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SUMMARY:Contemplative Wisdom\, Transformative Action Conference
DESCRIPTION:Harnessing Wisdom Traditions and Science for Social Change \n  \nHosted by the Garrison Institute Fellowship Program\, Contemplative Wisdom\, Transformative Action is a three-day virtual gathering that brings together contemplative practitioners\, social change leaders\, scholars\, and visionaries. Together\, we will explore how awareness-based practices can catalyze personal resilience\, systemic healing\, and collective regeneration. \nAnchored in the Fellowship’s four core pillars—contemplative wisdom\, the science of interconnection\, generative action\, and collective healing—this convening is a space to deepen understanding\, share field-leading innovations\, and cultivate new possibilities for social transformation. \nDrawing inspiration from the Garrison Institute’s Spirituality & Social Change Initiative\, the conference will highlight an evolving map of organizations integrating contemplative practice into their social impact work. This initiative illuminates a growing ecosystem of changemakers who lead from depth\, relationship\, and reciprocity. \nParticipants will hear from renowned guest experts\, engage in guided contemplative practices\, and connect with Fellows and peers through storytelling\, field-mapping\, and experiential sessions. Together\, we will explore how contemplative values—such as stillness\, compassion\, and interdependence—can guide regenerative leadership and support lasting social transformation. \nCore Question: How can contemplative wisdom nourish bold\, transformative action in times of planetary urgency? \nThis gathering is a field-building moment for those cultivating justice\, compassion\, and planetary well-being from the inside out.  \n  \nWHO SHOULD ATTEND\nThis conference is designed for: \n\nContemplative practitioners seeking to deepen their engagement with social change.\nEducators\, nonprofit leaders\, and organizational changemakers integrating contemplative practices into their work.\nScholars and researchers exploring the intersections of spirituality\, neuroscience\, and social transformation. \nActivists\, artists\, and visionaries committed to regenerative leadership and collective healing.\n\n  \nEVENT DETAILS\nThis conference will be hosted virtually through Zoom\, allowing participants from around the world to gather in real time. Registered participants will receive a secure Zoom link\, as well as access to session recordings for continued learning after the event.  \n\nDates: Friday\, November 7 – Sunday\, November 9\, 2025\nTimes: Daily sessions (see agenda below)\nLocation: Online via Zoom \n\n\n\n\n\n\n	AGENDA\n\n\n\n\n	Day 1Friday\, November 7\n\n\n	Theme:Entering the Field: Attunement\, Imagination\, and the Sublime\n\n\n	Time:3:00 PM - 7:00 PM ET\n\n\n	\n\n\n	3:00 - 3:20 PMWelcome & Grounding Practice\n\n\n	Led by Garrison Institute leadership\, with music/poetic opening\n\n\n	3:20 - 4:50 PMSession 1:Awareness as Bridge – From Self to Systems\, from Wounds to Wholeness\n\n\n	Guest Experts: Jon Kabat-Zinn\, Dan Siegel & Rev. angel Kyodo williams\n\n\n	5:00 - 6:30 PMSession 2:The Art of Awakening – Music\, Poetry & Embodied Creativity\n\n\n	Guest Experts: Laura Inserra\, Yolanda Sealey-Ruiz & Arawana Hayashi\n\n\n	6:30 - 7:00 PMRelational Sensemaking\n\n\n	Fellows lead an integrative practice weaving art\, neuroscience\, and embodiment.\n\n\n	\n\n\n	Day 2Saturday\, November 8\n\n\n	Theme:Embodying Change: From Justice to Leadership\n\n\n	Time:11:00 AM - 5:00 PM ET\n\n\n	\n\n\n	11:00 - 11:30 AM Morning Practice\n\n\n	11:30 AM - 1:00 PMSession 3: Somatics\, Dharma & the Work of Collective Liberation \n\n\n	Guest Experts: Resmaa Menakem & Kaira Jewel Lingo\n\n\n	1:10 – 2:40 PMSession 4:Ethical Leadership – Transforming Leadership at Scale\n\n\n	Guest Experts: Max Klau & Douglas Rushkoff\n\n\n	2:50 – 4:20 PMSession 5: The Mind's Eye — Cultivating Attention\, Inner Development & Collective Resilience\n\n\n	Guest Experts: Cliff Saron & Robert Roser\n\n\n	4:20 – 5:00 PMRelational Sensemaking\n\n\n	Fellows facilitate embodied reflection on justice and leadership.\n\n\n	\n\n\n	Day 3Sunday\, November 9\n\n\n	Theme:Earth\, Spirit\, and the Future We’re Making\n\n\n	Time:11:00 AM - 5:00 PM ET\n\n\n	\n\n\n	11:00 - 11:30 AM Morning Practice\n\n\n	11:30 AM - 1:00 PMSession 6:Living Earth – Ecology\, Resilience & Social Transformation\n\n\n	Guest Experts: Mary Evelyn Tucker & Elissa Epel\n\n\n	1:10 – 2:40 PMSession 7:Transforming Justice from the Inside Out\n\n\n	Guest Experts: Gretchen Ki Steidle & guests \n\n\n	2:50 – 4:20 PMCulminating Plenary:Weaving the Future – Insight\, Action & Our Shared Field\n\n\n	\n\n\n	4:20 – 5:00 PMRelational Sensemaking\n\n\n	Fellows guide participants in weaving across ecology\, spirit\, and justice\, moving from insight into commitments.\n\n\n\n\n  \n  \nHOSTS\nDr. Angel Acosta – Healing-Centered Leader & Founder\, Acosta Institute has worked to bridge the fields of leadership\, social justice\, and mindfulness for over a decade. He holds a doctorate degree in curriculum and teaching at Teachers College\, Columbia University. Acosta has supported more than educational leaders and their students by facilitating leadership trainings\, creating pathways to higher education\, and designing dynamic learning experiences. His dissertation explored healing-centered education as a promising framework for educational leadership development. After participating in the Mind and Life Institute’s Academy for Contemplative Leadership\, Acosta began consulting and developing learning experiences that weave leadership development with conversations about inequality and healing\, to support educational leaders through contemplative and restorative practices. As a former trustee for the Center for Contemplative Mind in Society\, he participated as a speaker and discussant at the Asia Pacific Forum on Holistic Education in Kyoto\, Japan. He continues to consult for organizations like the NYC Department of Education\, UNICEF\, Columbia University and others. Over the last couple of years\, he has designed the Contemplating 400 Years of Inequality Experience–a contemplative journey to understand structural inequality. He’s a proud member of the 400 Years of Inequality Project\, based at the New School. He is currently the Director of the Garrison Institute Fellowship Program and the Chief Curator at the Acosta Institute. \n  \nNichol Chase\, ERYT-500\, TSM\, is an educator\, program leader\, and contemplative teacher specializing in resilience science\, trauma-informed care\, and embodied wisdom practices. A Fellow of the Garrison Institute\, she designs and leads programs integrating mindfulness\, movement\, and music to help individuals and communities navigate stress\, heal from trauma\, and cultivate well-being. Nichol has presented and led practices at UCSF\, Spirit Rock\, Kripalu\, Esalen\, the Climate CAP Summit for MBA students\, and BrainMind. She is the co-author of a forthcoming chapter on trauma-informed yoga for the Palgrave Handbook of Third-Wave Psychotherapy with researchers from the Chinese Academy of Science\, James Cook University\, Bangor University\, and Santa Clara University. A classically trained ballerina and opera singer\, Nichol brings creativity and depth to her teaching. She is the founder of the Wisdom Building Method School\, creator of a 300-hour advanced trauma-informed yoga teacher training\, and faculty in anatomy and physiology for multiple yoga teacher training schools. Trained in diverse lineages—including Iyengar\, Ashtanga\, Anusara yoga\, Tibetan Buddhism\, Advaita Vedanta\, and iRest Yoga Nidra—she has studied with Jack Kornfield\, Tara Brach\, Richard Miller\, David Treleaven\, Noah Mazé\, Douglas Brooks\, Annie Carpenter\, and Richard Rosen. Nichol’s work integrates embodied practice\, science\, and contemplative wisdom to advance resilience\, trauma-informed care\, and holistic well-being. Learn more at https://www.nicholjoychase.com/. \n\n\nSPEAKERS\n  \nJon Kabat-Zinn\, Ph.D.\, did his doctoral work in molecular biology at MIT in the laboratory of the Nobel Laureate\, Salvador Luria. He is Professor of Medicine emeritus at the University of Massachusetts Medical School\, where he founded the Center for Mindfulness in Medicine\, Health Care\, and Society (in 1995)\, and (in 1979) its world-renown Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) Clinic. He is the author of 15 books\, the most recent of which are Mindfulness Meditation for Pain Relief (2023)\, and a Thirtieth Anniversary Edition of Wherever You Go\, There You Are 2024). Others include Full Catastrophe Living\, Wherever You Go\, There You Are\, and Mindfulness for Beginners. In 2018/2019\, he published a series of four volumes updating and expanding the 2005 edition of Coming to Our Senses: Meditation is Not What You Think; Falling Awake; The Healing Power of Mindfulness; and Mindfulness for All. His books are published in over 45 languages. His work has contributed to a growing movement of mindfulness into mainstream institutions such as medicine\, psychology\, health care\, neuroscience\, schools\, higher education\, business\, social justice\, criminal justice\, prisons\, the law\, technology\, government\, and professional sports. Over 700 hospitals and medical centers around the world now offer MBSR. Jon lectures and leads mindfulness workshops and retreats around the world and online. In the Spring of 2020\, at the start of the Covid-19 pandemic\, he offered 66 consecutive weekdays of 90 minute online guided meditations\, talks\, and dialogue\, the so-called mitigation retreat. Learn more at jonkabat-zinn.com. \n  \nDaniel J. Siegel\, M.D.\, is the Founder and Director of Education of the Mindsight Institute and Founding Co-Director of the Mindful Awareness Research Center at UCLA\, where he was also Co-Principal Investigator of the Center for Culture\, Brain and Development and Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at the School of Medicine. An award-winning educator\, Dan is the author of ﬁve New York Times bestsellers and over ﬁfteen other books which have been translated into over forty languages. As the founding editor of the Norton Professional Series on Interpersonal Neurobiology (“IPNB”)\, Dan has overseen the publication of over one hundred books in the transdisciplinary IPNB framework which focuses on the mind and mental health. A graduate of Harvard Medical School\, Dan completed his postgraduate training at UCLA specializing in pediatrics\, and adult\, adolescent\, and child psychiatry. He was trained in attachment research and narrative analysis through a National Institute of Mental Health research training fellowship focusing on how relationships shape our autobiographical ways of making sense of our lives and inﬂuence our development across the lifespan. Learn more about Dr. Siegel at: drdansiegel.com. \n  \nLaura Inserra is a sound alchemist\, multi-instrumentalist\, and internationally recognized pioneer in the field of sound and transformation. Born in Sicily and classically trained as well as self-taught\, she blends ancient wisdom traditions\, psychology\, mythology\, and modern science with immersive sound experiences. A world-renowned Hang musician\, Laura performs on a vast array of rare instruments\, creating music and environments that foster healing\, connection\, and transformation. She developed MetaMusic Healing\, a modality combining sound\, ancient practices\, and psychology\, and her work has been featured in the New York Times bestseller Your Brain on Art and selected by Johns Hopkins for research on music’s therapeutic benefits. Through retreats\, corporate programs\, global conferences\, and her Chambers of AWE project\, she designs meta-sensory experiences to cultivate leadership\, creativity\, and well-being. Her recent planetarium film Qualia bridges music\, science\, and ancient wisdom to open audiences to wonder and transformation. \n  \nYolanda Sealey-Ruiz\, Ph.D. is a Professor of English Education at Teachers College\, Columbia University\, and a leading voice on racial literacy in education. She is the co-editor of five books\, including the forthcoming All About Black Girl Love: bell hooks and Pedagogies of Love (2024)\, and co-author of the award-winning Advancing Racial Literacies in Teacher Education (2021)\, where she introduces her Archeology of Self™ framework. A poet as well as a scholar\, she has published two poetry collections: Love from the Vortex & Other Poems (2020) and The Peace Chronicles (2021). Yolanda has been named one of EdWeek’s EduScholar Influencers for three consecutive years\, placing her among the top 1% of educational scholars in the U.S.\, and in 2024 she received NYU’s Dorothy Height Distinguished Alumni Award. She is the founder of the Racial Literacy Project @TC and the long-running Racial Literacy Roundtables Series\, and she delivered the opening talk at the 2022 TEDxUPenn conference. Her work has been featured in Spike Lee’s 2 Fists Up: We Gon’ Be Alright (2016) and in the documentary Defining Us: Children at the Crossroads of Change. Connect with her on Twitter at @RuizSealey and Instagram at @yolie_sealeyruiz. \n  \nArawana Hayashi heads the creation of Social Presencing Theater (SPT) for the Presencing Institute\, where she serves as a core faculty. Working with Otto Scharmer\, Peter Senge\, and colleagues\, she brings her background in the arts\, meditation\, and social justice to creating “social presencing” that makes visible both current reality and emerging future possibilities for individuals and groups. Arawana is both an improvisational dancer and a lineage holder of the Japanese traditional dance of Bugaku. She is also a longtime practitioner and senior teacher in the Shambhala tradition of meditation. Arawana delivers workshops on SPT throughout the world. Learn more at arawanahayashi.com.  \n  \n Resmaa Menakem\, MSW\, LICSW\, SEP is a therapist\, author\, and cultural architect based in Minneapolis\, internationally recognized for his work on racialized trauma\, communal healing\, and embodied antiracist practice. He is the originator of Somatic Abolitionism\, a transformative approach to healing and culture building\, and the founder of Justice Leadership Solutions and the Cultural Somatics Institute. A senior fellow at The Meadows Behavioral Healthcare\, Resmaa is the author of the New York Times bestseller My Grandmother’s Hands: Racialized Trauma and the Pathway to Mending Our Hearts and Bodies (2017)\, as well as The Quaking of America (2022)\, Monsters in Love (2022)\, and The Stories from My Grandmother’s Hands (2023). His career spans decades of work as a counselor\, mediator\, and community organizer\, including serving as a military family consultant in Afghanistan\, directing counseling services for Tubman Family Alliance\, and leading behavioral health at African American Family Services in Minneapolis. In 2022 he launched The Addieun Foundation to support healing in marginalized communities\, and in 2023 released the online course Healing Racialized Trauma: Somatic Abolitionism for Every Body with Sounds True. Resmaa is a sought-after voice in national conversations on race and healing\, with appearances on On Being\, 10% Happier\, The Breakfast Club\, Tha God’s Honest Truth\, and Oprah’s Sundays with Vernā. Learn more at resmaa.com. (Photo by Nancy Wong) \n  \nKaira Jewel Lingo is a Dharma teacher with a lifelong interest in spirituality and social justice. Her work continues the Engaged Buddhism developed by Thich Nhat Hanh\, and she draws inspiration from her parents’ lives of service and her dad’s work with Martin Luther King\, Jr. After living as an ordained nun for 15 years in Thich Nhat Hanh’s monastic community\, Kaira Jewel now teaches internationally in the Zen lineage and the Vipassana tradition\, as well as in secular mindfulness\, at the intersection of racial\, climate and social justice with a focus on Black\, Indigenous\, and People of Color\, and activists\, as well as artists\, educators\, families\, and youth. Based in New York\, she offers spiritual mentoring to groups and is author of We Were Made for These Times: Ten Lessons in Moving through Change\, Loss and Disruption and co-author of Healing Our Way Home: Black Buddhist Teachings on Ancestors\, Joy and Liberation. Learn more at kairajewel.com. \n  \nDr. Max Klau is the Founder of the Center for Courageous Wholeness\, an organization dedicated to helping individuals and organizations integrate shadow\, serve others\, and scale their impact. He recently served as the Chief Program Officer at the New Politics Leadership Academy (NPLA)\, an organization focused on bringing more servant leaders–military vets and alumni of national service programs like AmeriCorps and Peace Corps–into politics. Prior to that\, he was the Vice President of Leadership Development at City Year\, the education-focused AmeriCorps program. He received his doctorate from the Harvard Graduate School of Education in 2005 with a focus on human development and leadership. His second book\, Developing Servant Leaders at Scale: How to Do It and Why It Matters\, was published in August 2025. He is a husband\, father\, consultant\, speaker\, Integral Master Coach\, and musician. Learn more about him at centerforcourageouswholeness.org. \n  \nDouglas Rushkoff\, Ph.D. is an author\, documentarian\, and professor whose work explores human autonomy in a digital age. Named one of the “world’s ten most influential intellectuals” by MIT\, he is the author of over twenty books\, including Survival of the Richest: Escape Fantasies of the Tech Billionaires (2022)\, Team Human (2019)\, and bestsellers such as Present Shock\, Throwing Rocks at the Google Bus\, Program or Be Programmed\, Life Inc\, and Media Virus. He is also the creator of the award-winning PBS Frontline documentaries Generation Like\, The Persuaders\, and Merchants of Cool. Rushkoff coined concepts like “viral media\,” “screenagers\,” and “social currency\,” and has been a leading voice in applying digital media toward economic and social justice. He is Professor of Media Theory and Digital Economics at CUNY/Queens\, where he founded the Laboratory for Digital Humanism\, and serves as a research fellow at the Institute for the Future. A frequent commentator in major media and host of the Team Human podcast\, his work bridges media\, technology\, culture\, and economics to help reorient digital society toward human values. Learn more at rushkoff.com. \n\nClifford Saron\, PhD is a Research Scientist Emeritus at the Center for Mind and Brain and MIND Institute at the University of California at Davis. He received his Ph.D. in neuroscience from the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York in 1999. In the early 1990s he conducted field research investigating Tibetan Buddhist mind training under the auspices of the Office of H.H. the Dalai Lama. A faculty member at Mind and Life Summer Research Institutes in the US and Europe\, he received the inaugural Mind and Life Service Award in 2018. Dr. Saron directs the Shamatha Project\, a multidisciplinary longitudinal investigation of the effects of intensive meditation on physiological and psychological processes central to well-being. In 2012\, Dr. Saron and his research team were awarded the inaugural Templeton Prize Research Grant in honor of H.H. the Dalai Lama. Currently his research team is investigating the consequences of compassion vs. mindfulness training on engagement with suffering\, as well as how meditation experience may have affected stress coping and cellular aging during the pandemic. His other research area focuses on sensory processing and integration in children with autism spectrum development to better understand how these children experience everyday environments. \n  \nRobert W. Roeser is the Alice Valli Professor of Compassion and Ethics and Professor of Behavioral Social and Health Education Sciences at Emory University. He also serves as the Director of Research for the Center for Contemplative Science and Compassion-based Ethics in the College of Arts and Sciences. His training is in education\, developmental science\, clinical social work and religion; and he is a thought leader in the emerging fields of Contemplative Education and Developmental Contemplative Science. Dr. Roeser’s research interests include adolescence and early adulthood\, schooling from Pre-K to College/University as a central cultural context of students’ academic\, social-emotional and identity development; and the role of mindfulness and compassion training for teachers and students.  His recent work has focused on introducing mindfulness and compassion practices in for-credit\, college courses for students to help them to (a) manage mental health challenges and (b) pursue their own vision of a life of flourishing. \n  \nMary Evelyn Tucker is co-director with John Grim of the Yale Forum on Religion and Ecology. They are affiliated faculty with the Yale Center for Environmental Justice at the Yale School of the Environment. They organized 10 conferences on World Religions and Ecology at Harvard and were series editors for the 10 resulting volumes from Harvard. Her research area is Asian religions and she co-edited Confucianism and Ecology\, Buddhism and Ecology\, and Hinduism and Ecology. She has authored with Grim\, Ecology and Religion (Island Press\, 2014). They co-edited the Routledge Handbook of Religion and Ecology (2017) with Willis Jenkins. They are editors for the series on Ecology and Justice from Orbis Books. They have created six online courses in Religions and Ecology: Restoring the Earth Community\, which include Indigenous religions\, Western religions\, and Asian religions. They also edited the books of cultural historian\, Thomas Berry\, including Selected Writings (Orbis 2014). They published Thomas Berry: A Biography (Columbia University Press\, 2019) with Andrew Angyal. With Brian Thomas Swimme\, they created a multi-media project Journey of the Universe that includes a book (Yale\, 2011)\, an Emmy Award winning film on PBS\, a series of podcast Conversations\, and free online courses from Yale/Coursera.  Tucker was a member of the Earth Charter Drafting committee and the International Earth Charter Council. She won the Inspiring Yale Teaching Award in 2015 and has been awarded 7 honorary degrees. With Grim\, she has received numerous awards\, including a Lifetime Achievement Award from the International Society for the Study of Religion\, Nature\, and Culture. \n  \nElissa Epel\, Ph.D\, (pronunciation) is an international expert on stress\, well-being\, and optimal aging and a best-selling author.  She is a Professor in the Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences\, at the University of California\, San Francisco\, where she is Vice Chair of Psychology and directs the Aging Metabolism Emotions Center.  She studies the environmental\, psychological\, behavioral\, and social factors that impact cellular aging (such as telomeres\, inflammation\, and mitochondria)\, and is also focusing on climate wellness. She studies how self-care practices such as meditation and positive stress can promote psychological and physiological thriving and is interested in large-scale interventions for communal well-being and health equity. She co-wrote the New York Times best-seller “The Telomere Effect: A revolutionary approach to living younger\, longer” with Nobel Laureate Elizabeth Blackburn (translated into 30 languages) and the new “Stress Prescription\,” an independent bookstore best seller and being translated into 15 languages. She enjoys leading science-based meditation retreats. Epel is a member of the National Academy of Medicine\, past President of the Academy of Behavioral Medicine Research\, and past co-chair of the Mind & Life Institute Steering Council.  She has served as a consultant to NIH\, CDC\, Facebook\, Apple\, United Health\, and UC campus-wide initiatives on stress and health.  Epel’s research has been featured in venues such as TEDMED\, Wisdom 2.0\, NBC’s Today Show\, CBS’s Morning Show\, 60 minutes\, National Public Radio\, New York Times\, Wall Street Journal\, and science documentaries. In 2022\, she was named as a highly cited researcher\, among the  top .1% of researchers globally (for publication impact). Learn more at elissaepel.com. \n  \nGretchen Ki Steidle is the Director of Garrison Institute’s Spirituality & Social Change Program.  She is also the Founder and President of Circles for Conscious Change\, a transformative education firm working with social entrepreneurs\, nonprofits\, and corporations on the use of mindfulness as a design tool for social innovation. Previously\, she founded Global Grassroots\, an international organization that operated a social venture incubator and mindful-leadership program for women and girls in East Africa. She has an MBA from the Tuck School at Dartmouth and a BA in Foreign Affairs from the University of Virginia. Gretchen is author of Leading from Within: Conscious Social Change and Mindfulness for Social Innovation (MIT Press\, 2017) and lectures and teaches on mindfulness and social change worldwide. A certified Integrative Breathworker\, Gretchen has been delivering breath-based therapeutic practices\, resilience training\, and trauma healing since 2002 to a range of individuals globally\, including survivors of and first responders to war and mass disaster. Her workshops have been offered at institutions including the Skoll World Forum\, Omega Institute\, Kripalu Institute\, Wellbeing Project\, AshokaU Exchange\, Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth College and University of Virginia\, among others. In 2007\, Gretchen was honored by World Business Magazine and Shell as one of the top International 35 Women Under 35. She was recognized in 2010 as a CNN Hero volunteering in Haiti after the earthquake. She was chosen in 2011 as one of seven Remarkable Women of the World by New Hampshire Magazine. In 2018\, Gretchen was named one of Inc.’s Top 100 Leadership Speakers. \n  \nRhonda V. Magee\, M.A.\, Sociology; J.D.\, is a Professor of Law at the University of San Francisco and an internationally recognized leader in integrating mindfulness into education\, law\, and social change. Born in North Carolina in 1967 and shaped by a childhood of trauma and challenge\, she discovered early that healing\, service\, and contemplative practice could provide a way forward. For more than two decades\, she has pioneered courses on civil law\, race and inequality\, and mindfulness and lawyering\, while training extensively in Buddhist traditions\, mindfulness-based interventions\, and interpersonal dialogue. A former president of the board of the Center for Contemplative Mind in Society and a Fellow of the Mind and Life Institute\, Rhonda has served on its steering council and sits on the boards of the UMass Center for Mindfulness and the Search Inside Yourself Leadership Institute. She has also taught in leading mindfulness teacher training programs and led retreats at Spirit Rock\, the Garrison Institute\, Omega\, Esalen\, and other centers nationwide. Her teaching and writing focus on compassionate conflict engagement\, presence-based leadership\, and embodied mindfulness as keys to personal and collective transformation. She is the author of The Inner Work of Racial Justice: Healing Ourselves and Transforming Our Communities Through Mindfulness (2019). \n  \nAqeela Sherrills\, Founder of the Community-Based Public Safety Collective\, is a spirit-centered organizer and activist who has worked for three decades to promote community ownership of public safety and facilitate healing from violence in marginalized communities. A nationally recognized expert in victim service and community-based public safety\, Aqeela has created and led multi-million-dollar nonprofit organizations focused on reducing violence and fostering safety in urban communities and advised hundreds of organizations. Currently\, Aqeela is the Founder and leader of the Community-Based Public Safety Collective. Aqeela’s dedication to ending violence and promoting community-based public safety began in Watts\, Los Angeles\, where he joined the Grape Street Crips before fleeing the violence in his community to attend college. At age 19\, Aqeela and Hall of Fame NFL star Jim Brown co-founded the Amer-I-Can Program\, Inc. to heal gang violence in cities across the country by empowering individuals to overcome behavior that negatively influenced their lives. During that time\, Aqeela was a chief architect of a historic truce between the Crips and Bloods in Watts. Aqeela and his brothers created the Community Self-Determination Institute in 1999 to heal communities’ post (and present) traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Aqeela launched The Reverence Project in 2007 to make meaning from his own son’s death. TRP brings together activists\, healers\, and artists in urban “war zones” to shift the culture from violence\, shame\, guilt\, and fear into one rooted in forgiveness\, compassion\, reverence\, and truth.  Aqeela serves as the Senior Advisor to the Alliance for Safety and Justice’s Shared Safety Initiative\, and is a member of the Board of Directors of The Alliance for Safety and Justice\, and Chairman of the Board of the Newark Community Street Team. \n  \nTracy Ferron is Founder and Board President of Life On Art\, a California-based non-profit which brings people together in therapeutic community art-making processes\, healing trauma while building hope. Life On Art combines community artmaking\, creative arts therapies\, social action\, and large-scale public art exhibitions. The customized programs further social and environmental justice movements and transform the world through love\, creativity\, and community building. Tracy’s passion for mental health and arts equity emerged from her experiences with her two severely mentally ill brothers\, and her personal journey of transforming childhood trauma into purpose and social action through art. Through the symbology of winged hearts and cages\, Ferron’s work compels audiences toward compassion. Tracy has innovated groundbreaking art programs at the margins\, serving patients and staff in a forensic state psychiatric facility and men and women in California state prisons.  These programs are developed in partnership with therapists\, artists\, educators\, non-profit leaders and community volunteers.  Tracy created Unbound (2021-22)\, an 80-foot sculpture of hundreds of winged hearts\, in an innovative partnership at one of California’s largest psychiatric facilities. This project involved 1500 people: 500 psychiatric patients\, 200 staff and 800 community participants. \n  \nSusan Olesek\, Founder of the Enneagram Prison Project\, is an unapologetic idealist and a Human Potentialist in passionate pursuit of what is possible for people. Born near Boston and raised in Hong Kong and Japan\, she earned a BA in Sociology from Occidental College\, where she received the Alumna of the Year award in 2025. As a consultant\, Susan has facilitated Fortune 500 clients in the work of self-development for over a decade\, but it was an opportune visit to a Texas prison that changed the trajectory of her life forever. In 2012 she founded the Enneagram Prison Project (EPP)\, a burgeoning California Bay Area nonprofit offering self-awareness education and self-regulation training to those incarcerated. With a vision to see her favorite transformational tool in every corner of society\, EPP is now programming from San Quentin State prison\, to Australia\, the UK\, Belgium and beyond. In 2021\, she launched The Human Potentialists\, a Benefit Corporation focused on doing business for good\, with a vision to democratize the Enneagram. Ultimately Susan has a dream of changing our collective vision of Social Justice in the long term through teaching the incarcerated about the prison of our own personality. Susan believes wholeheartedly in everyone and anyone willing to take an honest look at themselves to make deep and lasting changes from the inside out. \n \n  \nRev. angel Kyodo williams is a two-time author\, visionary\, master trainer and social strategist. She founded Transformative Change and is the architect of Healing Race Portal\, a global intervention designed to return people to inherent belonging. Called “one of our wisest voices on social evolution” by On Being’s Krista Tippett\, Rev. angel is the second Black woman to hold the most senior title in Zen Buddhism. Her 30 years of multidimensional work and practice sit at the vanguard of embodiment toward liberation\, changing the way change is done in activist communities at every intersection.Rev. angel’s first book\, Being Black: Zen and the Art of Living With Fearlessness and Grace\, bridged personal transformation and social justice with the principle: “Without inner change\, there can be no outer change. Without collective change\, no change matters.” Her second co-authored book\, Radical Dharma: Talking Race\, Love and Liberation\, offered a Framework for Liberation that confronts the roots of our individual and collective disbelonging. The book ignited community conversations and connections across lines of difference that became a laboratory for Healing Race Portal. Rigorous in discipline and rooted in love\, Rev. angel casts aside the limited imagination of cultures of domination to co-envision more expansive\, possible futures\, leveraging advanced technology and ancient wisdom practices to instigate the most potent change for all species and the planet. \n  \nAlex Senegal is an Ambassador for Enneagram Prison Project (EPP) and The Human Potentialists (THP) where he is someone else’s hope. Alex is a father\, grandfather\, ordained minister\, certiﬁed drug and alcohol counselor\, court liaison and mental health specialist with a passion for helping people overcome many of the same challenges in life he has endured. As a sought after public speaker\, and board member of nonproﬁts including Destination:Home\, and Lived Experience Advisory Board (LEAB) of Silicon Valley\, he advocates for those who are unhoused\, and brings the wisdom of his 26 years of lived experience of incarceration to everything he puts his heart into. Alex is the recipient of the Bibleway Christian Center’s Legacy Award for demonstrably making lives better through love and acceptance.\nRaised in “the projects” of southern California\, Alex was running the streets before he was seven\, and later found himself in the revolving door of the correctional system. In 2014\, while serving his ﬁnal term\, Alex learned the Enneagram which introduced Alex to Alex\, and he found a personal freedom\, unlike anything he’d ever known.\nToday Alex lives by the truth that: “The river of life ﬂows from the inside out\,” and has committed himself and his voice to foster the creation of a more socially just and equitable world. \n  \n  \n\n \n  \nIf you are experiencing issues with our check-out cart loading\, please click here to complete your transaction. We apologize for the inconvenience.
URL:https://www.garrisoninstitute.org/event/contemplative-wisdom-transformative-action-conference/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Forum,Virtual
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251118T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251118T150000
DTSTAMP:20260407T112651
CREATED:20250930T191439Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251117T150559Z
UID:46499-1763474400-1763478000@www.garrisoninstitute.org
SUMMARY:Virtual Forum:  Living the Hero’s Journey: Discovering Who We Truly Are
DESCRIPTION:A conversation with Hollywood FilmMaker Angus Wall\, Zen teacher Matthias Birk and Law Firm Leader Greg Starner\n  \n\nThis webinar will explore how Joseph Campbell’s Hero’s Journey can serve not just as a storytelling structure but as a practical guide for living a more authentic and purpose-driven life. Through dialogue with filmmaker Angus Wall\, Zen teacher Matthias Birk\, and Law Firm Leader Greg Starner (facilitated by the Garrison Institute’s Managing Director Steve Varley). \n  \nThrough dialogue we’ll examine how the stages of the Hero’s Journey help us: \n\nRecognize the call to adventure in our own lives.\nNavigate challenges and confront the ego.\nFind deeper alignment with who we truly are.\nReturn with insights that can serve our communities and the wider world.\n\n  \nThe Hero’s Journey is not only a narrative structure for movies\, but also a living framework for personal growth. By embracing it\, we can uncover purpose\, overcome the traps of the ego\, and live with greater clarity and meaning. Join us for this compelling and imaginative conversation. \n  \nZoom links will be emailed within 24 hours of registration. \nPlease contact us at events@garrisoninstitute.org with questions. \n  \n  \nSPEAKERS\n  \nAngus Wall is an Oscar and Emmy-winning filmmaker and founder of MakeMake\, an interdisciplinary studio dedicated to re-enchantment. He has three grown children and lives in Southern California with his wife and three mutts. \n  \n  \nMatthias Birk teaches Zen meditation at Still Mind Zendo in New York and leadership at NYU and Columbia Business School. He’s the founder of Self-Transcendent Leadership and the Director of Partner Development at White & Case. He lives with his wife\, two kids and dog in Brooklyn\, New York. \n  \n  \n  \nGregory Starner is a litigation partner at White & Case and manages the firm’s New York office. He lives with his wife\, three kids and a new puppy in Garrison\, New York. \n  \n  \n  \nSteve Varley serves as the Managing Director at the Garrison Institute. In this role\, Steve is responsible for the comprehensive strategy and support of the Garrison Institute’s efforts to apply the wisdom developed from contemplative practice to modern problems\, with a special interest on the translation of individual practice to community\, organizational\, and systems-level problems. \n  \n\n\n\n\n\n \n\nIf you are experiencing issues with our check-out cart loading\, please click here to complete your transaction. We apologize for the inconvenience.
URL:https://www.garrisoninstitute.org/event/living-the-heros-journey-discovering-who-we-truly-are/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Forum,Virtual
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260121T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260121T130000
DTSTAMP:20260407T112651
CREATED:20251209T124622Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251231T201827Z
UID:47586-1768996800-1769000400@www.garrisoninstitute.org
SUMMARY:Team Intelligence: How Brilliant Leaders Unlock Collective Genius
DESCRIPTION:A Conversation with Jon Levy \nJanuary 21\, 2026 • 12:00 PM ET • Live on Zoom \n  \nWhat makes certain teams thrive while others\, equally talented\, struggle? \nWhy do some groups produce breakthrough ideas\, deep trust\, and extraordinary results — while others collapse under the pressure of ego\, disconnection\, or unclear purpose? \nIn his groundbreaking new book\, Team Intelligence: How Brilliant Leaders Unlock Collective Genius\, behavioral scientist Jon Levy reveals a transformative truth: success is not driven by individual brilliance alone. It emerges from the capacity of a group to work together with clarity\, trust\, benevolence\, and shared purpose. \nJoin us for a special Garrison Institute webinar with Jon Levy and Dr. Angel Acosta as they explore the science\, stories\, and wisdom behind Team Intelligence — and what it takes to unlock the collective genius within organizations\, movements\, and communities today. \nThrough a blend of research\, storytelling\, and reflection\, this conversation will illuminate how brilliant leaders create conditions where teams can flourish. Together\, we will explore: \n\nWhy team performance depends more on trust and cohesion than on superstar talent\nThe vital role of “glue players\,” the often-overlooked individuals who hold groups together\nHow psychological safety\, belonging\, and vulnerability fuel creativity and innovation\nWays leaders can design environments where collective wisdom emerges organically\nWhat Jon Levy has learned from decades of studying astronauts\, Olympic captains\, artists\, entrepreneurs\, and community builders\n\nWhether you lead an organization\, support a community initiative\, guide a school\, or are simply curious about more human ways of working together\, this webinar will offer practical tools and inspiring perspectives for building teams grounded in clarity\, trust\, and shared humanity \n  \n***The Zoom link will be emailed within 24 hours of signing up***** \n\n  \nSPEAKERS\n  \nJon Levy is a behavioral scientist best known for applying research to human connection\, trust\, and influence. He is the founder of The Influencers Dinner\, a secret gathering where leaders from all fields — Nobel laureates\, Olympians\, artists\, executives\, and change-makers — meet and connect in meaningful ways. Over the past decade\, Levy has become a sought-after voice on collaboration\, belonging\, and the social behaviors that shape human performance.\nHis latest book\, Team Intelligence: How Brilliant Leaders Unlock Collective Genius\, dismantles the myth of the heroic individual and demonstrates how extraordinary outcomes emerge when teams cultivate trust\, psychological safety\, purpose\, and relational depth. Levy’s work has been featured across major platforms and has influenced leaders in business\, technology\, education\, and culture. \n  \nDr. Angel Acosta is a visionary educator\, scholar\, and facilitator\, leading efforts at the intersection of healing-centered education\, contemplative practice\, and leadership development. As the director of the Garrison Institute Fellowship\, Dr. Acosta is dedicated to nurturing a global community of change-makers. \n  \n  \n  \n  \n 
URL:https://www.garrisoninstitute.org/event/team-intelligence/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Virtual
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260210T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260210T150000
DTSTAMP:20260407T112651
CREATED:20251213T172141Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260122T164801Z
UID:47644-1770732000-1770735600@www.garrisoninstitute.org
SUMMARY:Virtual Forum: A Conversation Exploring the “Living Earth Community”
DESCRIPTION:  \nWith Jonathan F.P. Rose & Dr. Mary Evelyn Tucker\n  \nWe dwell within an intricate and evolving community of planetary life. The world speaks—to itself and to us—in a multitude of voices\, each representing a unique way of being and knowing. Many of these voices are organic\, such as birds\, mushrooms\, and trees. Others are elemental bodies like rivers and mountains. Yet each is an integral member of the whole. Since our species emerged in evolutionary history\, we have practiced diverse traditions—spiritual\, philosophical\, and scientific—to understand the intricate dimensions of Earth’s interdependence. \nThis conversation will explore the varied spiritual responses to the intelligences of nature and the implications for our current ecological challenges. It will highlight the new Living Earth Community website as a source reference for this discussion. \nAdditional background information is available here\, in a recent editorial from Environment magazine. \n“At every level—from the entire universe to this planet\, to all living beings now and through time\, to your mind and body\, and the world’s collective thinking and beliefs—existence is networks of relationships. I know of no other place on the internet that is a better first-stop and launching point for delving deeply into what all kinds of people have learned and thought about that most basic fact of existence and its radiating ramifications.” – Carl Safina\, PhD\, Ecologist; Professor for Nature and Humanity\, State University of New York; author of many books\, including Beyond Words; What Animals Think and Feel \nWe will conduct this LIVE Forum on Zoom at 2:00 p.m. ET on Tuesday February 10\, 2026. After registering\, you will receive a link to join the session. Please email us at events@garrisoninstitute.org with questions. \n  \nSPEAKERS\n  \n  \n \nMary Evelyn Tucker\, PhD\, taught at Yale in a joint program between the Divinity School and the School of Forestry and Environmental Studies. She directs the Yale Forum on Religion and Ecology with her husband\, John Grim. A pioneer in the field of religion and ecology and an expert in world religions\, she has published hundreds of articles\, co-authored and edited over 20 books\, and co-executive produced the Emmy award-winning film\, Journey of the Universe. Mary Evelyn and John have been building bridges between East and West and sharing the ideas and aspirations of Ecological Civilization for decades. \n  \n  \n \nJonathan F.P. Rose is a noted global expert in sustainable development and regenerative communities. He is Co-Founder and Board Chair for The Garrison Institute\, and Founder and President of Jonathan Rose Companies\, a mission-driven company focused on enhancing the health and wellness of its residents with green\, energy-efficient property improvements and through its Communities of Opportunities programming. In 2024\, he was awarded Bhutan’s prestigious Druk Thuksey Medal (“Order of the Beloved of the Thunder Dragon”) for helping create and implement the Thimphu Structure Plan\, a framework for sustainable development in Bhutan’s rapidly urbanizing capital city. Jonathan founded the Pathways to Planetary Health initiative at the Garrison Institute. \n  \n  \nPlease contact us for questions and inquiries at events@garrisoninstitute.org \n 
URL:https://www.garrisoninstitute.org/event/a-conversation-exploring-the-living-earth-community/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Virtual
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260218T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260218T201500
DTSTAMP:20260407T112651
CREATED:20260121T213319Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260130T210309Z
UID:47957-1771441200-1771445700@www.garrisoninstitute.org
SUMMARY:Conservation in China for Ecological Civilization: A Webinar Series on Ecological Civilization
DESCRIPTION:Co-sponsored by the Pathways to Planetary Health initiative at the Garrison Institute and the Yale Forum on Religion and Ecology \nConservation in China for Ecological Civilization\n  \nChina’s emerging framework of Ecological Civilization is reshaping what conservation can mean—expanding the public discourse beyond protected areas and species recovery to include culture\, livelihoods\, and the ethical foundations of human–nature relationship. This Forum explores conservation practice in China as a “nexus” challenge: where ecological science meets social realities and cultural meaning\, and where the success of conservation depends on trust\, governance\, and long-term stewardship. \nFeaturing conservation scientist and environmental anthropologist Gao Yufang\, we’ll examine how on-the-ground efforts—from protected landscapes to human–wildlife coexistence—are navigating the tensions and possibilities of rapid modernization. What kinds of ethical conservation approaches become possible when ecological values are treated as civilizational priorities? Where do the hardest tradeoffs show up? And what lessons might China’s experiments offer (or not offer) to leaders and communities elsewhere? \n\nTIMING\n  \nWe will conduct this live Forum on Zoom at 7:00 p.m. ET on Wednesday\, February 18\, 2026. After registering\, you will receive a Zoom link to join the session. \n  \n  \nSPEAKERS\n  \nGao Yufang\, PhD\, is a conservation scientist and environmental anthropologist focused on human–wildlife coexistence and the natural–social–cultural nexus in China\, especially in the Himalayan region and Tibetan Plateau. He is the Founder and Director of Conservation Edgewalkers\, an Explorer with the National Geographic Society\, Co-Chair of the IUCN China Species Specialist Group\, and a Research Associate with Yale’s InterAsia Initiative. \n  \n  \nMary Evelyn Tucker\, PhD\, co-directs the Yale Forum on Religion and Ecology\, which examines cultural and religious values for broadened environmental ethics. This arose from a series of 10 conferences at Harvard on world religions and ecology that she organized with John Grim. She has published several books on Confucianism including The Philosophy of Qi. She co-edited Confucianism and Ecology (Harvard) and two volumes with Tu Weiming on Confucian Spirituality. She is the co-author of Journey of the Universe with Brian Thomas Swimme and the executive producer of the Emmy Award winning Journey film. This was inspired by Thomas Berry whose books she edited and whose biography she wrote with John Grim.They have been traveling in China since 1985 studying Ecological Civilization. \n  \nStephen Posner\, PhD\, is Senior Fellow for Planetary Health at the Garrison Institute and Global Affiliate with the Gund Institute for Environment at the University of Vermont. Stephen integrates science with contemplative practices to build understanding across cultures\, align human systems with nature\, and promote cross-sector collaboration. He has published over 50 technical and non-technical articles on sustainability science and leverage points for systems change. He currently leads initiatives related to nature assessment and ecological stewardship \n  \nRoots of Renewal: \nEcological Civilization in China and the Confluence of  Tradition and Modernity\nA Garrison Institute Webinar Series on Ecological Civilization\n  \nThe Garrison Institute’s Pathways to Planetary Health initiative is partnering with the Yale Forum on Religion and Ecology to host a five-part online Forum series exploring Ecological Civilization in China—an evolving cultural\, ethical\, ecological\, and policy vision that asks what it would take to align human development with the flourishing of Earth’s living systems. \nRather than treating ecological civilization as primarily technical\, this series examines how social change is shaped by the relationship between tradition and modernity: where inherited worldviews and cultural traditions meet rapid development\, and where inner cultivation and public institutions must be reimagined together. Each Forum features a guest speaker in dialogue with Mary Evelyn Tucker and moderator Stephen Posner\, and invites participants into conversations that connect ideas to practice\, and values to systems change. \nAcross the series\, we move from on-the-ground conservation and thirty years of Ecological Civilization work in China\, to Daoism and classical reading as pathways for self-transformation and social reform—culminating in the launch of a new Yale Forum Ecological Civilization website designed as a living resource for learning\, teaching\, and transformation. \nModerator: Stephen Posner\, The Garrison Institute\nDiscussants: Mary Evelyn Tucker\, Yale University\, along with esteemed speakers \nWe will conduct these LIVE forums on Zoom. After registering for each forum\, you will receive a link to join the session. Please email us at events@garrisoninstitute.org with questions. \nFeatured speakers and topics: \n\nGao Yufang — Conservation in China for Ecological Civilization\nZhihe Wang & Meijun Fan — Ecological Civilization: Thirty Years of Work in China\nDaniel K. Gardner — Reading the Chinese Classics for Self-Transformation and Social Reform\nChen Xia — Daoism and Ecological Civilization\n\nSimeiqi He & Andrew MacIver — A New Ecological Civilization Hub for Learning\, Teaching\, and Action \nWe will conduct these LIVE forums on Zoom from 7:00 – 8:15pm ET on  \nFebruary 18 \nMarch 4 \n March 18 \nApril 14 \nApril 29 \n  \n  \n  \nPlease contact us for questions and inquiries at events@garrisoninstitute.org.
URL:https://www.garrisoninstitute.org/event/roots-of-renewal-pathways-speaker-series-1/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Forum,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.garrisoninstitute.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Conservation-in-China-for-Ecological-Civilization.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260221T123000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260221T180000
DTSTAMP:20260407T112651
CREATED:20251203T003238Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260204T184145Z
UID:47518-1771677000-1771696800@www.garrisoninstitute.org
SUMMARY:LOVE is the Most Powerful Force in the Universe: A Virtual Retreat
DESCRIPTION:LOVE IS THE MOST POWERFUL FORCE\nIN THE UNIVERSE\n  \nMindfulness teacher Sharon Salzberg joins with Atman Smith\, Ali Smith\, and Andres Gonzalez of the Holistic Life Foundation (HLF) to offer a program exploring the depths\, capacity\, and meaning of love. Love is the most powerful force in the universe. \nLearn to get in touch with and share the infinite love inside of you with meditation\, yoga\, and additional contemplative practices. \nIn a world where division and polarization prevail\, can love be known not as giving in\, but as transformative? How do we love in a way where we feel that we are not being taken advantage of\, and know when tough love is needed? How do we unconditionally love ourselves and find balance in love amidst all our relationships? \nIf conventionally love is seen as weakness\, can we come to understand it as the powerful force it truly is? \nHow do we find balance in love amidst all of our relationships? How do we love in a way where we feel that we are not being taken advantage of? How do we know when to be compassionate and when tough love is needed? How do we love from our higher selves? How do we unconditionally love ourselves? \nWe will explore a myriad of practical tools to promote greater love in life. \n• Connect with the reservoir of love within you \n• Learn greater self-love and self-acceptance \n• Learning to love with appropriate boundaries \n• Cultivating greater love for others through loving kindness meditation practice \n• Yoga and breathwork to ground ourselves and reduce stress\, to better receive love from others \nJoin us for this virtual retreat to develop the skills needed to better love ourselves\, the people in our lives\, and the world. No prior meditation experience is necessary to attend. \n  \nRETREAT SCHEDULE\nThis virtual retreat will be conducted through Zoom on Saturday February 21\, from 12:30 PM – 6:00 PM EST. The virtual retreat link will be emailed to participants within twenty-four hours of your registration. Please email us at events@garrisoninstitute.org with questions. \nSCHOLARSHIPS\nWe are no longer accepting applications at this time. We thank you for your interest and overwhelming response. We regret that we are not able to assist as we had more applicants than our funding can underwrite. For more information on our scholarship funds\, please visit this page. \nTEACHERS\n  \n Sharon Salzberg is a meditation pioneer\, world-renowned teacher\, and New York Times bestselling author. She is one of the first to bring mindfulness and lovingkindness meditation to mainstream American culture over 45 years ago\, inspiring generations of meditation teachers and wellness influencers. Sharon is co-founder of The Insight Meditation Society in Barre\, MA\, and the author of twelve books\, including the New York Times bestseller\, Real Happiness\, now in its second edition\, and her seminal work\, Lovingkindness. Her latest release is a children’s book\, Kind Karl\, is from Shambhala Publications. Her podcast\, The Metta Hour\, has amassed seven million downloads and features interviews with thought leaders from the mindfulness movement and beyond www.sharonsalzberg.com \n  \n Ali Smith was born and raised in Baltimore\, Maryland. He is a graduate of the Friends School of Baltimore and the University of Maryland\, College Park. Ali started his journey with contemplative practices as a small child\, learning meditation from his father and attending the Divine Life Church of Absolute Oneness\, run by Swami Shankarananda. He deepened his practice and learned the art of teaching as a young adult\, studying many forms of yoga\, meditation\, mindfulness\, and breathwork from his teacher and godfather Will Joyner. Ali has almost 20 years’ experience teaching these practices to a broad demographic spectrum\, internationally. He is a published author\, and is a pioneer in the fields of yoga and mindfulness in education\, as well as trauma informed yoga and mindfulness\, developing best practices that are used around the world. He co-founded the Holistic Life Foundation in 2001 and The Involution Group in 2019. Ali is also a co-host of the Look Again Podcast which you can find at www.theinvolutiongroup.com \n  \n Atman Smith is a Co-founder of the Holistic Life Foundation\, where he served as Director of Youth Programming for ten years Director of Fundraising for five years and currently serves as the Director of Development. Since 2001\, he has been teaching yoga and mindfulness to a diverse population including underserved and high-risk youth in Baltimore City Public Schools\, drug treatment centers\, wellness centers\, and colleges. A native of Baltimore\, Atman attended the University of Maryland\, College Park where he was a letter award winner for the University’s men’s basketball team. He graduated with a B.A. in Criminology and Criminal Justice. His work with the Holistic Life Foundation has been featured on Making a Difference on the NBC Nightly News\, CNN\, and CBS\, as well as O the Oprah Magazine\, The Washington Post\, Upworthy\, Mindful Magazine\, Yoga Journal\, Shambala Sun\, and many other publications. https://www.theinvolutiongroup.com/ \n. \n Andres Gonzalez is one of the Co-Founders of the Holistic Life Foundation. For eighteen years\, Andres has taught yoga to diverse populations throughout the world\, including Baltimore City Public School students\, drug treatment centers\, mental crisis facilities\, homeless shelters\, wellness centers\, colleges\, private schools and other various venues throughout the nation and throughout the world. He has partnered with John Hopkins Bloomberg School of Health and the Penn State’s Prevention Research Center on a Stress and Relaxation Study and is a published author in the Journal of Children’s Services. His work with the Holistic Life Foundation has been featured on Making a Difference on the NBC Nightly News\, CNN\, and CBS\, as well as O the Oprah Magazine\, The Washington Post\, Upworthy\, Mindful Magazine\, Yoga Journal\, Shambala Sun\, and many other publications. He is a certified Health Coach through the Institute of Integrative Nutrition\, maintains a B.S. in Marketing from University of Maryland\, College Park and an MBA from the University of Maryland\, University College. https://holisticlifefoundation.org/ \n  \n\n  \n 
URL:https://www.garrisoninstitute.org/event/love-is-the-most-powerful-force-in-the-universe-2026/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Forum,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.garrisoninstitute.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/People-Who-Care-for-People-–-A-Retreat-for-Caregivers.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260304T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260304T201500
DTSTAMP:20260407T112651
CREATED:20260121T214551Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260130T210031Z
UID:47958-1772650800-1772655300@www.garrisoninstitute.org
SUMMARY:Ecological Civilization: Thirty Years of Work in China: A Webinar Series on Ecological Civilization
DESCRIPTION:Co-sponsored by the Pathways to Planetary Health initiative at the Garrison Institute and the Yale Forum on Religion and Ecology \nEcological Civilization: Thirty Years of Work in China\n  \nOver the past three decades\, the idea of Ecological Civilization has moved from philosophical and cultural discourse into public policy\, education\, and civic imagination across China. This Forum traces that longer arc—how a “civilizational” framing of ecology took root\, what currents of thought and practice helped it spread\, and what we can learn from its evolution in a rapidly modernizing society. \nFeaturing Zhihe Wang and Meijun Fan—co-leaders of the Institute for Postmodern Development of China and long-time contributors to the Center for Process Studies’ China Project—the conversation offers an inside view of the relationships\, experiments\, and ideas that have shaped Ecological Civilization in China over time.  \nIn dialogue with Stephen Posner and Mary Evelyn Tucker\, we’ll explore questions such as: \n\nWhat were the early intellectual and moral foundations of Ecological Civilization—and how have they changed?\nWhere have policy\, culture\, and grassroots practice genuinely reinforced one another\, and where have they conflicted?\n How has “tradition” been mobilized (wisely or simplistically) in the context of modernization?\nWhat aspects of China’s Ecological Civilization journey might be transferable elsewhere\, and what is deeply place-specific?\n\nThis Forum is well-suited for participants interested in the long view: the deeper story behind the headlines\, and the ongoing work of shaping ecological futures through culture\, ethics\, and systems change. \n\nTIMING\n  \nWe will conduct this live Forum on Zoom at 7:00 p.m. ET on Wednesday\, March 4\, 2026. After registering\, you will receive a Zoom link to join the session. \n  \n  \nSPEAKERS\n  \nZhihe Wang\, PhD\, is Director of the Institute for Postmodern Development of China and Co-Director of the China Project at the Center for Process Studies in Claremont\, California. A former senior researcher at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences\, he is a leading figure in constructive postmodern thought in China and has published widely on process thought\, pluralism\, and ecological futures. \n  \n  \n  \nMeijun Fan\, PhD\, is Program Director of the Institute for Postmodern Development of China and Co-Director of the China Project at the Center for Process Studies. Formerly a professor at Beijing Normal University\, her work bridges Chinese traditional aesthetics\, process philosophy\, and education\, with a focus on cultural resources for ecological transition. \n  \n  \n  \nMary Evelyn Tucker\, PhD\, co-directs the Yale Forum on Religion and Ecology\, which examines cultural and religious values for broadened environmental ethics. This arose from a series of 10 conferences at Harvard on world religions and ecology that she organized with John Grim. She has published several books on Confucianism including The Philosophy of Qi. She co-edited Confucianism and Ecology (Harvard) and two volumes with Tu Weiming on Confucian Spirituality. She is the co-author of Journey of the Universe with Brian Thomas Swimme and the executive producer of the Emmy Award winning Journey film. This was inspired by Thomas Berry whose books she edited and whose biography she wrote with John Grim.They have been traveling in China since 1985 studying Ecological Civilization. \n  \nStephen Posner\, PhD\, Senior Fellow for Planetary Health at the Garrison Institute and Global Affiliate with the Gund Institute for Environment at the University of Vermont. Stephen integrates science with contemplative practices to build understanding across cultures\, align human systems with nature\, and promote cross-sector collaboration. He has published over 50 technical and non-technical articles on sustainability science and leverage points for systems change. He currently leads initiatives related to nature assessment and ecological stewardship.” \n  \nRoots of Renewal: \nEcological Civilization in China and the Confluence of Tradition and Modernity\nGarrison Institute Webinar 2026 on Ecological Civilization\n  \nThe Garrison Institute’s Pathways to Planetary Health initiative is partnering with the Yale Forum on Religion and Ecology to host a five-part online Forum series exploring Ecological Civilization in China—an evolving cultural\, ethical\, ecological\, and policy vision that asks what it would take to align human development with the flourishing of Earth’s living systems. \nRather than treating ecological civilization as primarily technical\, this series examines how social change is shaped by the relationship between tradition and modernity: where inherited worldviews and cultural traditions meet rapid development\, and where inner cultivation and public institutions must be reimagined together. Each Forum features a guest speaker in dialogue with Mary Evelyn Tucker and moderator Stephen Posner\, and invites participants into conversations that connect ideas to practice\, and values to systems change. \nAcross the series\, we move from on-the-ground conservation and thirty years of Ecological Civilization work in China\, to Daoism and classical reading as pathways for self-transformation and social reform—culminating in the launch of a new Yale Forum Ecological Civilization website designed as a living resource for learning\, teaching\, and transformation. \nModerator: Stephen Posner\, The Garrison Institute\nDiscussants: Mary Evelyn Tucker\, Yale University\, along with esteemed speakers \nWe will conduct these LIVE forums on Zoom. After registering for each forum\, you will receive a link to join the session. Please email us at events@garrisoninstitute.org with questions. \nFeatured speakers and topics: \n\nGao Yufang — Conservation in China for Ecological Civilization\nZhihe Wang & Meijun Fan — Ecological Civilization: Thirty Years of Work in China\nDaniel K. Gardner — Reading the Chinese Classics for Self-Transformation and Social Reform\nChen Xia — Daoism and Ecological Civilization\n\nSimeiqi He & Andrew MacIver — A New Ecological Civilization Hub for Learning\, Teaching\, and Action \nWe will conduct these LIVE forums on Zoom from 7:00 – 8:15pm ET on  \nFebruary 18 \nMarch 4 \n March 18 \nApril 14 \nApril 29 \n  \n  \nPlease contact us for questions and inquiries at events@garrisoninstitute.org.
URL:https://www.garrisoninstitute.org/event/roots-of-renewal-pathways-speaker-series-2/
CATEGORIES:Forum,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.garrisoninstitute.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Ecological-Civilization-Thirty-Years-of-Work-in-China.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260318T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260318T201500
DTSTAMP:20260407T112651
CREATED:20260122T193900Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260316T213137Z
UID:47974-1773860400-1773864900@www.garrisoninstitute.org
SUMMARY:Reading the Chinese Classics for Self-Transformation and Social Reform: A Webinar Series on Ecological Civilization
DESCRIPTION:Co-sponsored by the Pathways to Planetary Health initiative at the Garrison Institute and the Yale Forum on Religion and Ecology \nReading the Chinese Classics for Self-Transformation and Social Reform\n  \nAcross China’s long intellectual history\, the classics have not only been texts to study\, but practices to live—resources for cultivating character\, clarifying responsibility\, and shaping public life. In a moment of rapid modernization and ecological strain\, renewed attention to classical traditions raises a timely question: how might practices of self-cultivation support social reform—and what are the limits of that hope? \nIn this Forum\, Daniel K. Gardner (Dwight W. Morrow Professor Emeritus of History and Environment\, Smith College) draws on decades of scholarship on Confucian and Neo-Confucian traditions—especially the interpretive legacy of Zhu Xi—to explore how “reading” can function as a formative discipline: training attention\, moral discernment\, and a sense of obligation to the common good.  \nIn conversation with Stephen Posner and Mary Evelyn Tucker\, we’ll explore: \n\nWhat does it mean\, in the Confucian tradition\, to read for self-transformation rather than information?\nHow did thinkers like Zhu Xi connect inner cultivation to education\, institutions\, and reform? \nHow might classical practices illuminate (or complicate) contemporary aspirations such as Ecological Civilization—especially where “tradition” is invoked in modern public discourse?\nWhat can modern leaders\, educators\, and communities responsibly take from the classics without romanticizing or instrumentalizing them?\n\nThis Forum is designed for participants interested in the deeper cultural foundations of civilizational change—where ethics\, learning\, and governance intersect\, and where transformation begins with how we form persons and publics. \n  \nTIMING\n  \nWe will conduct this live Forum on Zoom at 7:00 p.m. ET on Wednesday\, March 18\, 2026. After registering\, you will receive a Zoom link to join the session. \n  \n  \nSPEAKERS\n  \nDaniel K. Gardner\, PhD\, is the Dwight W. Morrow Professor Emeritus of History and Environment at Smith College. He has written extensively on Confucian and Neo-Confucian traditions\, including Confucianism: A Very Short Introduction and major works on Zhu Xi and classical interpretation. His work also engages contemporary environmental questions in China\, including through his book Environmental Pollution in China: What Everyone Needs to Know (Oxford\, 2018). \n  \nMary Evelyn Tucker\, PhD\, co-directs the Yale Forum on Religion and Ecology\, which examines cultural and religious values for broadened environmental ethics. This arose from a series of 10 conferences at Harvard on world religions and ecology that she organized with John Grim. She has published several books on Confucianism including The Philosophy of Qi. She co-edited Confucianism and Ecology (Harvard) and two volumes with Tu Weiming on Confucian Spirituality. She is the co-author of Journey of the Universe with Brian Thomas Swimme and the executive producer of the Emmy Award winning Journey film. This was inspired by Thomas Berry whose books she edited and whose biography she wrote with John Grim.They have been traveling in China since 1985 studying Ecological Civilization. \n  \nStephen Posner\, PhD\, is Senior Fellow for Planetary Health at the Garrison Institute and Global Affiliate with the Gund Institute for Environment at the University of Vermont. Stephen integrates science with contemplative practices to build understanding across cultures\, align human systems with nature\, and promote cross-sector collaboration. He has published over 50 technical and non-technical articles on sustainability science and leverage points for systems change. He currently leads initiatives related to nature assessment and ecological stewardship \n  \nRoots of Renewal: \nEcological Civilization in China and the Confluence of Tradition and Modernity\nA Garrison Institute Webinar Series on Ecological Civilization\n  \nThe Garrison Institute’s Pathways to Planetary Health initiative is partnering with the Yale Forum on Religion and Ecology to host a five-part online Forum series exploring Ecological Civilization in China—an evolving cultural\, ethical\, ecological\, and policy vision that asks what it would take to align human development with the flourishing of Earth’s living systems. \nRather than treating ecological civilization as primarily technical\, this series examines how social change is shaped by the relationship between tradition and modernity: where inherited worldviews and cultural traditions meet rapid development\, and where inner cultivation and public institutions must be reimagined together. Each Forum features a guest speaker in dialogue with Mary Evelyn Tucker and moderator Stephen Posner\, and invites participants into conversations that connect ideas to practice\, and values to systems change. \nAcross the series\, we move from on-the-ground conservation and thirty years of Ecological Civilization work in China\, to Daoism and classical reading as pathways for self-transformation and social reform—culminating in the launch of a new Yale Forum Ecological Civilization website designed as a living resource for learning\, teaching\, and transformation. \nModerator: Stephen Posner\, The Garrison Institute\nDiscussants: Mary Evelyn Tucker\, Yale University\, along with esteemed speakers \nWe will conduct these LIVE forums on Zoom. After registering for each forum\, you will receive a link to join the session. Please email us at events@garrisoninstitute.org with questions. \nFeatured speakers and topics: \n\nGao Yufang — Conservation in China for Ecological Civilization\nZhihe Wang & Meijun Fan — Ecological Civilization: Thirty Years of Work in China\nDaniel K. Gardner — Reading the Chinese Classics for Self-Transformation and Social Reform\nChen Xia — Daoism and Ecological Civilization\n\nSimeiqi He & Andrew MacIver — A New Ecological Civilization Hub for Learning\, Teaching\, and Action \nWe will conduct these LIVE forums on Zoom from 7:00 – 8:15pm ET on  \nFebruary 18 \nMarch 4 \n March 18 \nApril 14 \nApril 29 \n  \n  \nPlease contact us for questions and inquiries at events@garrisoninstitute.org.
URL:https://www.garrisoninstitute.org/event/roots-of-renewal-pathways-speaker-series-3/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Forum,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.garrisoninstitute.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Reading-the-Chinese-Classics-for-Self-Transformation-and-Social-Reform.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260414T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260414T201500
DTSTAMP:20260407T112651
CREATED:20260122T204713Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260223T194549Z
UID:47985-1776193200-1776197700@www.garrisoninstitute.org
SUMMARY:Daoism and Ecological Civilization: A Webinar Series on Ecological Civilization
DESCRIPTION:Co-sponsored by the Pathways to Planetary Health initiative at the Garrison Institute and the Yale Forum on Religion and Ecology \n\nDaoism and Ecological Civilization\n  \nEcological Civilization in China often draws on traditional philosophical lineages to articulate what “living well” might mean within ecological limits. Among these\, Daoism offers a distinctive orientation: attention to harmony\, restraint\, interdependence\, and the cultivation of a way of life aligned with the patterns of the natural world. \nIn this Forum\, Chen Xia (Chinese Academy of Social Sciences) explores how Daoist thought can inform—support\, complicate\, and deepen—the project of Ecological Civilization today. Moving beyond slogans\, we’ll examine Daoism as a living intellectual and ethical tradition with relevance for contemporary challenges: environmental governance\, cultural renewal\, and the formation of ecological values in public life.  \nIn conversation with Stephen Posner and Mary Evelyn Tucker\, we’ll consider questions such as: \n\nWhat elements of Daoist philosophy are most relevant to today’s ecological realities—and what gets misunderstood when Daoism is translated into modern policy language?\nHow do Daoist ideas of cultivation (of self\, society\, and relationship with the more-than-human world) connect to the “inner–outer” demands of systems change?\nCan Daoist concepts such as gongsheng (symbiosis / co-flourishing) help reframe modern narratives of progress and development? \nWhat might Daoism contribute to global conversations on ecological ethics—without flattening cultural specificity?\n\n  \nTIMING\n  \nWe will conduct this live Forum on Zoom at 7:00 p.m. ET on Tuesday\, April 14\, 2026. After registering\, you will receive a Zoom link to join the session. \n  \nSPEAKERS\n  \nChen Xia\, PhD\, is a Research Fellow at the Institute of Philosophy at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences in Beijing and a former Berggruen China Center Fellow. Her research focuses on Chinese philosophy and religions\, with particular expertise in Daoism\, including Daoist ethics and ecological perspectives within Daoist thought and culture. \n  \nPeter Senge\, PhD\, is Co-Founder of the Center for Systems Awareness and Senior Lecturer in Leadership & Sustainability at MIT. Peter has been at the forefront of organizational learning since publishing his classic text\, The Fifth Discipline\, which provided theories and methods to foster aspiration\, develop reflective conversation\, and understand complexity in service of shaping learning-oriented organization cultures. He is a pioneer in systems thinking. \n  \n \nMary Evelyn Tucker\, PhD\, co-directs the Yale Forum on Religion and Ecology\, which examines cultural and religious values for broadened environmental ethics. This arose from a series of 10 conferences at Harvard on world religions and ecology that she organized with John Grim. She has published several books on Confucianism including The Philosophy of Qi. She co-edited Confucianism and Ecology (Harvard) and two volumes with Tu Weiming on Confucian Spirituality. She is the co-author of Journey of the Universe with Brian Thomas Swimme and the executive producer of the Emmy Award winning Journey film. This was inspired by Thomas Berry whose books she edited and whose biography she wrote with John Grim.They have been traveling in China since 1985 studying Ecological Civilization. \n  \n \nStephen Posner\, PhD\, is Senior Fellow for Planetary Health at the Garrison Institute and Global Affiliate with the Gund Institute for Environment at the University of Vermont. Stephen integrates science with contemplative practices to build understanding across cultures\, align human systems with nature\, and promote cross-sector collaboration. He has published over 50 technical and non-technical articles on sustainability science and leverage points for systems change. He currently leads initiatives related to nature assessment and ecological stewardship \n  \nRoots of Renewal: \nEcological Civilization in China and the Confluence of Tradition and Modernity\nGarrison Institute Webinar 2026 on Ecological Civilization\n  \nThe Garrison Institute’s Pathways to Planetary Health initiative is partnering with the Yale Forum on Religion and Ecology to host a five-part online Forum series exploring Ecological Civilization in China—an evolving cultural\, ethical\, ecological\, and policy vision that asks what it would take to align human development with the flourishing of Earth’s living systems. \nRather than treating ecological civilization as primarily technical\, this series examines how social change is shaped by the relationship between tradition and modernity: where inherited worldviews and cultural traditions meet rapid development\, and where inner cultivation and public institutions must be reimagined together. Each Forum features a guest speaker in dialogue with Mary Evelyn Tucker and moderator Stephen Posner\, and invites participants into conversations that connect ideas to practice\, and values to systems change. \nAcross the series\, we move from on-the-ground conservation and thirty years of Ecological Civilization work in China\, to Daoism and classical reading as pathways for self-transformation and social reform—culminating in the launch of a new Yale Forum Ecological Civilization website designed as a living resource for learning\, teaching\, and transformation. \nModerator: Stephen Posner\, The Garrison Institute\nDiscussants: Mary Evelyn Tucker\, Yale University\, along with esteemed speakers \nWe will conduct these LIVE forums on Zoom. After registering for each forum\, you will receive a link to join the session. Please email us at events@garrisoninstitute.org with questions. \nFeatured speakers and topics: \n\nGao Yufang — Conservation in China for Ecological Civilization\nZhihe Wang & Meijun Fan — Ecological Civilization: Thirty Years of Work in China\nDaniel K. Gardner — Reading the Chinese Classics for Self-Transformation and Social Reform\nChen Xia — Daoism and Ecological Civilization\n\nSimeiqi He & Andrew MacIver — A New Ecological Civilization Hub for Learning\, Teaching\, and Action \nWe will conduct these LIVE forums on Zoom from 7:00 – 8:15pm ET on  \nFebruary 18 \nMarch 4 \n March 18 \nApril 14 \nApril 29 \n  \n  \nPlease contact us for questions and inquiries at events@garrisoninstitute.org.
URL:https://www.garrisoninstitute.org/event/roots-of-renewal-pathways-speaker-series-4/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Forum,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.garrisoninstitute.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Daoism-and-Ecological-Civilization.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260429T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260429T201500
DTSTAMP:20260407T112651
CREATED:20260122T214511Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260223T194542Z
UID:47991-1777489200-1777493700@www.garrisoninstitute.org
SUMMARY:A New Ecological Civilization Hub for Learning\, Teaching\, and Action: A Webinar Series on Ecological Civilization
DESCRIPTION:Co-sponsored by the Pathways to Planetary Health initiative at the Garrison Institute and the Yale Forum on Religion and Ecology \n  \nA New Ecological Civilization Hub for Learning\, Teaching\, and Action\n  \nThis Forum marks the launch (and guided tour) of the Yale Forum on Religion and Ecology’s new Ecological Civilization online website—a curated platform designed to make a complex field more accessible for educators\, students\, researchers\, funders\, and practitioners working at the intersection of culture\, ethics\, and ecological change.  \nFeaturing Yale Forum research scholars Simeiqi He and Andrew MacIver\, the session will introduce the site’s purpose and architecture\, highlight key resource pathways (articles\, books\, journals\, multimedia\, reports/statements\, and related links)\, and offer a “how to use this” walkthrough tailored to different audiences—whether you’re looking for a rigorous entry point\, a teaching-ready reading list\, or a way to track the evolution of EcoCiv ideas across China and the West.  \nIn conversation with Mary Evelyn Tucker\, we’ll also explore what it means to build a living knowledge commons: how resources get curated\, how the team is thinking about interpretive balance (policy\, philosophy\, religion\, and practice)\, and how participants can help strengthen the platform over time—by sharing materials\, suggesting gaps\, and bringing forward new questions at the tradition–modernity interface. \n\n\nTIMING\n  \nWe will conduct this live Forum on Zoom at 7:00 p.m. ET on Wednesday April 29\, 2026. After registering\, you will receive a Zoom link to join the session. \n  \nSPEAKERS\n  \nSimeiqi He\, PhD is a Research Scholar with the Yale Forum on Religion and Ecology specializing in China and Ecological Civilization. Her work bridges ecological ethics\, technology\, and religious/social thought\, with a focus on cross-cultural exchange for mutual flourishing and the common good. \n  \n  \nAndrew MacIver\, PhD is a Research Scholar with the Yale Forum on Religion and Ecology specializing in China and Ecological Civilization. An anthropological archaeologist\, he collaborates with partners in the U.S. and China to explore how historical and cultural knowledge can inspire ecological civilization and the common good. \n  \n  \nMary Evelyn Tucker\, PhD\, co-directs the Yale Forum on Religion and Ecology\, which examines cultural and religious values for broadened environmental ethics. This arose from a series of 10 conferences at Harvard on world religions and ecology that she organized with John Grim. She has published several books on Confucianism including The Philosophy of Qi. She co-edited Confucianism and Ecology (Harvard) and two volumes with Tu Weiming on Confucian Spirituality. She is the co-author of Journey of the Universe with Brian Thomas Swimme and the executive producer of the Emmy Award winning Journey film. This was inspired by Thomas Berry whose books she edited and whose biography she wrote with John Grim.They have been traveling in China since 1985 studying Ecological Civilization. \n  \nStephen Posner\, PhD\, is Senior Fellow for Planetary Health at the Garrison Institute and Global Affiliate with the Gund Institute for Environment at the University of Vermont. Stephen integrates science with contemplative practices to build understanding across cultures\, align human systems with nature\, and promote cross-sector collaboration. He has published over 50 technical and non-technical articles on sustainability science and leverage points for systems change. He currently leads initiatives related to nature assessment and ecological stewardship. \n  \n  \nRoots of Renewal:\n Ecological Civilization in China and the Confluence of Tradition and Modernity\nA Garrison Institute Webinar Series on Ecological Civilization\n  \nThe Garrison Institute’s Pathways to Planetary Health initiative is partnering with the Yale Forum on Religion and Ecology to host a five-part online Forum series exploring Ecological Civilization in China—an evolving cultural\, ethical\, ecological\, and policy vision that asks what it would take to align human development with the flourishing of Earth’s living systems. \nRather than treating ecological civilization as primarily technical\, this series examines how social change is shaped by the relationship between tradition and modernity: where inherited worldviews and cultural traditions meet rapid development\, and where inner cultivation and public institutions must be reimagined together. Each Forum features a guest speaker in dialogue with Mary Evelyn Tucker and moderator Stephen Posner\, and invites participants into conversations that connect ideas to practice\, and values to systems change. \nAcross the series\, we move from on-the-ground conservation and thirty years of Ecological Civilization work in China\, to Daoism and classical reading as pathways for self-transformation and social reform—culminating in the launch of a new Yale Forum Ecological Civilization website designed as a living resource for learning\, teaching\, and transformation. \nModerator: Stephen Posner\, The Garrison Institute\nDiscussants: Mary Evelyn Tucker\, Yale University\, along with esteemed speakers \nWe will conduct these LIVE forums on Zoom. After registering for each forum\, you will receive a link to join the session. Please email us at events@garrisoninstitute.org with questions. \nFeatured speakers and topics: \n\nGao Yufang — Conservation in China for Ecological Civilization\nZhihe Wang & Meijun Fan — Ecological Civilization: Thirty Years of Work in China\nDaniel K. Gardner — Reading the Chinese Classics for Self-Transformation and Social Reform\nChen Xia — Daoism and Ecological Civilization\n\nSimeiqi He & Andrew MacIver — A New Ecological Civilization Hub for Learning\, Teaching\, and Action \nWe will conduct these LIVE forums on Zoom from 7:00 – 8:15pm ET on  \nFebruary 18 \nMarch 4 \n March 18 \nApril 14 \nApril 29 \n  \n  \nPlease contact us for questions and inquiries at events@garrisoninstitute.org.
URL:https://www.garrisoninstitute.org/event/roots-of-renewal-pathways-speaker-series-5/
CATEGORIES:Forum,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.garrisoninstitute.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/A-New-Ecological-Civilization-Hub-for-Learning-Teaching-and-Action.png
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR