Reclaiming Indigenous Ecologies of Love for Future Generations
The RIEL for Future Generations gathering seeks to elevate and amplify Indigenous voices to address critical health, wellbeing and environmental issues impacting Indigenous communities globally. It will provide an engaging strengths-based forum for international leaders to gather and focus on solutions that respond to systemic health challenges, critical environmental policies, and data security threats impacting Indigenous communities globally that will impact our future generations.
Stay tuned - more information coming soon
Gathering sub-themes
This theme takes a broad approach to health and healing that embraces notions of Indigenous Wellbeing. These include, but are not restricted to: Addressing sexual and gender health, family wellness, and self-care as self-love; mental health, depression, suicide prevention, grief, and trauma healing; maternal health and birth care; epidemic recovery; diabetes, HIV, and drug addiction; Women’s health and well-being; traditional healing practices, culture, language, and family as medicine; ceremony and conflict resolution as medicine; harm-reduction and high-performance athletics as health; Indigenized biomedicine and epidemiology of Indigenous health; biomedical trends and anti-discrimination in care; culturally responsive healthcare representation and Indigenist training for providers; traditional medicine and scientific processes; honoring and prioritizing Indigenous medicines; reclaiming Indigenous healthcare and re-learning traditional health practices; using traditional knowledge to drive innovative solutions in Native communities; and partnerships between biomedicine and traditional health epistemologies.
This theme opens opportunities to share Indigenous knowledge and approaches to exploring well-being through our relationality with land and ecological systems that support our communities. Examples include: land-based healing, and healing the ocean; water and land sovereignty and community safety; traditional knowledges for the land (including Indigenous calendar systems); Indigenous foods and climate change solutions; healing the land through restorative practice; sovereign Indigenous systems for food, capital, and socioeconomic thrivance; re-centering reciprocity and balance with lands, waters, and all living systems.
Indigenous Futures and the lives of future generations will include new and advanced technologies, including Artificial Intelligence. This theme provides the space for engagement with this rapidly growing field. Some examples include: Exploring how Indigenous knowledge and ethics can guide emerging technologies for good; advancing Indigenous data governance and digital sovereignty; protecting traditional knowledge within digital systems; AI and technology for language revitalization, education, and health; Indigenous innovation in digital well-being and cultural continuity; Indigenous futurisms and technology; building partnerships that blend Indigenous science and advanced technologies to serve collective well-being and planetary care.
Language Reclamation | Justice | Creative Practice | LGBTQIATS+ & Indigenist Gender Health | Advancing Health Policy & Sovereignty | Indigenous Governance
This theme takes a broad approach to health and healing that embraces notions of Indigenous Wellbeing. These include, but are not restricted to: Addressing sexual and gender health, family wellness, and self-care as self-love; mental health, depression, suicide prevention, grief, and trauma healing; maternal health and birth care; epidemic recovery; diabetes, HIV, and drug addiction; Women’s health and well-being; Medicines; traditional healing practices, culture, language, and family as medicine; ceremony and conflict resolution as medicine; harm-reduction and high-performance athletics as health; Indigenized biomedicine and epidemiology of Indigenous health; biomedical trends and anti-discrimination in care; culturally responsive healthcare representation and Indigenist training for providers; traditional medicine and scientific processes; honoring and prioritizing Indigenous medicines; reclaiming Indigenous healthcare and re-learning traditional health practices; using traditional knowledge to drive innovative solutions in Native communities; and partnerships between biomedicine and traditional health epistemologies.
This theme opens opportunities to share Indigenous knowledge and approaches to exploring well-being through our relationality with land and ecological systems that support our communities. Examples include: land-based healing, and healing the ocean; water and land sovereignty and community safety; traditional knowledges for the land (including Indigenous calendar systems); Indigenous foods and climate change solutions; healing the land through restorative practice; sovereign Indigenous systems for food, capital, and socioeconomic thrivance; re-centering reciprocity and balance with lands, waters, and all living systems.
Indigenous Futures and the lives of future generations will include new and advanced technologies, including Artificial Intelligence. This theme provides the space for engagement with this rapidly growing field. Some examples include: Exploring how Indigenous knowledge and ethics can guide emerging technologies for good; advancing Indigenous data governance and digital sovereignty; protecting traditional knowledge within digital systems; AI and technology for language revitalization, education, and health; Indigenous innovation in digital well-being and cultural continuity; Indigenous futurisms and technology; building partnerships that blend Indigenous science and advanced technologies to serve collective well-being and planetary care.
Language Reclamation | Justice | Creative Practice | LGBTQIATS+ & Indigenist Gender Health | Advancing Health Policy & Sovereignty | Indigenous Governance