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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20250415T160000
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DTSTAMP:20260404T092609
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UID:9951-1744732800-1745947800@foreststewardsguild.org
SUMMARY:Tree People: Trees\, Forests and the Human Imagination (virtual retreat)
DESCRIPTION:Register (free\, with suggested donation) \nNote: the date of the third session of this retreat has been moved. It is now scheduled for May 6. See you then! \nApril 15\, 22 and May 6\, 2025\n4:00 – 5:30 p.m. PT / 5:00 – 6:30 p.m. MT / 6:00 – 7:30 p.m. CT / 7:00 – 8:30 p.m. ET \nA Forest Stewards Guild 30th Anniversary Guild Gathering event over zoom! \nRetreat facilitator: Jason Minton Brown\, Guild member and Lecturer in the Department of Global Humanities at Simon Fraser University and founder of holyscapes.org. \nSynopsis: In this 3-part online-based participatory retreat/workshop we will explore the deep connection human cultures have forged with trees and forests and how these ‘arboreal’ cultures are expressed today. We will investigate the evolutionary past of tree-beings and explore their importance to the world’s religious and mythological systems. We will track the history of the modernist camps of agricultural\, conservation\, wilderness and Indigenous approaches to forestry practice. And end the workshop with an imaginative exploration of the future of forests. Along the way we will ask participants to examine their own relationship to trees and ask how they understand the role of trees in a changing global civilization and climate. \nLearning/Exploration Outcomes \n\nExplore the relationship between trees\, forests and human societies.\nLearn about how trees and forests show up in the world’s religious and spiritual traditions.\nUnderstand the cultural history of forestry\, natural resources and ecological sciences related to trees and forests.\nDeepen one’s personal relationship to trees and forest spaces.\n\nWorkshop Outline:\nOne-and-a-half-hour\, weekly format with short slide presentation\, group discussion and weekly field journal invitations: \n\nWeek 1: The Primeval Forest: The role of trees and forests in religion and mythology.\nWeek 2: The New Forest: The rise of conservation\, wilderness and the new science of tree communication and ecology.\nWeek 3: The Known Forest: The ways in which we relate to and understand trees and forests on a personal level.\n\n \nRetreat facilitator bio:\nJason Brown was born and raised in Southern California and studied anthropology and international development as an undergraduate at Brigham Young University. He has lived in Vancouver\, BC since 2013 and is a dual citizen of the US and Canada and is a proud Cascadian. He earned joint master’s degrees in forestry and theology from Yale. He completed his PhD in 2017 from the Institute for Resources\, Environment and Sustainability (IRES) at the University of British Columbia where his dissertation explored the sense of place of contemporary Catholic monks in the American West. His book on the experience\, Dwelling in the Wilderness: Modern Monks in the American West was published in 2024. As a Lecturer at Simon Fraser University Jason teaches courses in religious studies and ecological humanities for the department of Global Humanities. He teaches a course entitled Trees\, Forests and the Human Imagination. He is also an un-ordained\, non-aligned earth chaplaincy for Simon Fraser University. The program seeks to promote contemplative practice as a response to climate anxiety and grief. He writes at www.holyscapes.org. \nYou can hear more from Jason in his Contemplative Forestry podcast session and the recording of the Guild’s Communicating Forestry Webinar Series called “Give Me That Old Growth Religion.“
URL:https://foreststewardsguild.org/event/tree-people-trees-forests-and-the-human-imagination-virtual-retreat/
CATEGORIES:Guild Gathering,Intermountain West,Lake States,Northeast,Online Course,Pacific Northwest,Southeast,Southwest,Webinar
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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250428T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250428T150000
DTSTAMP:20260404T092609
CREATED:20250418T191547Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250421T151510Z
UID:10722-1745848800-1745852400@foreststewardsguild.org
SUMMARY:Shaping Georgia’s Forests Future: Tax Policy\, Landowner Decisions\, and Conservation Impact
DESCRIPTION:Register \nApril 28\, 2025\n2:00 – 3:00 p.m. ET \nApproved for one category 1 SAF CFE credit \nJoin us for an engaging webinar that delves into the intersection of forest policy\, taxation\, and private land stewardship. The first presentation will provide a clear overview of forest-related taxes and incentives\, highlighting how tax policy can support sustainable forest management and conservation among private landowners. The second presentation will share findings from a survey of family forest owners in Georgia’s Upper Flint River watershed\, offering insights into landowners’ awareness of conservation programs and how these influence land use decisions. Together\, these talks will explore the complex dynamics between policy tools\, landowner behavior\, and long-term forest conservation goals. \nAgenda \n2:00 – Welcome and introductions \n2:05-2:25 – Dr. Yanshu Li\, University of Georgia \nTitle: “An Overview of Timber Taxes” \nDescription: This presentation offers a concise yet informative exploration of the major types of forest-related taxes and the range of tax incentives and preferential tax provisions designed to support private forest landowners. It sheds light on how tax policy intersects with sustainable forest management\, conservation goals\, and long-term land stewardship. By outlining the financial frameworks that influence landowner decisions\, the discussion emphasizes the critical role of taxation in shaping the economic landscape of private forestry in the United States. \n2:25-2:30 – Questions \n2:30-2:50 – Dr. Jesse Abrams\, University of Georgia \nTitle: “How Georgia Family Forest Owners Uptake Conservation Policy & Program Knowledge” \nIn the talk\, we will present results from a survey of family forest owners in the Upper Flint River watershed regarding their familiarity with and adoption of various conservation programs and policy tools. We will also discuss the relationship between participation in these policies and intentions to transfer or subdivide forestland. In the context of other research on similar topics\, we will explore the tensions and tradeoffs regarding forest conservation policy effectiveness and landowner adoption. \n2:50-3:00 – Questions\, open discussion\, and closing remarks
URL:https://foreststewardsguild.org/event/shaping-georgias-forests-future-tax-policy-landowner-decisions-and-conservation-impact/
CATEGORIES:Southeast,Webinar
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