
Riverkeeper Webinar Explores the Rights of Nature Movement
On March 12, CEE Executive Director Karenna Gore, Thomas Linzey of the Center for Democratic and Environmental Rights and attorney Steven “Owl” Smith of the Ramapo Munsee Nation headlined a

On March 12, CEE Executive Director Karenna Gore, Thomas Linzey of the Center for Democratic and Environmental Rights and attorney Steven “Owl” Smith of the Ramapo Munsee Nation headlined a

“It’s about the future generations,” said Roberto Múkaro Borrero at the launch party for “Gu’ahai Taíno: We Speak Taíno,” a groundbreaking dictionary and grammar guide to the Indigenous Classic Taíno

WATCH WEBINAR “Ecosystem restoration is an endeavor in which we all share together with the human and the more-than-human world,” says Tariq Al-Olaimy. “We should be actively partnering with nature

READ REPORT “There must be a dramatic change in our relationship with the natural world,” says Karenna Gore, founder and executive director of the Center for Earth Ethics. “Ecosystem restoration

READ ARTICLE CEE Project Manager Shannon M.D. Smith was recently featured in the Catholic publication FutureChurch for their Just Word Readings and Commentary series, which features “emerging voices offering inclusive, life-giving

“It is not the form of what we do and how we do it, but the essence that matters. The real importance is in our relationships, our humility, our love

Freedom to Be: Perspectives on the 2022 UN Report on Indigenous Peoples and the Concept of Freedom of Religion or BeliefWednesday, December 63 p.m. (New York) | 10 a.m. (Honolulu)ONLINE

Faith-based environmental activist Gopal D. Patel, associate director for interfaith and UN relations at the Center for Earth Ethics, recently delivered “The unexpected way spirituality connects to climate change” at

Editor’s Note: On October 26, 2022, the Center for Earth Ethics hosted a forum of Indigenous and global leaders to discuss the key findings and recommendations of the report “Indigenous

Global food systems are broken. Let’s begin there. We produce enough food to feed ten billion, and yet we have at least 120 million people going hungry while another two
