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Loveland Garden Club Lecture with Michael Dockry

Arts & Culture Classes Lecture Educational

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“Learning From The Indigenous Roots of Sustainably Forestry in the U.S.A.: Promoting Sustainability, Community Healing, and Partnerships”

Building upon a tradition of environmental stewardship, Indigenous people tell us that our common future depends upon incorporating their wisdom and perspectives into social, economic, and ecological decisions. Join Professor Michael Dockry as he details the Indigenous roots of sustainable forestry, starting with the Memominee Nation in Wisconsin, and how that history can inform contemporary forestry practices, ecological restoration efforts, and lead to community healing. Dockry will reflect on his decades long-work with Indigenous communities and provide practical partnership-building strategies for working with tribes to effectively combine Indigenous knowledge with western natural resource management science to solve 21st century challenges. 

Lecture includes an in-person presentation, followed by a dessert reception

$15, $10 for Lauritzen Gardens members
This lecture is made possible by a generous gift from the Loveland Garden Club

About Michael Dockry: Michael Dockry, Ph.D., is a professor of Tribal Natural Resource Management at the University of Minnesota and a member of the Citizen Potawatomi Nation. His academic focus is on incorporating Indigenous knowledge into forestry and natural resource management, supporting tribal sovereignty, and addressing tribal environmental issues.

“Learning From The Indigenous Roots of Sustainably Forestry in the U.S.A.: Promoting Sustainability, Community Healing, and Partnerships”

Building upon a tradition of environmental stewardship, Indigenous people tell us that our common future depends upon incorporating their wisdom and perspectives into social, economic, and ecological decisions. Join Professor Michael Dockry as he details the Indigenous roots of sustainable forestry, starting with the Memominee Nation in Wisconsin, and how that history can inform contemporary forestry practices, ecological restoration efforts, and lead to community healing. Dockry will reflect on his decades long-work with Indigenous communities and provide practical partnership-building strategies for working with tribes to effectively combine Indigenous knowledge with western natural resource management science to solve 21st century challenges. 

Lecture includes an in-person presentation, followed by a dessert reception

$15, $10 for Lauritzen Gardens members
This lecture is made possible by a generous gift from the Loveland Garden Club

About Michael Dockry: Michael Dockry, Ph.D., is a professor of Tribal Natural Resource Management at the University of Minnesota and a member of the Citizen Potawatomi Nation. His academic focus is on incorporating Indigenous knowledge into forestry and natural resource management, supporting tribal sovereignty, and addressing tribal environmental issues.

More about Lauritzen Gardens
Experience year-round horticultural displays that inspire, programs that educate, and events that entertain at Omaha's public garden- a place to relax and reconnect with nature.
When & Where
Nov 3, 2022, 7:00pm to 9:00pm Timezone: CDT
$15.00


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