate also hosts and produces the Somatic Scribing Podcast; directs Playlab, an intergenerational embodied research ensemble; and is a writer and convener of transnational conversations about queer pedagogy.
Our bones remember. Many ancient wisdom practices honor the bones’ ability to seed and hold memory, to be pathways of vibrational communication and healing. In this session, we will discover “singing our bones,” a highly effective mindful, restorative “vibratory medicine” practice that supports softening the connective tissue that scaffolds us, triggering a renewed sense of aliveness as we invoke the spiraling dancers our bones truly are. With: Amber Gray, deeply experienced human rights psychotherapist, innovative movement artist, master trainer and educator, Continuum teacher, and public health professional.
March 28th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm
Panelists
Amber Gray

Activist, Academic, Artist, Therapist, Dancer and Teacher
Amber Elizabeth Gray, Ph.D., is a widely traveled, highly experienced human rights psychotherapist, innovative movement artist, board certified dance/movement therapist, master trainer and educator, Continuum teacher, and public health professional with a decades-long track record working on social justice. An innovator in the use of somatic psychology and movement–based therapies with survivors of trauma, torture, war, and human rights abuses in a number of nations, she also draws from eco-psychology, contemplative psychotherapy, cognitive behavioral therapy, EMDR, somatic experiencing, and narrative exposure therapy in her clinical work and is the originator of the Poto Mitan Trauma & Resiliency Framework.
Chemistry underpins 96% of all manufactured goods, but most materials and products are designed using processes that generate excess waste, rely on hazardous substances, generate carbon emissions, and cause long-term damage to human and environmental health. The root cause is upstream: sustainability has not been prioritized in the design of chemical and material products. Our educational systems need to be transformed to prepare chemists and scientists to design more sustainable products. John Warner, world-renowned inventor of green chemistry technologies, and Amy Cannon, a leading voice for systemic change in chemistry education will share their work on such key initiatives as the Green Chemistry Commitment, which equips universities to integrate green chemistry across curricula, research and training. These initiatives and more are enabling a new generation of scientists to create breakthrough technologies that will enable a more sustainable, circular and regenerative economy and society.
March 28th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm
Panelists
John Warner

Inventor and Co-Founder of the Field of Green Chemistry
John Warner, Ph.D., one of the founders of the field of Green Chemistry who co-authored its defining text “Green Chemistry: Theory and Practice” (with Paul Anastas), is a chemistry inventor and entrepreneur who works to create commercial technologies inspired by nature consistent with the principles of green chemistry. He holds over 350 industrial chemistry patents, and his inventions have served as the basis for several new companies in photovoltaics, neurochemistry, construction materials, water harvesting, and cosmetics. John, who has received many prestigious awards from within the chemistry industry, government, academia and civil society organizations, has had a distinguished academic career, including as a tenured full-professor at UMASS Boston and Lowell. In 2007 he co-founded (with Amy Cannon) Beyond Benign, a non-profit dedicated to sustainability and green chemistry education. He holds academic appointments at Monash University in Australia, Chulalongkorn University in Thailand, Somaiya University in India, University of Birmingham in the UK, Rochester Institute of Technology in the US, and Technical University of Berlin in Germany where they have named the “John Warner Center for Start Ups in Green Chemistry.” John also currently serves as CEO and CTO of Technology Greenhouse.
Amy Cannon

Co-Founder and Executive Director | Beyond Benign
Amy Cannon, Ph.D., co-founder and Executive Director of Beyond Benign, a global non-profit dedicated to green chemistry education, was the world’s first person to earn a doctorate in green chemistry and is a leading voice for systemic change in chemistry education to better prepare students and scientists to address global sustainability challenges. Prior to founding Beyond Benign, Amy worked in industry, including for Gillette and Rohm and Haas, and was an Assistant Professor at the University of Massachusetts Lowell. Amy is also very active in community-based work, including the global higher education program, the Green Chemistry Commitment, comprised of over 260 Universities worldwide; and the on-line teaching and learning community platform, the Green Chemistry Teaching and Learning Community (GCTLC).
Plants are our relatives, invaluable allies in sustaining our physical, mental and spiritual wellbeing, but the Indigenous care and use of plants has been severely disrupted by cultural appropriation, corporatization, and ecocide that violate plants’ protocols, rights, and life-cycles. In this session, cultural practitioners will discuss the protection of herbal medical traditions in the face of these challenges; explain how cultural practices have been passed down and revitalized to uphold our sacred relationships with plants; and share protocols of respect and reciprocity we should use whenever we grow, harvest and utilize plants. Moderated by Nazshonnii Brown-Almaweri, Program Manager in the Bioneers Indigeneity Program. With: Leah Mata Fragua; Jessie Rouse Whipple; Other TBA.
March 28th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm
Panelists
Nazshonnii Brown-Almaweri

Intercultural Conversations Program Manager, Indigeneity Program | Bioneers
Nazshonnii Brown-Almaweri, Intercultural Conversations Program Manager for Bioneers’ Indigeneity Program, is a West Oakland-based STEAM educator who advocates for exposure and opportunities for historically excluded people, especially Black and Native youth. She has provided many middle and high school students with the space to learn about STEAM at the intersection of ancestral knowledge and their lived experiences and has worked to help Oakland youth thrive in disciplines such as engineering. Nazshonnii is also a farmer connected to the Gill Tract Community Farm in Albany and was previously a STEM tutor, media educator, and youth program assistant for the American Indian Child Resource Center.
This workshop will offer a space for white-identifying participants of all ages to explore how to move past the amnesia and denial of “whiteness” by connecting with the best traditions of our ancestors and seeking to create a balanced, life-sustaining culture beyond the unearned privileges we have inherited. Somatic awareness techniques, storytelling dyads, ritual “composting,” and supportive group-sharing to encourage accountability will all be incorporated into this nuanced and compassionate community space. With: Hilary Giovale, community organizer, author of Becoming a Good Relative: Calling White Settlers toward Truth, Healing, and Repair; Darcy Ottey, co-founder/former Co-Director of Youth Passageways; Shay Sloan Clarke, longtime activist, and currently Executive Director of the Global Center for Indigenous Leadership & Lifeways and Nourishing Futures; Lauren Gucik, facilitator, event producer, and food justice organizer.
March 28th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm
Panelists
Hilary Giovale

Author, Community Organizer, Speaker and Facilitator
Hilary Giovale, a community organizer, speaker, facilitator and self-described ninth-generation American settler, seeks to follow Indigenous and Black leadership in support of human rights, environmental justice and equitable futures. As an active “reparationist,” she seeks to divest from “whiteness” and to bridge divides with truth, healing, apology, and forgiveness. She is the author of the award-winning book Becoming a Good Relative: Calling White Settlers toward Truth, Healing, and Repair.
Lauren Gucik

Facilitator, Educator, and Activist
Lauren Gucik is a facilitator, event coordinator, educator, and food sovereignty and social justice activist dedicated to weaving connections between people, land, and ancestral wisdom and designing experiences that nourish joy, deepen reflection, and cultivate liberation.
Darcy Ottey

Facilitator and Network Builder
Darcy Ottey is a “cultural practitioner,” facilitator, network builder, and co-founder and former Co-Director of Youth Passageways, an intergenerational and cross-cultural network supporting the regeneration of healthy passages into mature adulthood for today’s youth. Darcy’s work focuses on: supporting white people and others with privilege in dismantling systems of oppression internally and externally; building resilient networks of relationships across lines of difference; and building community capacity for meaningful acts of redistribution, reparations, and “rematriation” with people in the global majority.
Shay Sloan Clarke

Executive Director | Global Center for Indigenous Leadership & Lifeways
Shay Sloan Clarke, a practitioner of rites of passage, sharing circles, and embodied anti-racist practice, as well as a guide, trainer, convenor, facilitator, consultant, and educator, was previously founding Director of the Indigenous & Community Lands & Seas program for The WILD Foundation and the World Wilderness Congress and Executive Co-Director of The Ojai Foundation. She currently serves as Executive Director for the Global Center for Indigenous Leadership & Lifeways and is co-editor of: Protecting Wild Nature on Native Lands, and co-author of: Cross-Cultural Protocols in Rites of Passage: Guiding Principles, Themes and Inquiry.
This session will delve deeply into the concept of “rematriation,” revealing how acknowledging the land and the planet as our Mother and acting accordingly has to lead us to a revisioning of our current values and institutions that are so out-of-balance with the sacred, and to work toward a radical restructuring of our society. The presenters will also move beyond concepts to share some lived experiences and personal stories that drive home the power of rematriation. Hosted by Dahr Jamail, Storytelling and Communications Manager at Home Planet Fund. With: Alana Peterson, Executive Director of Spruce Root; Rosemary Nenini, prominent Maasai leader from Kenya, founding Manager, Twala Tenebo Cultural Center.
March 28th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm
Panelists
Dahr Jamail

Storytelling and Communications Manager | Home Planet Fund
Dahr Jamail, Storytelling and Communications Manager at Home Planet Fund, is a former mountaineer, guide, and rescue volunteer on Denali in Alaska who went on to work for a decade as a war correspondent in the Middle East, then for another decade as a journalist covering the global environmental crisis. The author of five books, he most recently edited We Are the Middle of Forever: Indigenous Voices from Turtle Island on the Changing Earth, which is focused on Indigenous perspectives on the polycrisis.
Alana Peterson

Executive Director | Spruce Root
Alana Peterson, whose Tlingit name is Gah Kith Tin (from Diginaa Hit, Luknahadi), grew up and currently lives in Sitka, a small island community in Southeast Alaska, where she is Executive Director at Spruce Root, an Indigenous institution that provides all Southeast Alaskans with access to business development resources including loans, coaching, workshops and more, seeking to catalyze local communities and empower small businesses. Alana who has a Master’s in Business Administration, also worked with the Peace Corps in southern Peru on economic development projects for two years.
There’s a good reason that philosophers, who have been struggling to understand consciousness for millennia, call it “the hard problem.” Michael Pollan, triggered by his experiences in meditation and with psychedelics, decided some seven years ago to dive into the topic. In this mind-expanding conversation with Dacher Keltner, Professor of Psychology at UC Berkeley and author of Awe: The New Science of Everyday Wonder and How it Can Transform Your Life, Michael will discuss his deep dive into one of nature’s greatest mysteries: why are our mental operations accompanied by feelings, thoughts, and a subjective sense of self? From the cutting edges of “plant neurobiology,” AI, and neuroscience to insights from philosophy, religion, psychedelic exploration, and literature, he will share with us what he found: a world far deeper and stranger than we can imagine.
March 28th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm
Panelists
Michael Pollan

Bestselling Author and Journalist
Michael Pollan is a writer, teacher and activist. His most recent book, A World Appears: A Journey into Consciousness, was published earlier this year. He is the author of nine previous books, including: This is Your Mind on Plants, How to Change Your Mind, Cooked, Food Rules, In Defense of Food, The Omnivore’s Dilemma, and The Botany of Desire, all bestsellers. Pollan has taught writing at Harvard and UC Berkeley and has been a Guggenheim and Radcliffe Fellow. In 2010 Time Magazine named him one of the 100 most influential people in the world.
Dacher Keltner

Distinguished Professor of Psychology | UC Berkeley
Dacher Keltner, a Distinguished Professor of Psychology at UC Berkeley, is the host of the Science of Happiness Podcast and the author of many articles and books, including: Awe: The New Science of Everyday Wonder and How it Can Transform Your Life.
One might think, in this reactionary era in which slews of corporations that formerly claimed to be concerned about climate and equity race to ditch their ESG and DEI departments and flaunt their regression to amoral greed, that the heyday of eco and socially conscious business is long behind us, but that would be far too hasty a conclusion. In fact, there are a few long-standing, exemplary, mission-driven, independent enterprises that have held on to their values and commitments and have, while remaining eminently profitable, kept refining and strengthening their ethical performance over the years, and one of the boldest new models of a path forward in this domain is Dr. Bronner’s Purpose Pledge. In this panel, Les Szabo, Chief Strategy & Impact Officer at Dr. Bronner’s, will host a session with representatives from a select few groundbreaking enterprises, all of which work in the domain of food or agricultural supply chains, who will share their companies’ philosophies, new initiatives and approaches. Panelists TBA.
March 28th | 4:45 pm to 6:00 pm
Panelists
Les Szabo

Chief Strategy & Impact Officer | Dr. Bronner’s
Les Szabo, Chief Strategy & Impact Officer at Dr. Bronner’s, the top-selling natural brand of soap in North America, joined the company in 2013. He leads its strategic planning, supports key business initiatives that enhance organizational capabilities and drive growth, and oversees Dr. Bronner’s Planning, Philanthropy & Impact Investing, International Markets, and E-Commerce departments, as well as serving on Dr. Bronner’s Executive Council and Board of Directors. His work is informed by over twenty years’ experience working in the natural products and apparel industries, including as a co-founder of the Living Harvest, Dunderdon, and Infinity Sport brands.
Bioneers Afterglow is a happy hour open to all conference attendees at the end of each day of presentations, providing a casual atmosphere with snacks, drinks, music and revelry. Party in the Cabaret, hang out in the Main Stage, or visit our fabulous Tea Lounge upstairs!
Important Note: This event is well-attended in a not-enormous space and has a festive atmosphere with a fairly elevated ambient noise level, so it is best for those accustomed to somewhat crowded bars or music venues. We will be providing alternatives throughout the conference for those seeking quieter and/or more structured networking opportunities.
March 28th | 6:15 pm to 8:30 pm
Sunday, March 29th
In this daylong intensive that will include theory, demonstrations, and hands-on activities, master Permaculture teacher and designer Erik Ohlsen, author of The Regenerative Landscaper, will share perspectives and techniques we can use to regenerate not only farms and gardens, but larger landscapes as well. The material covered will include how to observe natural patterns of ecological succession so that we can support a landscape in transition facing the stresses of climate shifts and larger ecosystems’ decline, and much more.
Transportation to and from the site and lunch will be provided.
March 29th | 10:30 am to 5:30 pm | Permaculture Skills Center
Note: A separate Early bird registration $195 fee is required for this event.

