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Sharing Indigenous Wisdom, An International Dialogue on Sustainable Development

Monday View Photo Album

9:00 - 9:45 a.m.

 

Official Welcome
Dr. Verna Fowler, President, College of Menominee Nation

Opening Ceremonies
Presentation of Colors, Veterans of Menominee Nation &  Wisconsin Indian Veterans Association - Oneida Chapter
Flag Song & Honor Song, Wolf River Singers
Invocation, David “Nahwahquaw” Grignon,
Menominee Indian Tribe Historic Preservation Director

Introduction of Honored Guests
    Dr. Holly YoungBear-Tibbetts, Dean of External Relations, College of Menominee Nation

Welcome Remarks
    U.S. Congressman, Dr. Steve Kagen
    Kathy Hughes, Vice Chairwoman, Oneida Nation of Wisconsin

Conference Overview
     Dr. William Van Lopik, College of Menominee Nation
    John Parrotta, IUFRO Task Force

Moderator, Dr. Holly YoungBear-Tibbetts, College of Menominee Nation

 

9:45 - 10:30 a.m.

Keynote Address
Zakka Chomock
Democracy and the Politics of Oil and its Impact on Sustainable Development

 

10:45 - 11:45 a.m.

Opening Menominee Address
Menominee Sustainability Tradition and History
Dr. Verna Fowler, President, College of Menominee Nation
Dr. Jerilyn Grignon
, College of Menominee Nation and Menominee Tribal Enterprises Board of Directors

 

12:00 - 1:00 p.m.

Lunch
Three Clans Complex Bear Room

1:00 - 3:15 p.m.

Land & SovereigntySession I -Land and Sovereignty
Facilitator:  Dr. Holly YoungBear-Tibbetts, College of Menominee Nation

Dr. Filberto Penados, Tumul K’in Center of Learning:  Redefining Development and Education
Ethan Baptiste, Traditional Governance:  Replacing a Traditional Dream with a Western Nightmare, Okanagan Nation
Erlinda Montillo-Burton, Revival and Enhancement of Indigenous Knowledge System of Indigenous Peoples of Southern Philippines

3:30 - 5:15 p.m.

EconomicsSession II - Sustaining Rights, Resource, and Economic Development
Facilitator:  Dr. Diana Morris, College of Menominee Nation

Monisha Gangopadhyay, The Story Behind the Loss of Indigenous Ecological Knowledge in India’s Most Species Rich State – A Focus on the Garo Hills
Jeff Metoxen,  White Corn Sustainability
Alberto Vargas, Community Forestry in Mexico and Indigenous Wisdom

 

6:15 - 8:00 p.m.

Welcome Dinner
Three Clans Complex Bear Room

My First Contact
A Video by Mari Correa and Kumare Txikao

 

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Our Logo Explained

LAND & SOVEREIGNTY

Are integral to the process of sustainable development. The Menominee Nation has a firm experiential basis for their understanding of this process. They know first hand the horror of termination, and the struggle for restoration of their status as a federally recognized Indian tribe. While political restoration has been accomplished, other aspects of restoration are yet unattended. Central to our research and extension mission is the commitment to those topics and activities that re-affirm tribal sovereignty and preserves the tribal estate.

NATURAL ENVIRONMENT

The long and successful Menominee experience in sustained yield forestry is the cornerstone of its community's sustainable development. SDI has prioritized forest products, forest ecology, enhanced commerce of timber products, and value added forest products as immediate topics relevant to its scholarship and research and extension mission.

INSTITUTIONS

In aiding in the development and maturation of the institutional life of the rural and reservation communities which we serve, we ensure the longevity of our efforts, maximize the impact of our initiatives, and position our own institution firmly within the community context which has chartered our mission.

TECHNOLOGY

SDI works collaboratively with the Menominee Telecommunications Design Team to enable a multi-media telecommunications infrastructure capable of serving our rural and reservation community institutions. The Design Team includes the College, the Tribal and County governments, and the Menominee Tribal Enterprises. We believe rural and reservation communities are dependent on the foresight of their institutions to assure access to the new wave of information technology. We are committed to forwarding the development of information infrastructure. We are attuned to the potential of electronic commerce, medicine, and judicial practice, advancing local access to technological innovations, and complementing our academic goal of advancing technological literacy.

ECONOMY

Initial entry into extension services to forward this dimension are in nascent development, with an initial emphasis on cooperating with the local business incubator, offering workshops for potential entrepreneurs and service as a research resource for tribal enterprise. We anticipate the local regions designation as an enterprise community will provide additional training opportunities.

HUMAN PERCEPTION, ACTIVITY & BEHAVIOR

A priority for research lies in projects which assure access to safe and reliable food and water resources. To that end, we anticipate complimenting research efforts in sustainable forestry with new initiatives in permaculture, ethnobotany, and preliminary investigation of the feasibility of aquaculture and hydroponics production.

Decision Making

Today we remain dependent on this land and water to sustain us. Therefore, we must make the necessary decisions to sustain it for future generations. We believe Menominee Autochthony is the centerpiece by which decision making must take place for successful sustenance of this nation and land.

AUTOCHTHONY - n. from the land itself; nativeness by virtue or originating or occurring naturally as in a particular place. (Webster's Unabridged Dictionary, 1913).

Land and Sovereignty Natural Environment Institutions Technology Economy Human Perception, Activity and Behavior Decision Making