Networking for the Earth
Bioneers is becoming a nationwide movement
November / December 2004
Leif Utne Utne magazine
Networks are the basic pattern of organization of all living systems,' Austrian physicist Fritjof Capra, author of The Hidden Connections, once commented. 'Life from its beginning more than three billion years ago did not take over the planet by combat, but by networking.'
RELATED ARTICLES
An update from the Utne stacks...
Terra Madre creates a farmers market of food and ideas...
Holistic education centers are shifting focus -- from changing yourself to changing the world...
When Kenny Ausubel founded the Bioneers conference in 1990, the New Mexico-based journalist and social entrepreneur took Capra's observation to heart. If the environmental movement has a chance of growing, spreading, and ultimately changing our destructive habits of overconsumption, he reasoned, it has to mimic nature in its approach. Ausubel and his partner, Nina Simons, began bringing together a diverse mix of 'biological pioneers,' environmentalists from all manner of disciplines -- artists, activists, scientists, farmers, architects, shamans, teachers, and others -- to network and share ideas and strategies for bringing about ecological and social change. Fourteen years later, Bioneers has become one of the world's most important annual environmental confabs, drawing over 3,000 people to San Rafael, California, each October to spend three days listening to ecoluminaries like Paul Hawken, Julia Butterfly Hill, and John Todd.
Two years ago, they began Beaming Bioneers, a project that beams the plenary speeches from California via live satellite video feed to locations across North America -- from Anchorage to Houston to Washington, D.C. Activists gather at each location to watch and then hold local workshops and discussions.
While Ausubel planned to hold the official Beaming Bioneers sites to 15 this year (plans are pending to expand the network internationally),
Bioneers enthusiasts around the country have been expanding the organization's network spontaneously. According to Bioneers deputy director Ginny McGinn, activists across the country -- from Nevada City, California, to Traverse City, Michigan, to Norfolk, Virginia -- have begun putting on miniconferences, film festivals, and monthly salons to watch Bioneers videos and discuss and strategize about local environmental and social justice battles.