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Free sustainability resources available now from these public forums
Our
thanks to all who participated, in particular to Hunter, panel members
and organisations / individuals who contributed to this event. The
feedback from all who attended was great.
HUNTER'S POWERPOINT SLIDES and VIDEO. (FREE)
SLIDES: from Hunter's final Smart Business Forum in Wellington can be downloaded here (13Mb pdf) or off the Natural Capitalism site Many other free resources are there. Listen to her podcast by Stranova
VIDEOCLIPS On line in Windows Media Format - (Mins/Mbytes)
(a) Rural focus Forums and dialogue: (click on title to view)
Smart Like Nature (27m/44) A rural rainforest community, Te Whaiti
Smart Communities (48m/78) Maori in a proactive community, Raglan
Smart Environment (50m/96) Active young people, Auckland & North
Smart Agriculture (50m/82) Innovative farmers and others, Hamilton
(b) Urban focus forums and dialogue: (click on title to view)
Smart Cities (50m/80) Young people and a mayor from Auckland cities
Smart Business (39m/63) With young people and businesses, Auckland
Smart Economy (40m/65) Students with Local Government, Wellington
A Smart Learning Country (52m/82) A diverse dialogue in Wellington
These are also available on DVD - see below
Content and Forum Overview
In
July 2006, Hunter visited Aotearoa to be a catalyst for a pioneering
series of National forums held in Christchurch, Auckland, Hamilton, Te
Whaiti, Hastings, and Wellington. This was not just a standard whistle
stop tour presentation by Hunter in a number of locations, but rather a
series of free public discussion forums each with a theme appropriate
to the region, each including a panel of young people and others
focused on generating dialogue about sustainability and the future.
For
many young people on the panels and in the audience this was their
first opportunity to have a say in their own future. Viewers cannot
fail to be impressed by their wisdom, talent and commitment. Many went
on to become The Youth Voice (www.thelongsong.com); a contingent of 90+ who enriched the Digital Earth Summit on Sustainability (www.digitalearth.org.nz) in Auckland 6 Aug 2006. Some members will be networking with US youth to make their voice heard even more loudly at the next Digital Earth in San Francisco in June 2007. Nexus will be running a free youth workshop "Joining the dots" on Tues 20th Feb 2006 prior to the NZSSES Sustainability Science and Engineering Conference
at Auckland University. They continue to find other innovative ways to
participate in and influence the national and international decision
making process. I n doing so they offer a healthy challenge to the
perspectives, values and assumed power of the baby boom generation who
they must succeed.
Many forums were enriched by a number of Maori participants who shared the concepts of kaitiakitanga
(guardianship and much more) and other indigenous world view values
that add a new dimension to the international sustainability movement.
Hunter spent a relaxing weekend on the Murumurunga Marae in Te Whaiti
visiting the world renowned Whirinaki Rainforest (featured in the SMART LIKE NATURE clip).
The
SMART COMMUNITY and SMART ENVIRONMENT clips include some appended video
to celebrate grass root environmental restoration and community
development pro-active role models (Hokianga Harbourcare, Raglan and
others) aimed at growing and preserving our natural capital. These to
often go unrecognized and unsupported, well below the official radar.
The
SMART BUSINESS, SMART CITIES, SMART ECONOMY and SMART AGRICULTURE
forums involved people representing organisations that are doing
pro-active things for our future, particularly around the design of
products, processes, cities and policy.
The
final forum A SMART LEARNING COUNTRY held in Wellington (the seat of
government), brought together a talented and diverse panel representing
all the previous forums who voiced a positive direction and actions for
the future.
Acknowledgements:
Our
thanks go to the network of enthusiastic volunteers around NZ who used
"Living Systems Thinking" to organise the trip, using some very organic leadership processes. Also to the the many committed NZ cities and other organisations that contributed funding to help.
Finally
we all express our personal appreciation to Hunter for her selfless
passion, commitment, knowledge, dialogue and facilitation skills,
without which this event could not have happened.
DVDs for purchase. (2 DVD set)
(a) Rural Focus - Nature, Communities, Environment, Agriculture
(b) Urban Focus - Cities, Business, Economy, Learning
To
obtain a copy please send a Cheque for $50 made out to Te Kura Toitu o
Te Whaiti Nui-a-Toi. Address: The Secretary (Tere), PO Box 3013, Via
Rotorua. ph 07 366 3221. (Over the holidays email here) This will help support the Kaitiakitanga Program at Whirinaki Rainforest.
(Copies
of these have been gifted as a koha to the libraries of political
parties, key government agencies and other organisations associated
with sustainability and environmental education.)
Full FORUM DVDs in Libraries
A set of eight DVDs covering the full sessions 1. Smart Business (Ak), 2. Smart Cities, 3.Smart Environment, 4. Smart Agriculture, 5. Smart Communities, 6. Smart like Nature (Kaitiakitanga), 7. Smart Economy, 8. A Smart Learning Country
have been sent to the following Libraries: Auckland City, Auckland
University, AUT, Hamilton City, Waikato University, Raglan, Hastings
City, Wellington City, Victoria University, Christchurch City,
Canterbury University, Lincoln University, CPIT, Dunedin City and
University of Otago. (These can be borrowed and copied for educational
purposes providing discs are labeled as per the master copy)
REFLECTION AND LEARNINGS:
It
was inspiring to have so many enthusiastic and talented young people
contributing on panels. We look forward to them networking together and
using their co-creative power to ask hard questions of our national
systems and behaviours to spearhead more change and action.
We were
disappointing that a number of national organisations who vocally
commit themselves publicly to sustainability, the environment,
education, networking and community development were not readily able
to recognise a win-win opportunity to participate and contribute
positively as part of a collaborative national volunteer network. We
trust that this event will have been a "disturbance" that will
encourage more "living system thinking" outside the confines of our own
narrow boxes. There we see these opportunities not as extra work or
competition, but rather as a way to make our own actions more effective
in the longer term by exploiting and levering on connections.
In
October we were encouraged by those who arranged a visit by Al Gore to
grow a heightened national awareness about climate change and
sustainability. This has coincided with a renewed commitment to some
positive action by the New Zealand Government and many others.
This
site will be left up to share the resources and to be used as a model
for future cross agency / cross organisational collaborative
initiatives. See How we work. For any questions or feed back email us
Q. WHAT IS KAITIAKITANGA?? A. Click here
THE WEBSITE INFORMATION USED TO PROMOTE THE VISIT.
World-renowned sustainability expert, Hunter Lovins, reminds us that
a world facing climate change, deteriorating eco-systems and peak oil
is a challenging place to do business or to make a life in. She insists
that solutions to these problems do exist and can be implemented in ways
that create greater prosperity, improve local and national security and
present opportunities for each of us to find greater meaning in our lives.
More on Hunter:
All
are welcome to come to these free public forums where Hunter and a
panel of New Zealanders (young and old) will help us reflect on what we
would seek to pass on to future generations. See her open letter to Kiwi youth
Thanks to our Christchurch region youth for responding with a bold challenge at their forum - "Sustainability, your future or ours"
Each two hour seminar/forum will have a specific theme appropriate to
the region starting with a challenging presentation by Hunter and
followed by an interactive panel discussion and question / reflection
time. On stage to support her will be some local experts in the subject
area, together with young people and others from organisations
committed to sustainable development and enterprise whose actions we
will celebrate.
These sessions will suit a wide range of people
from business, government and community organisations. Our objective
has been to make them free and open to all those who do not normally
not get the opportunity participate in such events or to have a say.
They are in the school holiday break, so we expect many young people,
students and their teachers will want to attend.
Session details and RSVP:
ENROL ON-LINE NOW PLEASE - Click on the underlined session name
you are interested in on the the left panel for details and to access
the on-line RSVP facility for each, to let us know which you want to
attend. Please do this as soon as you are certain, as space is limited
and we need an indication of numbers to help us plan.
Recording each session:
We expect to use technology (e.g. videoconferencing, television, DVD,
the web) to generate resources to allow people anywhere, particularly
our youth and schools, to view specific sessions of interest outside their
region or at a later time.
Can you help us please?
A network of volunteers around the country are connecting together as a
living system to help organise Hunter's visit.. This includes many
young people committed to the future from the Sir Peter Blake Youth
Environment Forum, Enviro-schools projects, our universities, schools
and elsewhere who will do much of the promotion work. Our aim is to
ensure that New Zealand makes the most of having Hunter here; using her
as a catalyst to inspire some fresh thinking about the world we will
pass on to all our grandchildrens. We have a focused group in each
location to handle all local arrangements.
We
are required to find considerable funding to bring Hunter Lovins and
her administrator here, so seek donor organisations who understand the
concepts of triple / quadruple bottom line to support us please. We are
not looking for corporate sponsorship in the conventional sense; the
brand for this programme is “New Zealand”. You contibution helps makes
it possible for our youth to be heard and celebrated. To find out how
you can help, see How we work and Contributors
More Youth Stepping Stones:
We hope that many youth attending and having their say will step on to attend the Digital Earth Conference www.digitalearth.org.nz
in Auckland on 26th - 30th August. This has a special pre-conference
youth forum workshop and a highly subsidised conference fee.
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My name is Hatata and we need you to help us with NZ's biggest roundup.
Herd
your parents, family, grandparents, teachers, friends, businessmen,
farmers, developers, doctors, builders, engineers, lawyers, architects,
researchers, judges, professors, bankers, mayors, councilors,
politicians and all. We need them all working alongside us to help grow
the kind of world that we would like to leave for all our future
grandchildrens.
Our partner Hunter told us
stories from around the planet to get us thinking about what we are
doing to it. We can all share ideas to help us do things right now to
make a difference.
Visit www.kaitiakitanga.net website to see how this relates to our traditional Maori values
Click
on the menus in the left panel to get information, about this event and
the middle panel to find the video and other resources we now share
with the rest of the world.
Sustainability:
your future or ours?
Theme - ChCh RegionYouth Forum
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