The Hidden Power of Forests: Connection and Cooperation from Roots to Canopy

Join us for the free, online event, “The Hidden Power of Forests” on March 26, 2026. Learn what forests can teach us about community resilience with National Geographic Explorer at Large, Nalini Nadkarni, and Tsimshian scientist Dr. Teresa Ryan.

DL TEST

Testing the two-form solution for Event_08: Event Registration After you register for this event you will receive an email from Zoom with instructions for joining. A recording of the event will be posted on this page for attendees who add a donation to their registration or who make a post-event donation.

The Cascadia Bioregion: Organizations and Resources in the Pacific Northwest

The Pacific Northwest (PNW) region is typically defined to include Oregon and Washington, and British Columbia (Canada) and the northernmost section of California are often included, as well. The Pacific Northwest “bioregion”—an area defined by shared natural characteristics, such as watersheds, topography, geography, climate, or ecosystems, rather than by arbitrary human borders—also can be interpreted in different ways.

Democracy Rising 34: On Ghosted Nature, Moloch, Alternate Futures, Shatter Zones, Elites, Power Laws, and [d]emocratic Crypto-Revolution

Perhaps our long experience of sitting around campfires together and talking about what’s going on in the world around us, and what we ought to do about it next, can be recovered and put to good use again.

Nourishing the Bioregional Economy: Essential Resources

In a recent article I summarized arguments for reversing the trend toward globalization of economies and cultures, aiming instead for the flourishing of communities rooted in their bioregions (i.e., regions defined by characteristics of the natural environment rather than human-imposed borders). For readers receptive to those arguments, the fundamental follow-up question is, “How?”

Rising to the Challenge of the Sociopolitical-Environmental-Economic Polycrisis

None of us gets to choose the era we live through or to control a whole lot about the world we live in. But we should strive to rise to the challenge of the situation we are confronted with, by doing what we can to make our communities, our country, and our world as livable (and worth living in) as we can.