
Advocacy and Vision at the UN Water Conference
This week, the Guardian reported that global fresh water demand will outstrip supply by 40% by 2030. This week’s UN 2023 Water Conference in New York “will mark the first

This week, the Guardian reported that global fresh water demand will outstrip supply by 40% by 2030. This week’s UN 2023 Water Conference in New York “will mark the first

Executive Director Karenna Gore is profiled in “Can the World’s Religions Help Save Us from Ecological Peril?,” the feature story in the Winter 2022-23 issue of Columbia Magazine. In the

DOWNLOAD NOW Español Français Earlier this year, the Center for Earth Ethics hosted a set of virtual consultations that explored ecosystem restoration through the lens of values, culture, and spirituality.

The world needs “a sustained conversation between advocates of freedom of religion or belief and advocates of the rights of Indigenous peoples.” That was a central message from Professor Ahmed

Freedom of Religion or Belief for Indigenous Peoples: The 2022 UN Report Wednesday, October 26, 2022 | 5 – 7 p.m. James Memorial Chapel, Union Theological Seminary, 90 Claremont Avenue,

Executive Director Karenna Gore delivered the morning keynote address at “Climate Change, Disasters & the Vulnerable Communities We Serve,” the Fall 2022 New York City Faith Sector Preparedness Summit on

A.I., Ecology & Earth Ethics537 West 27th Street, New YorkWednesday, September 28 | 5 p.m. What are the social, ethical, and religious implications of artificial intelligence for the environment and

This month, Union Theological Seminary published a profile of CEE founder and executive director, Karenna Gore. In her interview, Gore, a Union alumna, spoke about her “transformative education” at Union,

On Tuesday, May 17, Executive Director Karenna Gore participated at “Black Interfaith in the Time of Climate Crisis” at the National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington, D.C. The

The climate crisis is a present, existential threat, yet there is still time to change course and genuine reasons to be hopeful. That was a central message at the “Earth Day
