Diversity & Equity Archives - Wildlands & Woodlands https://wildlandsandwoodlands.org/topics/diversity-equity/ A vision for the New England landscape Mon, 04 Nov 2024 17:23:05 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.1 https://wildlandsandwoodlands.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/12/cropped-wwfc_favicon-1-32x32.png Diversity & Equity Archives - Wildlands & Woodlands https://wildlandsandwoodlands.org/topics/diversity-equity/ 32 32 2024 RCP Network Gathering AGENDA https://wildlandsandwoodlands.org/events-and-programs/2024-rcp-network-gathering-agenda-2/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=2024-rcp-network-gathering-agenda-2 Tue, 17 Sep 2024 19:13:43 +0000 https://wildlandsandwoodlands.org/?p=14175 ~ Agenda at a Glance ~ WORKSHOPS *  Presentations with Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Justice themes# Presentations that are led by or elevate the work of Regional Conservation Partnerships

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~ Agenda at a Glance ~

Time
Session
8:00 AM
Breakfast and Networking
9:00 AM
Welcome – Highstead Conservationist Katie Blake
9:15 AM
Keynote – Climate Change, Land, and Your Brain: A Hundred-Year Global Story, Ann-Christine Duhaime, MD
10:15 AM
Break
10:30 AM
Workshops Session A: 90 minutes
12:00 PM
Lunch Break and Networking
1:30 PM
Workshops Session B: 60 minutes
2:30 PM
Break
2:45 PM
Workshops Session C: 75 minutes
4:00 PM
Farewell

WORKSHOPS

*  Presentations with Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Justice themes
# Presentations that are led by or elevate the work of Regional Conservation Partnerships

Session A: 10:30 AM – 12 PM
Session B: 1:30 – 2:30 PM
Session C: 2:45 – 4:00 PM
TRACK 1: Physical and Mental Well-Being
TRACK 2: Listening and Connecting
TRACK 3: Resilient Ecosystems
TRACK 4: Integrated Land Use
TRACK 5: Diverse Partnerships

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2023 RCP Network Gathering Agenda https://wildlandsandwoodlands.org/events-and-programs/2023-rcp-network-gathering-agenda-1/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=2023-rcp-network-gathering-agenda-1 Thu, 07 Sep 2023 18:15:03 +0000 https://wildlandsandwoodlands.org/?p=12770 ~ Agenda at a Glance ~ WORKSHOPS

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~ Agenda at a Glance ~

Time
Session
8:00 am
Breakfast and Networking
9:00 am
Welcome on behalf of RCP Network, Conservationist Katie Blake – Highstead
9:15 am
Keynote Panel — The Imperative for Conservation to Address More
10:15 am
Break
10:30 am
Workshops Session A: Addressing Land Justice and Equity at Scale
11:45 am
Lunch Break and Networking
1:15 pm
Workshops Session B: RCPs Leading and Learning from One Another
2:30 pm
Break
2:45 pm
Workshops Session C: Research, Resources, and New Ideas to Support Your Work
4:00 pm
Farewell

WORKSHOPS

Keynote Address: 9:15 – 10:15 am
 
The Imperative for Conservation to Address More:  A conversation with three visionary leaders from philanthropy and community-centered conservation
Forrest King-Cortes – Director of Community-Centered Conservation, Land Trust Alliance
Onika Abraham Lee – Executive Director, Blue Sky Funders Forum
Sacha Spector – Director, Environmental Program, Doris Duke Foundation

Moderator: Bill Labich – Director of Conservation, Highstead

Session A – 10:30 – 11:45 am
Session B – 1:15 – 2:30 pm
Session C – 2:45 – 4:00 pm
Addressing Land Justice and Equity at Scale
RCPs Leading and Learning From One Another
Research, Resources, and New Ideas to Support Your Work
A1: The History of Rural Black Ownership
B1: Connecting Conservation to Community Needs
C1: Increasing Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion for Massachusetts’ Land and Water Conservation Fund
A2: Advancing Equity, Climate Resilience, and Biodiversity Conservation in the Appalachians: How Will We Know We are Winning?
B2: Engagement through Community-Centered Corridor Initiatives – Follow the Forest and the Green Corridor
C2: Restoring Old Growth Characteristics & Understanding Family Forest Owner Attitudes
Toward Passive Management
A3: Watershed-Scale Climate Collaboratives: Toolkit & Stories from Massachusetts
B3: The Northeast Mid-Atlantic Partnership for Forests and Water
C3: A Case for Wildlands
A4: Integrated Conservation Strategies for Greater Climate Resilience: A Panel Discussion
B4: Learning from the Southern New England Heritage Forest RCPP
C4: Inspire Action with Empathetic
Communications: Advancing Strategic and Collective Narratives
A5: Climate-Smart Forestry for our Communities: A Critical Piece of the Solutions Puzzle
B5: Forest Management Across Property Boundaries: The Woodlots Program Toolkit
C5: Supporting Low-Income Households with Land Trust Solar Energy
A6: Inclusive Conservation: Planning for the Kittatinny Ridge Conservation Landscape
C6: The Emergence and Growth of Canadian Regional Conservation and Climate Partnerships

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LGBTQ+ Communities and Climate Resilience – An Important Partnership https://wildlandsandwoodlands.org/resources/lgbtq-communities-and-climate-resilience-an-important-partnership/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=lgbtq-communities-and-climate-resilience-an-important-partnership Fri, 24 Jun 2022 16:50:00 +0000 https://wildlandsandwoodlands.org/?p=9845 Land conservation seeks to protect the interconnected ecosystems that preserve biodiversity and the beneficial services ecosystems provide for non-humans and humans, including climate resilience. From extreme temperature and flooding events to increasing cases of childhood asthma diagnoses, the evolving climate crisis reveals how the most underserved communities are disproportionately experiencing the most severe consequences. Stigmatized and […]

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Land conservation seeks to protect the interconnected ecosystems that preserve biodiversity and the beneficial services ecosystems provide for non-humans and humans, including climate resilience. From extreme temperature and flooding events to increasing cases of childhood asthma diagnoses, the evolving climate crisis reveals how the most underserved communities are disproportionately experiencing the most severe consequences. Stigmatized and low-income populations face structural challenges and are least able to prepare for and recover from severe climate change impacts, and LGBTQ+ people are among these marginalized groups.

Climate-related natural disasters combined with structural barriers will displace more marginalized people and leave them vulnerable to further harm. It is estimated that 40% of the total unaccompanied and homeless youth in the United States identify as LGBTQ+ and Chapin Hall at the University of Chicago published a study finding that LGBTQ+ youth are 120% more likely to experience homelessness than non-LGBTQ young people. Despite severe and exacerbated issues like poor health outcomes, resource scarcity, and housing instability, a 2018 study by Arizona State University’s New College details the finding that LGBTQ+ people are more likely to engage in environmental change movements than heterosexual identifying people.

Climate resilience and action and the intersecting social, environmental, and health issues therein can only benefit from the perspectives and solutions of those most affected by structural inequalities and injustices. Our friends at Mass Audubon are flying the Progress Pride flag at their sanctuaries across the state, and hosting events for members of the LGBTQ+ community in celebration of Pride Month. In addition to MassAudubon, meet 8 organizations leading the way for a more just and whole environmental movement building climate resilience in and for their LGBTQ+ communities and beyond.

1. Rock Steady Farm

Rock Steady Farm is a “queer*-owned and operated cooperative vegetable farm rooted in social justice, food access, and farmer training.” Located in New York, the farm applies regenerative and sustainable farming practices while increasing food system equity.

In 2021, Rock Steady Farm launched POLLINATE! a paid training program for beginner queer and trans farmers focusing on removing the barriers to experience in the agricultural field. Through their Food Access Fund, the farm works with donors to provide free and subsidized produce to low-income people in their community and those living with serious health conditions.

2. Out In The Open

Based in Brattleboro, Vermont, the nonprofit Out In The Open connects rural LGBTQ+ people locally and regionally through community care systems. They envision “a resilient community of communities that works toward the transformation of our economic, social, and political relationship” through collective projects, including the We Feed Eachother: Rural LGBTQ Food Traditions zine.

3. Chiltern Mountain Club

Founded in 1978 by Sturgis Haskins, Chiltern Mountain Club (CMC) is a volunteer group that organizes outdoor-related events for LGBTQ+ people of all abilities and backgrounds. Featuring trips across New England, CMC aims to create community-building outdoors experiences that are safe and inclusive.

4. Venture Out Project

The Venture Out Project leads outdoor and wilderness trips for LGBTQ+ people to develop outdoor and leadership skills while building community. The nonprofit organization offers multi-day trips in New England and the western U.S. as well as day hikes, youth trips, service project programming, and provides trans-affirmative community workshops.

Watch the 15-minute Venture Out Project film.

5. OUT for Sustainability

Since 2008, OUT for Sustainability (Out4S) has been a leader in the LGBTQ+ sustainability movement. Through advocacy, training, fundraising, and relationship-building, Out4S advocates, trains, fundraises, and builds relationships across the connections between LGBTQ+ communities, sustainability, and justice. As of June 2022, Out4S is growing its QReady initiative, a disaster-preparedness resource specifically designed for the LGBTQ+ community.

Watch the trailer for “Fire & Flood – Queer Resilience in the Era of Climate Change” which tells the story of two 2017 climate disasters in Puerto Rico and California from the perspective of LGBTQ+ people who were part of the community response.

6. Queer Nature

Based in Washington state, Queer Nature is a trans-led nature-based/naturalist education project and facilitates place-based survival and self-sufficiency skills lessons for LGBTQ+ and QTBIPOC (Queer, Trans, Black, Indigenous, and People of Color) people in affinity-based learning spaces. Another essential aspect of Queer Nature is a framework that elevates the messages of non-human life while promoting ecological awareness and healthy environmental stewardship practices. They see ecological awareness combined with outdoor and place-based skills as vital to resilience building for populations who have been marginalized and silenced.

7. Brave Trails

In 2015, Brave Trails began as a youth leadership camp and is now a national nonprofit organization dedicated to LGBTQ+ youth leadership by offering accredited summer camps, family camps, mentorship, facilitated meet-up groups, consulting, and a mental health program. Brave Trails operates camps in California and Maryland and is beginning to build its “forever home” on a 54-acre site in California’s Angeles National Forest.

8. Our Climate Voices

Founded in 2017, Our Climate Voices (OCV) is a youth-led storytelling platform sharing the perspectives of people and communities most impacted by the current climate disaster. Through their web-based platforms, podcasts, workshops, and on-the-ground actions, OCV storytellers offer frontline perspectives and link listeners to grassroots solutions for a more equitable and sustainable world.

Listen to OCV’s inaugural episode of IN CONVERSATION: An Episode on Climate Justice & Queer and Trans Liberation, and hear from queer and trans climate justice organizers as they discuss the connections and imperatives of prioritizing queer and trans solutions in an everchanging climate situation.

Notes

For this article, we use the term LGBTQ+ and recognize that sexual orientation and gender identity are complex. The following definitions are adapted from the HRC Foundation’s Glossary of Terms.

LGBTQ+ – An acronym for “lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer or questioning” with a “+” sign to recognize the limitless sexual orientations and gender identities, including but not limited to two-spirit, intersex, asexual, and pansexual.

Queer – A term people use to express identities and orientations that are counter to the mainstream culture. Queer includes many people, including those who do not identify as exclusively straight and/or people who have non-binary or gender-expansive identities. Although previously used as a slur, the term has been reclaimed by parts of the LGBTQ+ movement.


Resources

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Mass Audubon Celebrates Pride Month with Flag Displays at Sanctuaries https://wildlandsandwoodlands.org/resources/mass-audubon-celebrates-pride-month/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=mass-audubon-celebrates-pride-month Fri, 10 Jun 2022 18:03:47 +0000 https://wildlandsandwoodlands.org/?p=9735 The post Mass Audubon Celebrates Pride Month with Flag Displays at Sanctuaries appeared first on Wildlands & Woodlands.

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New Report and Mapping Tools Highlight Inequities in Access to Conserved Land https://wildlandsandwoodlands.org/news-and-stories/new-report-and-mapping-tools-highlight-inequities-in-access-to-conserved-land/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=new-report-and-mapping-tools-highlight-inequities-in-access-to-conserved-land Mon, 04 Apr 2022 21:21:18 +0000 https://future.wildlandsandwoodlands.org/?p=8931 A new study published in Environmental Research Letters shows striking disparities in the distribution of conserved land across multiple dimensions of social marginalization in New England – and creates a tool to help address these inequities in conservation. The Harvard Forest and Amherst College researchers found that communities in the lowest income bracket, and communities with the highest proportions […]

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new study published in Environmental Research Letters shows striking disparities in the distribution of conserved land across multiple dimensions of social marginalization in New England – and creates a tool to help address these inequities in conservation.

The Harvard Forest and Amherst College researchers found that communities in the lowest income bracket, and communities with the highest proportions of people of color, have access to only about half as much protected land near where they live. These disparities persist across urban, suburban, and rural communities, and across decades.

But Harvard Forest authors Lucy Lee and Jonathan Thompson – with colleagues Neenah Estrella-Luna of Boston, and Kate Sims and Margot Lurie (’21) of Amherst College – didn’t stop at identifying the inequities in conservation. They also created tools that will be part of the solution.

First, they looked at lands that rank highly with conventional conservation criteria – such as wildlife habitat, drinking water, and carbon sequestration – and mapped their relationship with lands that rank highly for human environmental justice criteria – including communities with low income, high percentages of people of color, and high percentages of English language learners. They found that the two don’t tend to overlap.

They created a new prioritization system to help state agencies and conservation organizations identify specific opportunities for future conservation based on environmental justice criteria, and built a free, online mapping tool to highlight these opportunities on the landscape. 

Although their analysis focused on conservation solutions for currently undeveloped land, they also pointed to the importance of restoring existing developed land, including improving forest canopy in marginalized communities, and conservation partnerships that can increase access to existing open space. 

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New Study and Interactive Map Point to Environmental Justice Disparities (and Solutions) in Land Conservation https://wildlandsandwoodlands.org/resources/new-study-and-interactive-map-point-to-environmental-justice-disparities-and-solutions-in-land-conservation/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=new-study-and-interactive-map-point-to-environmental-justice-disparities-and-solutions-in-land-conservation Mon, 04 Apr 2022 20:52:20 +0000 https://future.wildlandsandwoodlands.org/?p=8927 The post New Study and Interactive Map Point to Environmental Justice Disparities (and Solutions) in Land Conservation appeared first on Wildlands & Woodlands.

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Request for Proposals: 2022 RCP Network Gathering on Climate Justice and Resilience https://wildlandsandwoodlands.org/news-and-stories/request-for-proposals-2022-rcp-network-gathering-on-climate-justice-and-resilience/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=request-for-proposals-2022-rcp-network-gathering-on-climate-justice-and-resilience Thu, 31 Mar 2022 21:25:10 +0000 https://future.wildlandsandwoodlands.org/?p=8731 Last year’s focus on Land Justice left many in attendance at the RCP Network Gathering with a heightened awareness of the need to put justice and equity at the center of their conservation work.  It has also sparked conversations about how to actually do the work of advancing land justice and equity while meeting their […]

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Climate Justice and Resilience

Last year’s focus on Land Justice left many in attendance at the RCP Network Gathering with a heightened awareness of the need to put justice and equity at the center of their conservation work. 

It has also sparked conversations about how to actually do the work of advancing land justice and equity while meeting their core mission work of conservation. For example, RCP Network members have been asking how we can more effectively amplify the voices and support the communities most impacted by injustice and climate change through our land conservation efforts, while others of you have been working with these impacted communities for years.

For the 2022 RCP Network Gathering, we would like you and your partners to have a chance to share your insights, projects, relationship-building stories, and lessons. Tell us who you are learning from and how you are together advancing Climate Justice and Resilience — for making land more accessible, more useful for nature and people, and more resilient to the impacts of climate change for the benefit of others. 

We invite you to submit proposals and nominations for Gathering panels, webinars, and field trips in the weeks leading up to the Gathering. Please complete and submit a separate form for each webinar, panel, and field trip you wish us to consider.

We are offering three ways for you to participate – please review all options and apply to the program or programs where you think you or your partners can add the most value.

Recommend a Panelist for the 2022 RCP Network Gathering (November 17)

Two panels at the November 17th, 2022 Gathering will focus on Climate Justice and Resilience, through the eyes of those who have experienced climate injustice, addressed injustice, or focused resiliency efforts to the benefit of marginalized communities. Please note that panelists will need to commit to at least a couple of hours on November 17th and a few hours before the event for preparation and rehearsal. 

  • Panel 1 – What do Climate Justice and Resilience mean to me and my communities?
  • Panel 2 – Forming conservation partnerships built on trust and shared Climate Justice or Resilience goals.

If you would like to participate as a panelist during the November 17th RCP Network Gathering, or know someone who would be a great addition, please fill out the form linked below. Please review the form requirements before you begin filling it out.

RCP Network Gathering Webinars (October 3 to November 10)

As part of this year’s Gathering, we would like to offer one to three pre-Gathering webinars held during the weeks leading up to the November 17 Gathering. These webinars will ideally highlight RCPs’ and RCP Network members’ activities in the areas of Land Justice, Climate Justice, and Climate Resilience. Themes may include:

  • Putting healing before conservation: How are you working with marginalized groups to help them heal or recover from past or present harm and injustices?
  • Expanding the conservation table: How did you get more — and different —  people to the table, how did you offer your skills and capacity to others’ work, or how did you create a new table?
  • Public health and conservation: How have you formed partnerships or developed programs that effectively linked public health and conservation, especially in support of marginalized communities – and how can this example scale-out?
  • Food sovereignty and conservation: How have you partnered with others to advance conservation and food sovereignty?
  • Broadening participation in conservation: How can we create opportunities for new voices and new ideas? How do we welcome people of all backgrounds to careers in conservation? 
  • Reducing exposure to climate change: What actions have communities taken to reduce their exposure to the impacts of climate change through conservation, restoration, and stewardship? Partnership examples/case studies and how can this example scale-out?

Click the link below to propose a webinar. Please review the form requirements before you begin filling it out.

Field Trips (Mid-September to December)

Occurring during the months leading up to the Gathering and through the end of 2022, these are opportunities for RCP Network members to organize and convene on-site walks and talks that explore one or more of the webinar themes (see above). Highstead and the RCP Network staff will help to promote the field trips but the entire event— logistics planning, promotion, costs, and execution–is the responsibility of the field trip lead. 

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Conservation Finance Learning Lab Series Addresses Key Funding Topics https://wildlandsandwoodlands.org/resources/conservation-finance-learning-lab/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=conservation-finance-learning-lab Tue, 29 Mar 2022 20:39:44 +0000 https://future.wildlandsandwoodlands.org/?p=8659 The post Conservation Finance Learning Lab Series Addresses Key Funding Topics appeared first on Wildlands & Woodlands.

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RCP Network Gathering 2021 – Keynote Address https://wildlandsandwoodlands.org/resources/rcp-network-gathering-2021-keynote-address/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=rcp-network-gathering-2021-keynote-address Mon, 22 Nov 2021 18:21:00 +0000 https://future.wildlandsandwoodlands.org/?p=8220 The post RCP Network Gathering 2021 – Keynote Address appeared first on Wildlands & Woodlands.

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