
CEE Welcomes Liv Bigtree as Fellow
One founding cornerstone of Center for Earth Ethics is to support Indigenous Peoples in living out their traditional ways. We have come to understand that helping hold time and space

One founding cornerstone of Center for Earth Ethics is to support Indigenous Peoples in living out their traditional ways. We have come to understand that helping hold time and space

Take the Survey Help shape global ecosystem restoration! The Center for Earth Ethics and United Religions Initiative invite all youth working on ecosystem restoration projects to share their stories for an

I spent a few days in Washington, D.C. last week lobbying lawmakers alongside other members from the Break Free From Plastic Coalition, a coalition of some 200 organizations working on

The fourth gathering of the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee (INC-4), aimed at reaching a global treaty to combat the plastics crisis, concluded on April 29 in Ottawa. The week-long negotiations as a

“We need you. … We need your energy, your insights, your work ethic, and especially your creativity.” In its 2024 commencement issue, Harvard Magazine profiled the address by CEE Executive

Karenna Gore, founder and executive director of the Center for Earth Ethics, will address the graduating class of Harvard University’s Graduate School of Design in Cambridge, Massachusetts during Class Day

“For me, true development would be the sovereignty to practice our own spirituality, beliefs and rituals. And when we get back these practices, I think we will have the development

On the weekend of April 12, former Vice President Al Gore headlined a massive Climate Reality Project training in New York City. Experts, politicians, activists and more than 3,000 trainees,

DOWNLOAD PDF SUMMARY: The overabundance of plastics has contributed to global challenges, such as climate change, plastics pollution and a rise in health problems. It has also posed ethical concerns,

WATCH WEBINAR “I have a relationship with the water, and I absolutely refuse to let them have it,” said Diane Wilson, fifth- generation shrimper, 2023 Goldman Prize winner and recent
