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SUSTAINING
CULTURAL AND BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY
IN A RAPIDLY CHANGING WORLD: LESSONS FOR GLOBAL POLICY
American Museum of Natural
History
April 2 through 5, 2008
Sustaining Cultural and Biological Diversity in a Rapidly
Changing World: Lessons for Global Policy is co-organized
by the American Museum of Natural Historys Center for
Biodiversity and Conservation, IUCN-CEESP Theme on Culture
and Conservation, Terralingua, and the Wenner-Gren
Foundation. This symposium is made possible by major support
and organizational assistance from The Christensen Fund. Additional
support has been provided by the Rockefeller Foundation, the
Ford Foundation, and Oak Foundation, and by the National Science
Foundation. It is the CBC's Thirteenth Annual Symposium and
will be held at the American Museum of Natural History in
New York City, April 2 through 5, 2008.
The past two decades have witnessed an upsurge of interest
in the links between cultural, linguistic, and biological
diversity. These various manifestations of the diversity of
life are under threat by some of the same forces, yet, both
in scientific inquiry and in the realms of policy and management,
nature and culture are often treated as separate and unrelated
entities. This stems in part from the mutual isolation that
has traditionally characterized training and work in the natural
and social sciences, leading to limited communication or collaboration
among fields concerned with sustainability in both nature
and culture. Another contributing factor has been a limited
appreciation of the relevance of the vast variety of approaches
to human-environment relationships that have developed across
the worlds diverse cultures, often through close interactions
with the natural environment and based on a perception of
humans as part of, not separate from, nature. Fragmented approaches
have not been successful in arresting the growing erosion
of the worlds biodiversity and of the vast and diverse
pool of cultural knowledge, practices, and languages developed
by humanity. This is resulting in an ever less diverse and
resilient world.
Sustaining Cultural and Biological
Diversity will seek to bridge gaps, address challenges
and opportunities, and help to forge a long-term multi-dimensional
vision for sustaining biological and cultural diversity. In
order to affect decision making, specific policy processes
will be targeted and public outreach goals pursued.
Participants:
Leading natural and social scientists, conservation and development
practitioners, members of indigenous, tribal, and local communities,
representatives of governmental and non-governmental organizations,
U.N. agencies, universities and research institutions, funding
organizations, educators, students, and others versed in relevant
fields to create a platform for analysis and dialogue across
disciplines and knowledge systems.
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