Série de webinaires d'apprentissage en deux parties : L'envie coloniale de marchandiser la crise climatique
Date: Thursday, October 26, 2023
Time: 1PM PT / 2PM MT / 3PM CT / 4PM ET / 5PM AT
Location: Zoom
Series Description:
Indigenous Climate Action is dedicated to raising awareness about the impacts of climate change on Indigenous communities and advocating for sustainable solutions that respect Indigenous sovereignty, knowledge, and cultural practices. As we navigate the complexities posed by this climate crisis, it is vital to address not only genuine solutions but also the false solutions that can perpetuate more environmental harm and social injustices. The aim of this webinar series is to facilitate open and informative discussions that shed light on various false solutions that are often presented as viable approaches to combat the climate crisis and counteract them with real, Indigenous-led solutions.
Part 1: Unpacking False Solutions
Panel highlighting false solutions with a short recap of UNFCCC COP27. This webinar discussion will cover questions like:
How can we begin to identify when a solution is false? What are false solutions?
How can false solutions impact Indigenous communities? How can we resist?
How are false solutions being presented at the UNFCCC COP? How might this impact communities?
Panelists
Julia Bernal (they/she) is from the Indigenous Nations of Sandia Pueblo and Yuchi and is the Executive Director of the Pueblo Action Alliance and has organized with the organization for seven years; Pueblo Action Alliance is a Pueblo Indigenous femme led grassroots organization in New Mexico campaign for climate justice and community defense. They advocate for Water Back, Land Back, the rematriation of everything stolen from their peoples’ ancestral lands and the decommodification of all that is sacred. They are a steering committee member of the New Mexico No False Solutions movement to denounce all energy investments that prop up extractive industries, educate communities why market-based mechanisms continue to exacerbate the climate crisis and continue destroying mother earth. They have been a part of the Ring of Fire cohort with the Indigenous Environmental Network to help train up other Indigenous organizers on why carbon trading is exacerbating the climate crisis. They have also been a part of the Greater Chaco coalition working to end fossil fuel extraction in the San Juan basin of NM. They are an internationalist with the global struggle for sovereignty, self-determination and liberation.
Karahkwinetha Sage Goodleaf-Labelle est étudiante en psychologie et en neurosciences à l'Université McGill. Elle est née dans le clan de l'Ours de la nation Kanien'kehá:ka, qui fait partie de la Confédération Haudenosaunee. Élevée par deux femmes inspirantes, une psychologue et une enseignante, qui s'identifient toutes deux comme bispirituelles, elle a développé une compréhension éternelle des valeurs traditionnelles et un intérêt pour aider les autres à se comprendre eux-mêmes. Elle est membre du Conseil consultatif des jeunes autochtones de McGill et du sous-comité des jeunes du projet Collective Impact à Kahnawake.
Thomas Joseph Tsewenaldin is Hupa, Karuk, Paiute-Shoshone, and currently works with Indigenous Environmental Network. IEN is an Indigenous-led organization addressing environmental and economic justice issues. Thomas is apart of IEN’s Climate Justice Team, as their Carbon Pricing Educator.

