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CATEGORIES:Lecture/Presentation,Virtual
DESCRIPTION:Conservation Conversations\, a multi-university webinar series 
 brought to you by the Getches-Wilkinson Center at Colorado Law\, presents "
 Another Way of Knowing: Indian Tribes\, Collaborative Management & Public L
 ands" on Tuesday\, Aug25\, from noon to 1 p.m. MDT.\n\nSteeped in on-the-gr
 ound experience\, our speakers will discuss the role that traditional knowl
 edge and collaborative management can and should play in decision-making on
  public lands. This will include lessons learned from Bears Ears National M
 onument\, specific recommendations about integrating collaborative manageme
 nt between Tribes and federal agencies on public lands\, and the ways tradi
 tional knowledge can enrich our understanding of the natural world.\n\nFeat
 uring:\n\nDaniel Cordalis is a member of the Navajo Nation who grew up in D
 urango\, Colorado. Daniel practices natural resources and Indian law in Cal
 ifornia. He works closely with Tribes to protect their water\, natural reso
 urces\, and cultural resources through litigation\, resource negotiations\,
  land acquisition\, and tribal governance and land management initiatives. 
 Daniel also serves as a member of the GWC Advisory Council.\n\nJim Enote is
  a Zuni tribal member\, a high-altitude traditional farmer since childhood\
 , and the CEO of the Colorado Plateau Foundation. For over 20 years\, he ha
 s tackled land and water conservation issues around the world and is commit
 ted to conserving and protecting his own and other Native cultures. He is c
 urrently involved in efforts to repatriate Zuni artifacts and in cultural m
 apping at Zuni Pueblo.\n\nCharles Wilkinson is the Moses Lasky Professor of
  Law Emeritus at the University of Colorado School of Law. He has also been
  named as Distinguished Professor\, one of just twenty-five on the Universi
 ty of Colorado-Boulder campus. After graduating from Stanford Law School an
 d practicing with Phoenix and San Francisco firms\, Wilkinson joined the Na
 tive American Rights Fund in 1971 as a staff attorney. Since 1975\, he has 
 taught at the Oregon and Colorado law schools\, receiving many teaching and
  research awards.\n\nAlice Madden is the Executive Director of the GWC. Ali
 ce practiced law for a decade before running for the Colorado House of Repr
 esentatives in 2000. As Majority Leader\, Alice led the passage of an histo
 rically progressive agenda. She then served as Gov. Ritter’s Climate Change
  Advisor\, was a Climate Fellow at the Center for American Progress\, and l
 ater held the Timothy Wirth Chair in Sustainable Development at CU Denver. 
 In 2015. she was appointed to a high-level leadership position in the Obama
  administration at the U.S. Department of Energy.
DTEND:20200825T190000Z
DTSTAMP:20260308T173233Z
DTSTART:20200825T180000Z
LOCATION:
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Another Way of Knowing: Indian Tribes\, Collaborative Management & 
 Public Lands
UID:tag:localist.com\,2008:EventInstance_34360821422715
URL:https://calendar.colorado.edu/event/another_way_of_knowing_indian_tribe
 s_collaborative_management_public_lands
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