Posts

Two Worlds of Sustainability: What I Learned from the CSD and Bioneers

Two Worlds of Sustainability: What I Learned from the CSD and Bioneers Sustainability conversations happen in many different spaces, but not all spaces speak the same language—or even ask the same questions. This became clear through experiences at two very different gatherings: the United Nations Commission on Sustainable Development (CSD) and the Bioneers Conference. Both offered deep learning. Both shaped understanding. But they revealed two distinct worlds of sustainability knowledge—one focused on global systems and policy architecture, the other on ecological imagination and community-based solutions. The CSD: Learning the Architecture of Global Systems At the CSD, the conversations were often technical, structural, and deeply connected to global governance. It was here that concepts like carbon trading, carbon markets, and international economic policy frameworks became part of the discussion. Topics included: Carbon trading systems and market mechanisms Climate finance and glob...

Why Are NGOs Outside the Room? Understanding Participation and Power at UN Sustainability Conferences

Why Are NGOs Outside the Room? Understanding Participation and Power at UN Sustainability Conferences If you’ve ever attended a United Nations conference on sustainability, you may have noticed something striking: while governments sit at the decision-making table, many non-governmental organizations (NGOs) gather on the sidelines—or even outside, protesting. This raises an important and often misunderstood question: Why aren’t NGOs fully at the table, especially when they represent communities most affected by global challenges? The answer lies not in exclusion alone, but in how the international system itself is designed. A System Built for Governments At its core, the United Nations is an organization of countries. Bodies like the High-level Political Forum on Sustainable Development (HLPF) are structured around member states, meaning national governments hold formal decision-making power. This structure reflects a foundational principle of international relations: sovereignty. Gove...

Where Did the Spirit of the CSD Go? Finding Participatory Spaces in Today’s Sustainability Landscape

Where Did the Spirit of the CSD Go? Finding Participatory Spaces in Today’s Sustainability Landscape There was a time when global conversations on sustainability felt different—more open, more exploratory, more human. For many who participated in the United Nations Commission on Sustainable Development (CSD), the experience was not just about policy, but about connection, learning, and shared discovery. People gathered not only to report progress, but to exchange ideas, listen deeply, and imagine new possibilities together. Today, the global stage is led by the High-level Political Forum on Sustainable Development (HLPF). It is more visible, more political, and more structured. It tracks progress on the Sustainable Development Goals, aligning nearly every country around a shared framework for the future. And yet, for some, something feels different—perhaps even missing. This raises an important question: Where did the participatory spirit of the CSD go? From Dialogue to Reporting The t...

The Gathering of the Tribes: When the "Pioneer Spirit" Met the Summer of Love

  The Gathering of the Tribes: When the "Pioneer Spirit" Met the Summer of Love ​On January 14, 1967, a crisp winter afternoon in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park became the epicenter of a cultural earthquake. The Human Be-In , famously subtitled "A Gathering of the Tribes," wasn't just a concert; it was a landmark experiment in collective living and a foundational moment for the 1960s counterculture. ​While history often focuses on the later "Summer of Love," the Be-In was the catalyst that proved a decentralized, peaceful community could manifest on a massive scale. ​A Convergence of Two Worlds ​The event was born from a desire to heal a growing rift within the counterculture. At the time, two "tribes" were drifting apart: ​ The Berkeley Radicals: Heavily focused on political activism, the anti-war movement, and institutional change. ​ The Haight-Ashbury Hippies: More interested in personal enlightenment, spirituality, and the use...

The House Archives Built: Memory, Humanity, and the Unfinished Record of Black Life

The House Archives Built: Memory, Humanity, and the Unfinished Record of Black Life In her 2025 book, The House Archives Built and Other Thoughts on Black Archival Possibilities, Dorothy Berry invites us to reconsider something many take for granted: the archive. Not simply as a place where documents are stored, but as a living structure that reflects power, absence, and the fragile effort to remember. Her work moves beyond archival practice and enters a deeper terrain—one that resonates strongly with Anthropology. It asks: How do humans record themselves? And what happens when entire lives are only partially recorded—or not recorded at all? Archives as Human Systems, Not Neutral Containers Anthropology teaches us that no human system is neutral. Language, kinship, ritual—all are shaped by culture and power. Berry extends this insight to archives. Traditional archives often present themselves as objective repositories of truth. Yet Berry shows they are anything but neutral. They are co...

The Original Blueprint: A Metaphysical Journey Through the Teachings of Jesus

Image
  The Original Blueprint: A Metaphysical Journey Through the Teachings of Jesus ​The teachings of Jesus have long been viewed as the foundation of Western morality, but within the tradition of Metaphysical Christianity , they are seen as something far more practical : a manual for the mastery of life. Rather than focusing on traditional dogma, this movement interprets the life and teachings of the " Indwelling Christ" through a philosophical lens, focusing on the relationship between universal laws, the mind, and spiritual reality. ​ The Law of Mental Causation ​At the heart of this perspective is the principle that the external world is a mirror of internal consciousness. This approach suggests that every circumstance in a person’s life—from health and relationships to peace of mind—is the "out-picturing" of their habitual thought patterns. Often referred to as the Law of Mental Equivalents, this principle teaches that to change a condition in the physical wor...

From Crisis to Connection: The Great Restoration

Image
  From Crisis to Connection: The Great Restoration ​For decades, the global conversation around Earth Day has been anchored in the "climate crisis." It’s a narrative built on a foundation of fear, guilt, and the looming shadow of catastrophe. While intended to spark action, this framing has often resulted in "eco-paralysis"—a sense of overwhelming helplessness that leaves many feeling like a "virus" on the planet. But a profound shift is underway, moving us away from the desperation of damage control and toward the hopeful, tangible practice of Earth Land Restoration. ​This evolution represents a move from sustainability —merely trying to keep things from getting worse—to regeneration , the active process of healing the land. At the heart of this movement is a return to Indigenous Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) . This isn't a rejection of modern progress, but rather a "braiding" of ancient wisdom with contemporary science to remembe...