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Certificate in Regenerative
Entrepreneurship at the University for
International Cooperation (UCI)
REGENERATIVE DEVELOPMENT FOR FUTURE WELLBEING
UNIVERSITY FOR INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION WWW.UCI.AC.CR COSTA RICA
Online program, Starts September 17, 2019
In cooperation with:
The Certificate in Regenerative Entrepreneurship at the University for
International Cooperation (UCI) is given in cooperation with Capital
Institute and the Regenerative Communities Network, Savory Institute,
The Carbon Underground, Finca Luna Nueva and Rancho Margot.
Help co-create a better future for all life forms to thrive. Be a pioneer in
developing and promoting innovative regenerative development projects and
contribute to creating true and pragmatic solutions to solve the most
challenging issues that are putting our planetary life at risk.
This Certificate Program was designed to run parallel to the Master’s in Project Management program
(https://www.uci.ac.cr/master-project-management/) at UCI but can be taken independently by all
current and former UCI students at a discounted rate and is also open to the general public interested in
a high level practical program on entrepreneurship for regenerative development.
Participate with colleagues from many different countries for 16 months in an online program and
immerse yourself in regenerative development as it is incorporated into management for regeneration
of the planet, society and the economy.
You will initially learn about current pressing issues of global change, including the planetary boundaries
approach and the safe operating space for humanity and explore the impacts and interdependencies
between different global changes in the Anthropocene. You will participate in active discussions about
the relevant international organizational structures including the UN conventions, SDGs and other global
initiatives which are used as the framework for global decisions. Also, a review on current geopolitics
and how shifts in power are happening in a world of growing population and scarce resources. The
exponential impacts of the 4th
Industrial Revolution on human societies will also be discussed.
After this, you will dive into holistic management practice through the integration of nature,
society, economy, culture, politics and spirituality in transdisciplinary site-based approaches. You will
understand how systems thinking and complexity can be included in effective project management to
achieve regeneration at all levels.
The core of this program is regenerative development – with special emphasis on how the study of
living systems is rapidly changing mindsets and the measurement of economic development.
Different approaches taken by the most relevant organizations currently promoting regeneration will be
analyzed and compared with the goal of co-creating regenerative solutions for immediate
implementation in different parts of the world with special emphasis on the Regenerative Communities
Network.
After understanding how to transition from degenerative development to green economy, to
sustainability and now to regeneration, you will dive through a series of modules into an in-depth
analysis of each of the pillars of regenerative development. These thematic areas are not disciplinary
and thus will necessarily be interlinked into holistic thinking and action.
Regenerative Development at UCI
Regenerative development is a dynamic management process that participates with the rest of nature
to restore health and vitality to ecosystems. This opens up new opportunities beyond traditional
sustainability which is typically seen as an end goal rather than as a natural outcome of intelligent
management processes. It is a site-based holistic approach that incorporates transdisciplinary processes
with active participation and empowerment of local communities through recognition of the value of
their social networks, cultures, knowledges and beliefs. It integrates six dimensions: a) regeneration of
functional landscapes which allow for carbon capture in soils and the recovery of biodiversity and thus
ecosystem function, food security and health; b) a new economic paradigm based on regenerative
economics that seeks wellbeing of humans and all life forms; c) regeneration of the social web by
empowering local communities to maximize their participation in the local governance of their territory;
d) designing regenerative cultures and recovering social values, increasing self-esteem and promoting
true empowerment; e) redefining the political structures by incorporating youth into politics and; f)
spirituality, where ethics, transparency and empathy are some of the fundamental aspects.
Environment Society Economy Culture Politics Spirituality
Entrepreneurship is an important component of regeneration. You will be immersed in the use of new
approaches to solve social, environmental and economic problems. Different aspects of
social entrepreneurship will be analyzed in order to understand what may or may not be successful.
Regenerative entrepreneurship requires integrated competences, beyond knowledge and skills.
Attitude, consciousness, mindfulness and passion are highly relevant. Wellbeing of all life forms
replaces traditional measures of success. The practical integration of the above components will allow
for new mindsets that will foster innovative approaches to local territorial development.
The program will also cover additional tools such as the use of socio-economic and climate
change scenarios linked to business plan development or the fine-tuning of public policy. UCI has many
years’ experience working with future scenarios methodologies in partnership with several global and
national organizations.
Program outline
Current global and technological changes are now exponential and thus any process for co-creating
solutions has to be dynamic. Below is an outline of the Certificate Program. This is not a rigid program
and the base of the certificate is an active co-creation process between students and mentors. One of
the fundamental outcomes of the program is to have people capable of managing complex problems in
cooperation with the Regenerative Communities Network and other actors under permanent changing
conditions. Flexibility, creativity and innovation will be standard practice in the discussions and thus will
feed into the implementation of the program.
The program will run for 16 months starting September 17, 2019. It consists of readings, webinars,
video presentations, forum discussions, group work and other mediation strategies. The total
recommended time dedicated to academic activities is from 5 to 10 hours per week. From Unit 1
students will have to choose a project which they will work on throughout the program. Evaluation will
take place based on the development of a regenerative project and a corresponding essay.
Unit 1
Where do we stand?
Global change, planetary boundaries approach and the safe operating space for humanity, impacts and
interdependencies between global changes in the Anthropocene.
Relevant international organizational structures including the UN conventions, SDGs and other global
initiatives which are used as the framework for global decisions.
The exponential impacts of the 4th
Industrial Revolution on human societies.
Current geopolitics and how shifts in power are happening in a world of growing population and scarce
resources. Use of social media, data and artificial intelligence and loss of democracy.
Regenerative project development for implementation – individual or joint project which will be
developed by students for on the ground practice of regenerative entrepreneurship.
Unit2
Systems thinking. Principles of systems approach and transdisciplinarity – dealing with complexity.
Biomimicry and whole systems design. Bioliteracy and Innovation for Regenerative Development (BIRD).
Regenerative development overview – from degenerative development to regeneration. Holistic
management practice through the integration of nature, society, economy, culture, politics and
spirituality in regenerative transdisciplinary site-based approaches. Incorporating systems thinking and
complexity in effective project management to achieve regeneration at all levels. Theory of change. Real
politics of Sharing. Integrative institutions in a regenerative culture.
Unit 3
Transformation - innovation and creation of previously unimagined possibilities. Disruption. 3 Horizons
Framework (managerial, visionary, and entrepreneurial waves of change), Transformational leadership.
Use of future scenarios for decision making.
Unit 4
Regeneration of functional landscapes. Nature based solutions. The Ecosystems Approach. Biodiversity
conservation and ecosystem function. Ecosystem services and ecological economics. Nature based
solutions. Ecosystem based adaptation. Regenerative agriculture. Permaculture. Holistic cattle grazing.
Natural and assisted regeneration of natural ecosystems. LandArt regeneration. Landscape scale
regeneration. Soil carbon, resilience, and climate change adaptation and mitigation. One health
approach.
Unit 5
Social and cultural regeneration. Applied cultural evolution. Designing regenerative cultures.
Participatory planning and active participation. Conflict management and conflict transformation.
Communities and territorial governance.
Unit 6
Moving away from GDP. Regenerative economics and key principles (In Right Relationship; Views Wealth
Holistically; Innovative, Adaptive, Responsive; Empowered Participation; Edge Effect Abundance; Robust
Circulatory Flow; Seeks Balance).
Cryptoassets and Decentralized Autonomous Communities design to promote Regenerative
Development.
Doughnut economics. Economy for the common good. Local development. Wellbeing Economy Alliance.
Unit 7
Regenerative policy and politics. Politics and economics. Current global and national politics.
Empowering youth to go into politics. Advocacy and action. Local governance. Holistic management
framework for decision making. Leadership for cooperation.
Unit 8
Spirituality, World view, The Earth Charter, Laudato Sí. Ethics, values and principles for a collaborative
future. Biocultural conservation. Consciousness, mindfulness. Working on the inner self. Peace and
balance. Peace and mindfulness.
Unit 9.
Applying holistic approaches. Transdisciplinarity for regenerative development. Bioregional approach.
Territorial regenerative development. Urban regeneration and development. Regenerative communities
and collaboratives. Inter-sector value chains – regenerative businesses, regenerative tourism, B-Corps,
cooperatives.
Unit 10
Technology for regeneration. Social media platforms and how to use them for collective action. Apps for
regeneration. Applying blockchain technology.
Unit 11
Finding your path. Regenerative Environmental Emergence. Entrepreneurship for regeneration. Social
entrepreneurship. Regenerative business models. Innovation. Holistic planning. Co-creating solutions.
Communication. Network building. Fundraising. Project management.
Unit 12
Capacity development and education for regenerative development. Competence based framework.
Enhancing community participation though empowerment and education. Leadership for co-creation.
Development of a Regenerative Project: starting with Unit 1, students will construct a
regenerative project for implementation, incorporating the different themes as we go along.
Implementing regenerative development in real-life situations – developing a project for on-the-ground
implementation. Networking for co-creation. Preparation of an essay on the application of regenerative
entrepreneurship.
Optional field visit to Costa Rica
At the end of the program students have the possibility of visiting sites where regenerative development
is being implemented. This visit can be arranged for 1, 2 and 4 weeks of stay.
Mentors and invited speakers:
Below is a list of some of the confirmed experts that will be participating through webinars, online
discussions, video presentations and other platforms. This list will be expanded as the co-creation
process advances.
Eduard Müller is the founder and rector (president) of the University for
International Cooperation, being responsible for the institutional development of
the university since 1994. Currently one of the global leaders on promoting
regenerative development based on the Planetary Boundaries and the “Safe
operating space for humanity”, for creating innovative solutions to the current
challenges through transdisciplinary teams, the use of climate change and socio-
economic scenarios, working integrally the economic, social, cultural,
environmental, political and spiritual realms, seeking to increase the resilience of
impacts of global change and especially climate change, facilitating mitigation and adaptation strategies
for making a better planet.
His over 40 years of experience in five continents and dozens of countries in a wide array of fields, have
enabled him to become an internationally recognized trend-setting leader. His work has covered
management and innovation in higher education, global and climate change communication, nature
conservation and nature based solutions, business and biodiversity initiatives, public private
partnerships, conservation and development, sustainable development, sustainable tourism, eco and
agrotourism, tourism, rural community development, rural development, local agendas 21, community
management for poverty reduction, functional landscapes. He has occupied relevant international
positions in wildlife management, protected areas, UNESCO MAB Program, development and evaluation
of agricultural and environmental productive projects, breeding and animal production, alternative
production systems and veterinary medicine. He has adopted spirituality as the major change-maker in
human behavior, working closely with the Earth Charter initiative and more recently the Laudato Sí. He
is also the Chair-holder of the UNESCO Chair for Biosphere Reserves and Natural and Mixed World
Heritage Sites. He is a member of the Global Council of the Wellbeing Economy Alliance.
Allan Savory is the founder and president of Savory Institute. Allan was
born in Zimbabwe and educated in South Africa (University of Natal, BS in
Zoology and Botany) pursued an early career as a research biologist and game
ranger in the British Colonial Service of what was then Northern Rhodesia
(today Zambia) and later as a farmer and game rancher in Zimbabwe.
In the 1960s he made a significant breakthrough in understanding what was
causing the degradation and desertification of the world’s grassland
ecosystems and, as a resource management consultant, worked with
numerous managers on four continents to develop sustainable solutions.
He served as a Member of Parliament in the latter days of Zimbabwe’s civil war and became the leader
of the opposition to the ruling party headed by Ian Smith. Exiled in 1979 as a result of his opposition, he
immigrated to the United States, where he continued to work with land managers through his
consulting business. The growth of that business, a desire to assist many more people and the need for
furthering his work led him to continue its development in the nonprofit world. In 1992 Savory and his
wife, Jody Butterfield, formed a non-profit organization in Zimbabwe, the Africa Centre for Holistic
Management, donating a ranch that would serve as a learning site for people all over Africa. In
2009Savory, Butterfield, and a group of colleagues co-founded the Savory Institute in Boulder, Colorado
to serve the world through an international network of entrepreneurial innovators and leaders
committed to serving their regions with the highest standards of Holistic Management training and
implementation support. The Africa Centre became the first of the Savory Institute’s locally led and
managed “hubs.” (Photo credit: Roberto Rosales)
Savory’s book, Holistic Management: A New Framework for Decision-Making (Island Press, 1999),
describes his effort to find workable solutions ordinary people could implement to overcome many of
the problems besetting communities and businesses today.
In 2003, Allan Savory received Australia’s International Banksia Award “for the person or organization
doing the most for the environment on a global scale,” and in 2010 Savory (and the Africa Centre)
received the Buckminster Fuller Institute’s Challenge award for work that has “significant potential to
solve humanity’s most pressing problems.” A TED talk Savory gave in 2013 has received over 3.4 million
views and in 2014 was voted one of the 50 most intriguing TED talks of all time. The Savory Institute is
one of 11 finalists in the Virgin Earth Challenge, a $25 million initiative for the successful
commercialization of ways of taking greenhouse gases out of the atmosphere and keeping them out
with no countervailing impacts.
Alnoor Ladha is an author, activist, anti-preneur. Alnoor’s work focuses on
the intersection of political organizing, systems thinking and narrative work. He is
the co-founder and Executive Director of The Rules (TR), a global network of
activists, organizers, designers, coders, researchers, writers and others focused on
changing the rules that create inequality, poverty and climate change.
Prior to TR, Alnoor was a partner and head of strategy at Purpose, a political
consultancy focused on movement building. Alnoor is a writer and speaker on
new forms of activism, the structural causes of inequality, the link between climate change and poverty,
and the rise of the Global South as a powerful organizing force in the transition to a post-capitalist
world. He is currently writing a book about the intersection of spirituality and politics. He has sat on
various boards including Greenpeace International USA, the P2P Foundation and The Emergence
Network. He holds an MSc in Philosophy and Public Policy from the London School of Economics. He is
also a co-founder of Tierra Valiente (Brave Earth), a postcapitalist community in northern Costa Rica.
Daniel Christian Wahl Daniel Christian Wahl works internationally as a
consultant and educator in regenerative development, whole systems design,
and transformative innovation. He holds degrees in biology (Univ. of Edinburgh),
and holistic science (Schumacher College), and his 2006 doctoral thesis (Univ. of
Dundee) was on Design for Human and Planetary Health: A Holistic/Integral
Approach to Complexity and Sustainability.
He was director of Findhorn College between 2007 and 2010, and is a member of
the International Futures Forum since 2009 and Gaia Education since 2007. He
has collaborated with UNITAR and UNESCO, many large NGO, and as a consultant his clients included
companies such as Camper, Ecover and Lush, as well as, local and regional governments and UK
Foresight.
Daniel is a fellow of the Findhorn Foundation, on the advisory council of the Ecosystems Restoration
Camps Foundation and the Ojai Foundation and the research group of the Global Ecovillage Network. He
is co-founder of Biomimicry Iberia (2012), and has been collaborating with ‘SmartUIB’ at the University
of the Balearic Islands since 2014.
His book Designing Regenerative Cultures was published in 2016 by Triarchy Press and quickly reached
international acclaim. It was released in Portuguese in 2019 and a Spanish edition will be launched in
2020. The ‘SDG Implementation Flashcards’ he developed for Gaia Education have been taken up
enthusiastically by UNESCO and so far have been translated into 7 languages. Daniel's blog on
Medium.com has a large and growing international following.
Bjørn Heyerdahl is an active explorer, Global Citizen, Father, Explorers
Club member (2002), Earth Charter Affiliate www.earthcharter.org , Integral
thinker, Biospheric Designer, Global Public Speaker and Philosopher. Founder
of Midgard and Integral Climate Change Solutions
www.integralclimatechangesolutions.com and the Midgard Expedition
www.midgardexpedition.com formally launched at the explorers club 2003.
Recipient of the Lowell Thomas Award from the Explores Club in New York
2003, for his contribution to the future for scientific exploration. Awarded the
Silver Medal by Micheal Gorbachev at the tenth anniversary of the Green Cross International in Geneva
2003 for his contribution to global ecological awareness, scientific research, functional model building in
sustainability, promoting the Earth Charter and furthering the principles inherent in the GCI.
Bjørn has sailed, walked, rowed, paddled, swam and climbed all biomes of our planet, oceans, rivers,
mountains, deserts, wetlands, jungles and African bushvelt, over the last 30 + years, in the search for
adventure and models of intelligent life (life lived in an ecologically, economically and socially sound
way), lived consciously, and sustainably.
This Trans-Disciplinary learning has been shared in a global dialogue through papers, academia, scientific
institutions, organs of the United Nations, The Green Cross International, The Earth Charter
International, schools, public presentations, environmental immersive, experiential education
programmes and most importantly in building living models of sustainable human habitation and
Climate Parks, around the globe, from Mozambique to Italy, from South Africa to the UAE, from the
Philippines to Costa Rica, home of the Earth Charter International and UPEACE.
Bjørn has a strong Viking identity and linage, dating back to 812 AD and is Grandson of Thor Heyerdahl
of the Kon-Tiki Expedition.
Bjørn is currently building an authentic Viking Ship.This expedition is not just about crossing oceans and
seas as our ancestors did and achieving or having more… its about being more. It’s about growing up,
waking up, cleaning up and showing up for what is demanded of global leadership right now. It’s about
being conditioned and groomed to become leaders - contemporary Vikings; relevant, contributing,
influencing - living models of integral intelligence.
The Midgard Expedition crew lead by Bjorn Heyerdahl, a group of global citizens, are exploring globally
models of intelligent sustainable human habitation and applying it to their own lives, careers and
communities. This learning is shared as a global dialogue so that the lessons can be applied by any
interested group or individual.This expedition will trace old Viking pathways, honouring that spirit,
courage and skill; it will highlight modern and ancient models of intelligent, integrated life on earth.
Bjørn’s intention is to grow global ecological and ethical awareness on what can be done now in
response to the collapse of life support systems; and to elevate through Trans - Disciplinary
methodology, adults and youth in terms of the various cognitions required to build strong, informed,
proactive, ethical leaders to help design the future we want.
May East is a sustainability educator, spatial planner and social innovator. Her
work spans the fields of cultural geography, urban ecology, and women’s studies.
Designated one of the 100 Global SustainAbility Leaders three years in a row she
currently works in 54 countries with community-based organisations and
intergovernmental agencies in the creation of policy guidance for accelerating the
implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals and for delivery of projects seeking to strengthen
climate resilience, food security and renewable energies solutions. A UNITAR Fellow she has an MSc in
Spatial Planning with specialization on rehabilitation of abandoned villages. As CEO of Gaia Education,
her passion is to co-develop Project-Based Learning trajectories supporting indigenous and migrant
communities and their traditions to survive in rapidly changing environments while enhancing their
opportunities to become the designers of their desired future. She has recently received the Women of
the Decade in Sustainability and Leadership award by the Women Economic Forum.
Joe Brewerhas dedicated his life to helping humanity navigate global
challenges as a complexity researcher, innovation strategist, and transdisciplinary
scholar who brings a wealth of expertise to the adoption of sustainable solutions
at the cultural scale. He weaves people and knowledge across fields to build
capacities for systemic change. He is a co-founder of the Cultural Evolution
Society, a global scientific community dedicated to the study of cultural
evolution, has been the culture editor for This View of Life at the Evolution
Institute since 2014, is the co-founder of Evonomics Magazine dedicated to the
evolution of economics, and has worked with a large variety of nonprofits, social-impact businesses, and
government agencies to apply insights from the cognitive, behavioral, and evolutionary sciences to
large-scale social problems. Joe has joined the leadership team at Regenerative Communities Network
to help grow the capacities for this network of regenerative projects around the world.
Dr. Stuart Cowan is the Co-Founder of the Regenerative Communities
Network, an initiative of the Capital Institute, and has served as its
Director/Systems Convener since 2017. He leads the delivery of a full cycle of
engagement with each collaborative in the Network while also coordinating the
design, governance, and business operations of the Network. Stuart brings a
unique combination of practical engagement with circular/regenerative
economies, systems science, design thinking, transaction/business experience,
netweaving, and community facilitation. Stuart previously served as Chief Scientist
for the Smart Cities Council. In this role, he developed knowledge frameworks and tools supporting the
integration of smart technologies with urban sustainability and resilience. Previously, Stuart was a
Partner with Autopoiesis LLC, which applies complex living systems models and frameworks to
regenerate communities, ecosystems, and organizations. Autopoiesis LLC has worked with a wide range
of financial institutions, municipalities, state and federal agencies, tribes, non-profits, utilities,
companies, and religious orders. Stuart served as a Transaction Manager and founding team member
with Portland Family of Funds, an innovative sustainable community investment fund. He helped
develop a triple bottom line investment strategy for Portland Family of Funds and its national affiliate,
United Fund Advisors, LLC, which have together closed $2.8 billion in transactions, generating 21,000
jobs. He served as Conservation Economy Research Director at Ecotrust, an innovative sustainability
non-profit based in Portland, Oregon where he led the development of the Reliable Prosperity
framework for a regenerative bioregion. He is the co-author with Sim Van der Ryn of Ecological Design
(Island Press, 1996/2007), a visionary overview of the whole systems integration of ecology and
architecture, land-use planning, and product design that has been translated into three languages and
was reissued in a special Tenth Anniversary second edition. He received his doctorate in Applied
Mathematics from U.C. Berkeley with a focus on complex systems modeling and ecological economics.
He has taught ecological design, sustainability, and complex systems at a wide range of universities,
including the sustainable MBA program at Bainbridge Graduate Institute, U.C. Berkeley, Portland State
University, and Naropa University. Stuart serves on the Global Council for the Well-Being Economy
Alliance, is a Councilor for the SDG Transformations Forum, and is a member of the Netweaver Network.
Ricardo Rozzi is a Chilean ecologist and philosopher who is professor at
the University of North Texas (UNT) and the Universidad de Magallanes (UMAG).
His research combines both disciplines through the study of the interrelations
between the ways of knowing and inhabiting the natural world, proposing a
dynamic continuous reciprocal feedback between both domains. His work at
UNT forms a central part of the nation's best program in environmental
philosophy (www.phil.unt.edu).
In addition to his theoretical work, Rozzi has collaborated with the Chilean
Ministry of Education, the Latin American Ecology Schoolyard Program, and has participated in the
creation of the "Senda Darwin" Biological Station (Chiloé Island, Chile), the Latin American Network of
Ethnobotanical Parks, the Omora Ethnobotanical Park (Puerto Williams, Chile), and the UNESCO Cape
Horn Biosphere Reserve at the southern end of the Americas, with the aim of incorporating
environmental ethics in the practices of conservation and education in Latin America. Currently, he is
the director of the Subantarctic Biocultural Conservation Program, coordinated by the University of
North Texas in the US, and by the Universidad de Magallanes and the Institute of Ecology and
Biodiversity in Chile. With these institutions, he co-directs a biocultural conservation and "field
environmental philosophy" program working in collaboration with the Center for Environmental
Philosophy.
As the co-founder of the Omora Ethnobotanical Park and the leader in the creation of the Cape Horn
Biosphere Reserve, his academic work has been strongly associated with application and includes a
novel focus on "biocultural conservation" and the "linking of human well-being with the environment."
Within this same line of inquiry, Rozzi coined the terms "biocultural ethics" and "field environmental
philosophy" to denote his emphasis on applying philosophy to real life situations using direct encounter
experiences to enrich both academic formation as well as inform social processes, such as decision-
making and ecotourism.[2] For example, based on the discovery of the outstanding diversity of mosses,
lichens and liverworts (5% of the world's total) in the Magellanic sub-Antarctic ecoregion, Dr. Ricardo
Rozzi and his colleagues has coined the term Tourism with a Hand Lens to refer to a new speciality
tourism being promoted in the Cape Horn Biosphere Reserve. Rozzi has called upon tourism operators
to place this narrative into their offering for the region and take advantage of this biodiversity hotspot
for non-vascular flora. In turn, Rozzi and the Omora Ethnobotanical Park have metaphorically called
these small plant communities the "Miniature Forests of Cape Horn" to help the broader society
understand the ecological role played by these tiny, but diverse, abundant and important organisms.
Alvaro Cedeño Molinari was born in Costa Rica, where he obtained a
degree in Law. He worked as an official translator and interpreter while being an
international volunteer promoting intercultural competence for peace around
the world for ten years. He then obtained a Master’s degree in Peace and Conflict
Transformation from Tromsø University in the Norwegian Arctic region, where he
also developed a personal concern for the impact of climate change on both the
Arctic and Antarctic regions of the world. He later obtained a Master’s degree in
Public Policy and Management from Carnegie Mellon University in Adelaide,
South Australia, where he was trained and developed a keen interest in digital technologies. His main
fields of interest are conflict transformation, regenerative development and the digital economy.
Currently he is a Fellow at the Geneva Centre for Security Policy where he focuses on the leadership at
the convergence of the Fourth Industrial Revolution and Climate Action. He is also a founding partner of
IoTRepublik, where he leads projects that relate Internet of Things and climate action. He lives in
Geneva with his wife and two daughters.
He started his diplomatic career as Commercial Counselor opening his country’s Embassy in Beijing,
China, after the establishment of diplomatic relations in 2007. He has served as a Costa Rican public
servant for 13 years including eleven in diplomacy, eight of which were as Ambassador for his country to
Japan and to the World Trade Organization in Geneva, Switzerland. In Japan he established a bilateral
green growth agenda and he also developed great concern for Japan’s ecological footprint, which led
him to become an advocate of bioliteracy and regenerative development. At the WTO he had the
original mandate of advancing the conversation of trade and climate action and founded the coalition
member states called Friends Advancing Sustainable Trade (FAST), in addition to a coalition called
Friends of E-commerce for Development (FEDs), which became a formal plurilateral negotiation.
Dr. Katherine Trebeck is Policy and Knowledge Lead for the Wellbeing
Economy Alliance. She has over eight years’ experience in various roles with
Oxfam GB - as a Senior Researcher for the Global Research Team, UK Policy
Manager, and Research and Policy Advisor for Oxfam Scotland. Katherine, with
Lorenzo Fioramonti, instigated the group of Wellbeing Economy Governments;
developed Oxfam's Humankind Index; and led Oxfam's work on a 'human
economy'. She was Rapporteur for Club de Madrid's Working Group on Shared
Societies and Sustainability and is on the advisory board for the Centre for
Understanding Sustainable Prosperity (University of Surrey); the Living Well
Within Limits project (University of Leeds); A Good Life for All Within Planetary Boundaries (University of
Leeds); the Economic Democracy Index project (University of Glasgow); and the Omina Foundation.
Katherine has Bachelor Degrees in Economics and in Politics and holds a PhD in Political Science from
the Australian National University. She is Honorary Professor at the University of the West of Scotland
and Senior Visiting Research Fellow at the University of Strathclyde (based at the Fraser of Allander
Institute). Her most recent book The Economics of Arrival: Ideas for a Grown Up Economy (co-authored
with Jeremy Williams and published by Policy Press) was published in January 2019.
Maria Emilia Correa is a Colombian and Chilean national with 30 years
of international experience in business, civil society and academia and is
recognized as a leader in sustainability and entrepreneurship in Latin America
and abroad. After an early career in biological conservation and sustainable
development, became the first Vice President for Sustainability for a
multinational corporation in Latin America. In 2012 she co-founded Sistema B, a
movement advancing a new economy where success is measured in terms of
wellbeing for people and planet. Recognized for the ability to take ideas into
action, build bridges between “improbable partners”, and effectively advocate
change. Some of her achievements are being a member of the jury at the 2016 Rolex International
Awards, Leading Women in Environment Awards and 100 Female Leaders in Chile in 2013. She was also
chosen as one of the 30 more recognized female intellectuals in Iberoamerica by ESGlobal in 2017. She
is also a 2019 Fellow at Harvard University’s Advanced Leadership Initiative.
Maria Emilia has proven talent for nurturing enthusiastic communities of multi stakeholder parties,
facilitate critical connections, and create conditions to foster trust. Ms. Correa also headed social and
environmental responsibility for Latin American GrupoNueva, directed sustainability at Brazilian
cosmetics company Natura Cosmeticos, and led biodiversity conservation in Colombia for The Nature
Conservancy. Correa serves as board member of for profit companies -Colbún, Córpora, and Explora in
Chile-, and non for profit Fundación Bancolombia and Fundación Gaia in Colombia.
Franz Josef Allmayer is founder of Integrity.Earth where he leads
multilateral transdisciplinary efforts in converging key partners towards
streamlining solutions for today’s grand challenges. He is currently working with
communities in Central America to introduce micro hydro power solutions to
build capacity for energy sovereignty in disenfranchised rural communities.
Previously, he was a Program Coordinator with Advanced Development for Africa,
leading multidisciplinary approaches to address the Millennium Development
Goals throughout Africa. More recently, with the Clinton Health Access Initiative
(CHAI) he developed the global strategy for mHealth/eHealth, engaging governments and partners to
address large-scale barriers to effective treatment and care. Previously, he worked as a Program
Coordinator with Advanced Development for Africa, where he led multidisciplinary approaches to
address the Millennium Development Goals throughout Africa.
Franz Josef served as an Innovation Scout for the AFAQ Group, where he identified innovative
renewable energy and technology solutions to introduce in UAE and Middle Eastern markets. He worked
in planning, executing, and commissioning turnkey hospital projects throughout Latin America with
VAMED. Previously, Franz Josef worked for the World Health Organization in the Reproductive Health
and Research Department, mapping transformative solutions to leverage Information and
Communications Technology for public health. Franz Josef possesses a joint MSc on Health Policy,
Planning, and Financing from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and the London
School of Economics; a BSc in Biomedical Engineering from the Technikum Vienna University; and
received Graduate Tuition in Development Communications from the Harvard Extension School. Franz
Josef has served as Grand Jury President at the World Summit Youth Awards (WSYA), serves as á
Member of the Jury of the World Summit Awards and the European Youth Awards. He was selected to
form part in FutureLab Europe, an initiative for young European leaders playing an active role shaping
the future of Europe. He was selected as a member of the Ashoka ChangemakerXchange community, a
global collaboration platform for social entrepreneurs. Franz Josef is a Member of the Board of Primeros
Pasos, a civil society organization improving access to medical services, food security, and improved
education programs to rural communities of the Palajunoj Valley of Quetzaltenango, Guatemala. He
served as a lecturer for the module Global Health Informatics to Improve Quality of Care offered by the
Harvard-MIT collaboration in Health Sciences and Technology (HST).
Miguel A Altieri studied agronomy at the University of Chile, where he
received a BS. He also obtained a Masters at the National University of
Colombia. He graduated with a Ph.D. in entomology at the University of
Florida. In 1981 he became Professor of Agroecology at the University of
California, Berkeley in the Department of Environmental Science, Policy and
Management and after 37 years of service he is now Professor Emeritus.
At Berkeley he taught agroecology and urban agriculture, but he also serves
as guest professor in numerous universities in Latin America, Spain and Italy.
He has conducted most of his research in California and Latin America working closely with farmers to
implement principles of agroecology to design productive, biodiverse and resilient farming systems.
Altieri served as a scientific advisor to the Latin American Consortium on Agroecology and Development
(CLADES) Chile, an NGO network promoting agroecology as a strategy for small farm sustainable
development in the region. He also served for 4 years as the General Coordinator for the United Nations
Development Programme’s Sustainable Agriculture Networking and Extension Programme which aimed
at capacity building on agroecology among NGOs and the scaling-up of successful local sustainable
agricultural initiatives in Africa, Latin America and Asia. He was the chairman of the NGO committee of
the Consultative Group on International Agriculture Research whose mission was to make sure that the
research agenda of the 15 International Agricultural Research Centers benefited poor farmers. He was
Director of the US-Brasil Consortium on Agroecology and Sustainable Rural
Development (CASRD), an academic-research exchange program involving students and faculty of UC
Berkeley, University of Nebraska, UNICAMP and Universidad Federal de Santa Catarina. He also served
as scientific advisor to the Food and Agriculture Organization Globally Important Agricultural Heritage
Systems (GIAHS) program, which is devoted at identifying and dynamically conserving traditional
farming systems in the developing world. He was the President of the Latin American Scientific Society
of Agroecology (www.socla.co). In 2015 he was awarded a Doctor Honoris Causa at the Universite
Catholique du Lovain, Belgium. In 2017, he became Honorary Professor of the University of La Frontera
in Chile. In February 2018 he was inducted to the Earth Hall of Fame by the Kyoto Prefecture, Japan. In
December 2018 he received from the Universidad de Guadalajara in Mexico the prize “Biodiversidad,
Sociedad y Territorio”. He has written more than 250 scientific articles and more than 20 books among
them Agroecology: the science of sustainable agriculture, Biodiversity and pest management in
agroecosystems and Agroecology: science and politics.
Mel Landers is an Environmental Biologist, former workflow and usability
analyst and former agro-forester. He and his wife, Biologist Margarita Lorío teach
the ancient Indigenous American Agroforestry system mentioned in the IPCC’s
2007 climate assessment as the technology needed to adapt to and mitigate the
effects of climate change. Mel also studied crop production and paleo climatology
in individual study. After a life altering experience teaching agricultural practices
to the formerly hunter gatherer tribe, the Urarinas of the Peruvian Amazon, Mel
began his lifelong study of the system adapted from the forest ecosystem by
Indigenous American women over a period of thousands of years.
Mel became fascinated by natural systems as a young child. This was amplified by his early study and
field work in Archaeology and Paleontology. His understanding of past earth systems, that were unlike
that which exists today; coupled with his systems analysis approach, an indigenous world view and his
holistic ecosystems training have given him a unique perspective on the problems faced by today’s
world system. They are also helping him formulate realistic, matter of fact opinions about how to reduce
the damage humans have inflicted on the present earth system.
Ranulfo Paiva Sobrinho, PhD from Brazil has 10 years analyzing and
working with blockchain technology, 20 years of experience in economy,
sustainability, local currencies and Decentralized Autonomous Communities
(DAC) design. PhD in Economics and postdoc in Environmental Cryptoassets for
Sustainability. Co-Founder of Sustainability School and BeSpiral. Co-Author of
New Money for Sustainability.
Currently, he is designing applications using blockchain technology to solve socio-ecological problems,
for example, a cryptocurrency to help restore and conserve watersheds, as well as, conservation of
biomes. He is designing blockchain DACs (Decentralized Autonomous Corporation) to help to promote
sustainable development. He is a co-founder of Spiral, a DAC which is in Singularity University incubator,
California, USA. He is a co-founder of Sustainability School. Ranulfo also helps governmental
organizations in decision analysis process using multicriteria methods like MACBETH (Measuring
Attractiveness by a Categorical Evaluation Technique). He is a writer, New money for sustainability; This
is mutual credit clearing system, Blockchain for Entrepreneurs (coming soon). Also, he is a fellow from
the Empowering Sustainability promoted by the University of California (Irvine campus).
M.Sc. Karla Córdoba Brenes is a happy Costa Rican living in Brazil,
passionate about communications, sustainability, new types of money,
community development and new organizational models, including DAC design
and social currencies. Masters in Community Development. Co-Founder of
Sustainability School, BeSpiral and co-Author of New Money for
Sustainability. Singularity University Alumni and Shuttleworth Foundation
Fellow. Karla is passionate about sustainability, innovation, new types of money,
exponential tech and organizations... but mostly, she believes in our capacity to
transform the world in a better place. Communications + Sustainability + Creativity + Strategy + Design +
Disruptive Technology + Innovation + Online Education + Blockchain + Social Impact + Leadership +
Gender Equality + Spirituality + Community Development + Social Organizations + Facilitation +
Exponential Transformation + Latin American Music
MA. Marieke Veeger is a scenarios and policy researcher for the CGIAR
Research Program on Climate Change Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS) and
the University for International Cooperation (UCI). Bringing together key
stakeholders from the public, private and research sectors on regional, national
and local levels, she designs and coordinates participatory scenario-guided
policymaking processes in Latin America since 2013. Within this science – policy
interface, she works with decision makers to establish the capacities and
institutional support fundamental for policy design under uncertainty. Her main research topic is
currently anticipatory climate governance, and how it can support the formulation of ambitious
emission reduction goals.
A geographer by training graduated from the Vrije Universiteit (VU) in Amsterdam, Marieke studied
institutional, policy and behavior changes in natural resource management. Working in social innovation
has convinced her of the strength of multidisciplinary teams.
Steve Waddell, PhD.Responding to the 21st century’s enormous global
challenges and realizing its unsurpassed opportunities require new ways of acting
and organizing. Steve supports organizational, network, and societal change and
development, through consultation, education, research, and personal leadership.
In particular, he focuses upon intersectoral (business-government-civil society),
inter-organizational collaboration and networks to produce innovation, enhance
impact, and build new capacity.
Steve has done this for nearly 30 years, working with others as clients, funders, sponsors, and project
partners. This includes the Global Knowledge Partnership, the UN Global Compact, World Bank, Global
Reporting Initiative, Ford Foundation, Humanity United, Civicus, International Youth Foundation, USAID,
International Development and Research Centre, Forest Stewardship Council. He founded the Boston
College executive management program Leadership for Change, and is founding Lead Steward for the
SDG Transformation Forum. Steve is currently the Lead Staff of the SDG (Sustainable Development
Goals) Transformations Forum, which is growing systems of people, organizations and locales, who are
developing transformations systems as key infrastructure to accelerate deep change. He connects
diverse groups to take collaborative action and evolve strategic directions in the context of great
challenges of paradox, complexity and scale.
Jennifer Menke is Project Director of Regenerative Economy Lab, and
President of Regenerative Earth a nonprofit corporation. In 2015, she was
nominated as an emerging global leader by the Academy for Systems Change
and resides as a fellow of the organization. Jennifer has been managing a project
in the Osa Peninsula, Costa Rica for the past 3 years, facilitating local
communities and governments to develop and implement a regenerative
rainforest economy in which the community, ecosystem, and economy all thrive.
Jennifer’s community resource mapping and facilitation techniques translate to
diverse projects around the world, facilitating the rapid evolution of sustainable economic models. She
also curates nature-based immersion retreat experiences for executives, investors, and leaders in their
field.
Jennifer is an entrepreneur and nature whisperer in the fields of design and sustainability who is
passionately helping bring forth an enhanced relationship and comprehensive dialogue between
humans and their internal and external environments. Through 15 years of dedicated training to
actualize her vision, she started with a BA in environmental studies and ecopsychology from University
of Colorado and Naropa University. She deepened her studies with 13 different North and Central
American indigenous cultures, nature based spiritual elders, social sustainability entrepreneurs, and the
Earth directly. For 11 years during this time she apprenticed with John P. Milton and The Way of Nature,
spending over 500 days combined in nature solitary retreats, and has worked as a senior guide of Sacred
Passage for the past 5 years. Currently studying with La’ne Saan Moonwalker, an internationally
recognized Native American spiritual teacher and healer, Jennifer has been initiated as an
environmental guardian and is following a traditional path to become a spiritual elder herself. Through
her work Jennifer has brought many individuals into deep relationship with all living things, opening
hearts to the realization of Source, and regenerating native ecosystems in urban environments through
her landscape design business and nature based retreats. Her guidance has inspired leaders in their
fields to create sustainable change within themselves, their communities, and their businesses, to the
benefit of all. More recently she has been lead to collaborate on projects and initiatives that address the
interface between social, economic, and biological systems and how to bring these into optimal
harmony for the purpose of regenerating some of our most critical ecosystems globally.
Hunter Lovins L.is the President and Founder of Natural Capitalism
Solutions(NCS). A renowned author and champion of sustainable development
for over 35 years, Hunter has consulted on business, economic development,
sustainable agriculture, energy, water, security, and climate policies for scores of
governments, communities, and companies worldwide. Within the United
States, she has consulted for heads of state, departments of defense, energy
agencies and hundreds of state and local agencies. Hunter believes that citizens,
communities and companies, working together within the market context, are
the most dynamic problem-solving force on the planet. She has devoted herself
to building teams that can create and implement practical and affordable
solutions to the problems facing us in creating a sustainable future. Hunter has co‐authored fifteen
books and hundreds of articles, and was featured in the award‐winning film, Lovins On the Soft Path.
Her best‐known book, Natural Capitalism, won the Shingo Prize. It has been translated into a more than
three dozen languages and summarized in Harvard Business Review. Its sequel, The Way Out:
Kickstarting Capitalism to Save Our Economic Ass, won the Atlas Award. Her latest books are Creating a
Lean and Green Business System that again won the Shingo Prize and A Finer Future.
Luis Martin del Campois an entrepreneur, futurist, global sustainability
strategist, writer and speaker dedicated to the development of human potential
and a new cultural narrative. Luis trains change makers, designs and implements
Regenerative/Circular Business Models. Co-Founder of Kala Institute, a school for
human development and training change makers. Kala Institute works with
"human software", the worldview, habits, and capacities of people, companies,
and communities, helping them rediscover their essence, aligning their habits
and processes toward incredible results, and building the capacities to restore
human and ecological sustainability with circular economies. Our mission is to
light up the spark of change in 1 billion people by 2038.
Founder of Sporah, a consultancy firm focused on Blue Economy and circular, sustainable business
models. Holds a degree in International Business and studies an MSc in Renewable Energy. Leads
Destino Solar, a young clean energy company in Mexico. He is a Blue Economy Scholar, and attended the
first Blue Economy Living University in 2016 with the Zero Emissions Research and Initiatives.
Recognized in 2016 as one of the top 250 Young Leaders of the Americas by the Obama Administration´s
Department of State.
Tom Newmark spent fourteen years in the natural products industry,
helping to build New Chapter into a premier brand in the natural retail
channel. Proctor & Gamble purchased New Chapter about seven years ago,
and since that time Tom has focused on environmental activism with specific
attention on regenerative agriculture.
Tom is the co-owner of Finca Luna Nueva Lodge, an organic and biodynamic
farm and ecolodge in the mountainous rainforest of Costa Rica that teaches
regenerative agriculture. www.fincalunanuevalodge.com. Finca Luna Nueva
has a holistically managed dairy and extensive agroecological plantings of
cacao, vanilla, black pepper, ginger, turmeric, allspice, nutmeg, cinnamon, and more than 300 other
tropical fruits and spices. He is a founding member and chair of Tero Kuraĝa, a regenerative trading
company just formed in Costa Rica that will support the carbon-negative commercialization of
regenerative agriculture. He is the co-founder and board chair of The Carbon Underground, co-founder
of the Soil Carbon Initiative and a founding member of that standard’s Design Team, past board chair of
the Greenpeace Fund USA, and a founding member of the Regenerative Agriculture Initiative of
California State University – Chico. He is also the past board chair of the America Botanical Council,
publisher of the peer-reviewed journal HerbalGram. In his past he was also a corporate attorney and
entrepreneur, from which he claims to be recovering.
Federico Bellone has twenty years professional experience in
international development, strategic philanthropy, and partnership-
building for sustainable development and social impact in Latin America,
USA, and Europe. His current professional focus is on regenerative
development. He is undertaking a year of study and exposure in the field
of regenerative business, as well as ways in which we can effectively
educate and train regeneration professionals, primarily in Latin America,
but drawing on international best practice too. Previously Federico
focused on effective philanthropy at Porticus, a global international
private foundation (www.porticus.com). As Executive Director for Latin America, I lead the
transformation from traditional charitable-giving to strategic philanthropy, and served as a member of
the Global Leadership Team. He also served as international portfolio manager at Avina Foundation, one
of Latin America's largest philanthropic organizations whose mission is to support leadership and social
entrepreneurship for sustainable development, and with the Spanish International Development Agency
(AECID), redesigning biodiversity and sustainable livelihood programs across Latin America.
Federico’s career interests have been shaped by addressing the question of how to live within Earth's
limits, and what social, economic, and ecological arrangements come into place to achieve this with
dignity and prosperity.
Pablo Jenkins is Co-Founder and President of Ideas en Acción, a
donor-advised fund and co-creation platform that implements regionally
scalable projects combining technology, social innovation, and youth
leadership. He is also an active investor focusing on sustainable
development through impact investing in wellbeing, education and
technology. Pablo is co-founder of the Costa Rica Chapter of Conscious
Capitalism. Pablo has served as an advisor to four Ministers of Science and
Technology of Costa Rica on topics related to broadband and innovation
policy. He was Intel Capital’s youngest strategic investment manager, Director of International
Expansion for Endeavor Global during its expansion into the Middle East and Asia, and the co-creator of
the Sustainable Investments Group in Brazil, with leading local family offices. Pablo has been co-
organizer of TEDxPuraVidaJoven since 2011 and the first Do Lectures in Latin America. Pablo graduated
with a B.A. from Princeton University and an MBA and an MPA from Harvard University. Pablo is part of
the Aspen Global Leadership Network and a 2015 Young Global Leader of the World Economic Forum.
He is on the board of directors of Estrategia Siglo XXI, Fundación Gente, and Cenfotec University.
Mirian Vilela is the Executive Director of the Earth Charter
International Secretariat and the Earth Charter Center for Education for
Sustainable Development at the University for Peace. She is a professor at
the University for Peace and coordinates the UNESCO Chair on Education
for Sustainable Development with the Earth Charter. Mirian has been in the
leadership of the Earth Charter Initiative since January 1996. For more than
23 years, she has facilitated multi-cultural and multi-sectoral workshops,
courses, and dialogues related to sustainability, values and education. She
has a Master´s in Public Administration from Harvard University and is a PhD Candidate on Education
from LaSalle University in Costa Rica.
Mirian has been working in the field of sustainability since 1990, when she worked for the United
Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED) in preparation to the 1992 UN Earth
Summit. Prior to that she worked for the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development
(UNCTAD). Over the years her work involved leading numerous international workshops, seminars and
courses especially in the field of values and principles for sustainability. Since 2005 she has been
teaching courses on Sustainable Development, Education for Sustainable Development and
Environmental Governance at the University for Peace. She has organized and facilitated numerous
international workshops and seminars on values and principles for sustainability. Miriam is a member of
the UNESCO Expert Reference Group for the Decade of Education for Sustainable Development (DESD).
Marije van Lidth de Jeudeis a M.Sc. graduate in Cultural
Anthropology with a specialization in gender and development studies; and a
B.Sc. graduate in Commercial Economy. She has a professional record of more
than twenty years in sustainable development, in particular with multi- and
bilateral agencies, governmental institutions, academia, producer
cooperatives, small enterprises, community-based organizations and other
civil society stakeholders. Marije is specialized in conducting gender capacity
assessments and development strategies as well as participatory baseline studies, mid-term and end
evaluations with a gender perspective. Her expertise was established as program officer (amongst
others for Oxfam-Novib and IFAD) and during research and consultancy assignments related to all
phases of the project-cycle. She combines qualitative participatory research methods with quantitative
data collection and analysis. Her thematic specializations are: participatory design for sustainable cities;
Gender equity and empowerment; capacity building and behaviour change; socio-economic
vulnerability of children and youth, indigenous people, migrants; social performance of financial services
and business development. Marije has been living in Costa Rica for the last seventeen years, from where
she works in the whole Latin America region and beyond.
Oliver Schütte is an expert on bio-climatic architecture and sustainable
urban development. He worked for worldwide renowned offices like the
Office for Metropolitan Architecture (OMA) and its research counterpart
Advanced Media Operations (AMO). In 2014 he was head commissioner and
curator, together with Marije van Lidth de Jeude, of the national pavilion from
Costa Rica in the Venice Architecture Biennale where a critical view on the
urban development model of the country and its implications on spatial
fragmentation and social segregation was given. Together with Marije he was
also the lead investigator of the Sustainable Cities project developed by A Foundation with Cordaid
Urban Matters, which was presented at the World Urban Forum in 2012 and will be published in Costa
Rica in 2016. In 2012, he was working as leading architect, also together with Marije and contracted by
Cordaid Urban Matters, on the participatory design process of a mixed use neighbourhood providing
“attainable” (affordable and sustainable) housing in highly vulnerable areas, both environmentally and
socially speaking. The project site is located in Soyapango, San Salvador, between two territories
confiscated by two rivalling Maras and is projected to encourage social integration through shared
public and collective, work and recreational, spaces.
Allan Valverde is currently the Dean of the Faculty of Environment and
Development and Director of the Latin American School for Protected Areas at
UCI. He is also the regional vice-chair for Central America of the World
Commission on Protected Areas, IUCN. Allan started his professional life having
worked for more than six years as an officer of Tortuguero National Park
National in the National System of Conservation Areas of Costa Rica, serving as
manager of public use, environmental education, voluntary and control and
protection. Afterwards he moved to UCI, where he has accomplished an
impressive career, not only in protected area management but also in education. His experience in
protected area management has led him to manage several large-scale projects in Bolivia, Brazil,
Colombia, Chile, Ecuador, Peru and others. His expertise in education and learning, competence based
learning, project based and online learning has placed him as one of the most talented experts in the
interphase of protected area management and education. He designed the curricula and courses for the
Global Partnership for Professionalizing Protected Area Management.
Félix Cañet is currently the Dean of the One Health Faculty and Director of
the Master’s Program in Health Management with Emphasis on Food Safety at
UCI. He is co-founder of the Urban Family Organoponic initiative in Cuba. He is
an international consultant in Agriculture and Food, Lead Auditor in Good
Agricultural Practices EurepGap and in Food Safety Management Systems
(Norms of the ISO 22000 family) and Quality Management (standards of the ISO
9000 family (2013). He is a specialist in Food Inspection Based on Risks, Risk
Analysis, Post-Harvest Technology and Application of the Ecosystem Approach in Agriculture and Food,
in production systems based on conventional, organic agriculture, family, urban and peri-urban, with
experience in exporting fresh fruits and vegetables to markets in Canada, the US and Europe. He has
provided technical and consulting services in the public, NGO and and private sectors of Costa Rica,
Cuba, Mexico, Panama, Saint Kitts Nevis and Venezuela. From 1999 to 2010 he was Director of the
Division of Nuclear Techniques, Plant Physiology and Postharvest, of the Institute of Fundamental
Research in Tropical Agriculture "Alejandro de Humboldt", (INIFAT), Havana, Cuba. Among the activities
under his charge, was the Food Safety and Quality Management of the National Program of Urban
Agriculture of Cuba.
Tania Moreno is the Coordinator of University Social Responsibility at UCI
and also serves as the Executive Coordinator of the UNESCO Chair in Biosphere
Reserves and natural and mixed World Heritage Sites. She was the lead person
for the establishment of the Water and Peace Biosphere Reserve and has since
then collaborated with several biosphere reserves in Latin America and also
coordinated several networks related to biosphere reserves and UNESCO
Chairs. She is part of the MAB Roster of Experts and assisted the UNESCO-MAB
Strategy Group in the preparation of the MAB Strategy and Action Plan 2015-
2025. She is part of the Costa Rican MAB National Committee as representative
of UCI and Secretary of Board during the periods 2012-2018 and vicepresident since 2018. She also
works with the Foundation of the Water and Peace Biosphere Reserve with technical assistance,
capacity building activities and fieldwork. Tania also represents UCI in the Costa Rican Network of
Sustainable Educational Institutions (REDIES). Member of IUCN Commission on Education and
Communication (CEC) and Commission on Ecosystem Management (CEM).
Juan Sostheim, a former corporate maven, is the founder of Rancho
Margot and a proven regeneration practitioner, a pioneer in scalable,
sustainable living. As a luxury eco-tourist resort, educational facility and
organic farm in Costa Rica, he's demonstrating that "living off the grid" is not
only possible but practical for large-scale communities. Juan fuels the kitchen
with methane gas from cows and pigs, generates his own electricity and
creates bio-fuels. Rancho Margot was started in 2004 after former fast-food
executive Juan Sostheim and his family purchased 400 acres of former cattle range. They set about
turning the largely treeless land into what it is today — a rich and verdant spread of land bursting with
life. They take a holistic view of sustainability at Rancho Margot and design their systems to be closed
looped and productive — the pigs eat food scraps from the kitchen which is turned into poop that is
used to produce energy (the solids are composted to create hot water while liquids are put in a bio-
digester to create methane gas) before being applied to fields to fertilize organic crops, which are then
eaten by Rancho Margot's staff and guests. Rancho Margot produces their own electricity through a
small hydropower plant. The workers of Rancho Margot grow and raise most of the food eaten on site
and make their own soap. Their furniture is built using wood harvested from trees growing on-site.
Rancho Margot is a partner in the Regenerate Costa Rica Hub.
Alexis D. Gaillard is an artist and photographer. His focus on traveling,
nature, art, photography, and the blossoming of human nature brought him, in
2006, to the realization of his first artistic project: “Galactical Nature.” Parallel to
his artworks, Alexis D. Gaillard materializes his interests through diverse social,
cultural and entrepreneurial projects such as "Natural Pact" which does
reforestation through a seasonal and timeless land art where he is co-founder
and manager. Natural Pact Land Art is a compensation service for greenhouse
gas emissions unique in the world. This program works through an unprecedented Land Art
reforestation method. It offers the opportunity to be a sponsor of reforested trees for a period of 20
years. Our natural works allow us to participate in the insertion of trees that are protected for life within
our private nature reserve. Each tree is certified and geolocated thanks to our methodology. Land-Art
and Natural Pact will be used in the regeneration of degraded land. Natural Pact, Alexis co-founded and
managed "Zoom Social 200 – ZS200" / Art photography workshops, the "Brussels Art Factory – BAF" /
Artistic production and distribution center and co-created "The World With You" / Offers and demands'
window on the social and humanitarian Belgium world. Natural Pact is a partner in the Regenerate Costa
Rica Hub.
Program cost:
This program can be taken in parallel to the Master’s in Project Management and also by any UCI
current student at a cost of US$1300 payable in four payments of US$325.
For non-regular UCI students, the cost is US$1600.
Optional field visit in Costa Rica
At the end of the program, a field visit is available to all participants at an additional cost which will
depend on length of stay. Students will have the chance to visit sites where regenerative development is
being implemented.
The Regenerate Costa Rica Hub is working initially in
these seven territories where regenerative
experiences are taking place.
For more information:
University for International Cooperation
www.uci.ac.cr
Phone: (+506) 22536464
rectoria@uci.ac.cr

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Program Outline in Regenerative Entrepreneurship

  • 1. Certificate in Regenerative Entrepreneurship at the University for International Cooperation (UCI) REGENERATIVE DEVELOPMENT FOR FUTURE WELLBEING UNIVERSITY FOR INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION WWW.UCI.AC.CR COSTA RICA Online program, Starts September 17, 2019 In cooperation with:
  • 2. The Certificate in Regenerative Entrepreneurship at the University for International Cooperation (UCI) is given in cooperation with Capital Institute and the Regenerative Communities Network, Savory Institute, The Carbon Underground, Finca Luna Nueva and Rancho Margot. Help co-create a better future for all life forms to thrive. Be a pioneer in developing and promoting innovative regenerative development projects and contribute to creating true and pragmatic solutions to solve the most challenging issues that are putting our planetary life at risk. This Certificate Program was designed to run parallel to the Master’s in Project Management program (https://www.uci.ac.cr/master-project-management/) at UCI but can be taken independently by all current and former UCI students at a discounted rate and is also open to the general public interested in a high level practical program on entrepreneurship for regenerative development. Participate with colleagues from many different countries for 16 months in an online program and immerse yourself in regenerative development as it is incorporated into management for regeneration of the planet, society and the economy. You will initially learn about current pressing issues of global change, including the planetary boundaries approach and the safe operating space for humanity and explore the impacts and interdependencies between different global changes in the Anthropocene. You will participate in active discussions about the relevant international organizational structures including the UN conventions, SDGs and other global initiatives which are used as the framework for global decisions. Also, a review on current geopolitics and how shifts in power are happening in a world of growing population and scarce resources. The exponential impacts of the 4th Industrial Revolution on human societies will also be discussed. After this, you will dive into holistic management practice through the integration of nature, society, economy, culture, politics and spirituality in transdisciplinary site-based approaches. You will understand how systems thinking and complexity can be included in effective project management to achieve regeneration at all levels. The core of this program is regenerative development – with special emphasis on how the study of living systems is rapidly changing mindsets and the measurement of economic development. Different approaches taken by the most relevant organizations currently promoting regeneration will be analyzed and compared with the goal of co-creating regenerative solutions for immediate implementation in different parts of the world with special emphasis on the Regenerative Communities Network. After understanding how to transition from degenerative development to green economy, to sustainability and now to regeneration, you will dive through a series of modules into an in-depth analysis of each of the pillars of regenerative development. These thematic areas are not disciplinary and thus will necessarily be interlinked into holistic thinking and action.
  • 3. Regenerative Development at UCI Regenerative development is a dynamic management process that participates with the rest of nature to restore health and vitality to ecosystems. This opens up new opportunities beyond traditional sustainability which is typically seen as an end goal rather than as a natural outcome of intelligent management processes. It is a site-based holistic approach that incorporates transdisciplinary processes with active participation and empowerment of local communities through recognition of the value of their social networks, cultures, knowledges and beliefs. It integrates six dimensions: a) regeneration of functional landscapes which allow for carbon capture in soils and the recovery of biodiversity and thus ecosystem function, food security and health; b) a new economic paradigm based on regenerative economics that seeks wellbeing of humans and all life forms; c) regeneration of the social web by empowering local communities to maximize their participation in the local governance of their territory; d) designing regenerative cultures and recovering social values, increasing self-esteem and promoting true empowerment; e) redefining the political structures by incorporating youth into politics and; f) spirituality, where ethics, transparency and empathy are some of the fundamental aspects. Environment Society Economy Culture Politics Spirituality Entrepreneurship is an important component of regeneration. You will be immersed in the use of new approaches to solve social, environmental and economic problems. Different aspects of social entrepreneurship will be analyzed in order to understand what may or may not be successful. Regenerative entrepreneurship requires integrated competences, beyond knowledge and skills. Attitude, consciousness, mindfulness and passion are highly relevant. Wellbeing of all life forms replaces traditional measures of success. The practical integration of the above components will allow for new mindsets that will foster innovative approaches to local territorial development.
  • 4. The program will also cover additional tools such as the use of socio-economic and climate change scenarios linked to business plan development or the fine-tuning of public policy. UCI has many years’ experience working with future scenarios methodologies in partnership with several global and national organizations. Program outline Current global and technological changes are now exponential and thus any process for co-creating solutions has to be dynamic. Below is an outline of the Certificate Program. This is not a rigid program and the base of the certificate is an active co-creation process between students and mentors. One of the fundamental outcomes of the program is to have people capable of managing complex problems in cooperation with the Regenerative Communities Network and other actors under permanent changing conditions. Flexibility, creativity and innovation will be standard practice in the discussions and thus will feed into the implementation of the program. The program will run for 16 months starting September 17, 2019. It consists of readings, webinars, video presentations, forum discussions, group work and other mediation strategies. The total recommended time dedicated to academic activities is from 5 to 10 hours per week. From Unit 1 students will have to choose a project which they will work on throughout the program. Evaluation will take place based on the development of a regenerative project and a corresponding essay. Unit 1 Where do we stand? Global change, planetary boundaries approach and the safe operating space for humanity, impacts and interdependencies between global changes in the Anthropocene. Relevant international organizational structures including the UN conventions, SDGs and other global initiatives which are used as the framework for global decisions. The exponential impacts of the 4th Industrial Revolution on human societies. Current geopolitics and how shifts in power are happening in a world of growing population and scarce resources. Use of social media, data and artificial intelligence and loss of democracy. Regenerative project development for implementation – individual or joint project which will be developed by students for on the ground practice of regenerative entrepreneurship. Unit2 Systems thinking. Principles of systems approach and transdisciplinarity – dealing with complexity. Biomimicry and whole systems design. Bioliteracy and Innovation for Regenerative Development (BIRD). Regenerative development overview – from degenerative development to regeneration. Holistic management practice through the integration of nature, society, economy, culture, politics and spirituality in regenerative transdisciplinary site-based approaches. Incorporating systems thinking and complexity in effective project management to achieve regeneration at all levels. Theory of change. Real politics of Sharing. Integrative institutions in a regenerative culture.
  • 5. Unit 3 Transformation - innovation and creation of previously unimagined possibilities. Disruption. 3 Horizons Framework (managerial, visionary, and entrepreneurial waves of change), Transformational leadership. Use of future scenarios for decision making. Unit 4 Regeneration of functional landscapes. Nature based solutions. The Ecosystems Approach. Biodiversity conservation and ecosystem function. Ecosystem services and ecological economics. Nature based solutions. Ecosystem based adaptation. Regenerative agriculture. Permaculture. Holistic cattle grazing. Natural and assisted regeneration of natural ecosystems. LandArt regeneration. Landscape scale regeneration. Soil carbon, resilience, and climate change adaptation and mitigation. One health approach. Unit 5 Social and cultural regeneration. Applied cultural evolution. Designing regenerative cultures. Participatory planning and active participation. Conflict management and conflict transformation. Communities and territorial governance. Unit 6 Moving away from GDP. Regenerative economics and key principles (In Right Relationship; Views Wealth Holistically; Innovative, Adaptive, Responsive; Empowered Participation; Edge Effect Abundance; Robust Circulatory Flow; Seeks Balance). Cryptoassets and Decentralized Autonomous Communities design to promote Regenerative Development. Doughnut economics. Economy for the common good. Local development. Wellbeing Economy Alliance. Unit 7 Regenerative policy and politics. Politics and economics. Current global and national politics. Empowering youth to go into politics. Advocacy and action. Local governance. Holistic management framework for decision making. Leadership for cooperation. Unit 8 Spirituality, World view, The Earth Charter, Laudato Sí. Ethics, values and principles for a collaborative future. Biocultural conservation. Consciousness, mindfulness. Working on the inner self. Peace and balance. Peace and mindfulness.
  • 6. Unit 9. Applying holistic approaches. Transdisciplinarity for regenerative development. Bioregional approach. Territorial regenerative development. Urban regeneration and development. Regenerative communities and collaboratives. Inter-sector value chains – regenerative businesses, regenerative tourism, B-Corps, cooperatives. Unit 10 Technology for regeneration. Social media platforms and how to use them for collective action. Apps for regeneration. Applying blockchain technology. Unit 11 Finding your path. Regenerative Environmental Emergence. Entrepreneurship for regeneration. Social entrepreneurship. Regenerative business models. Innovation. Holistic planning. Co-creating solutions. Communication. Network building. Fundraising. Project management. Unit 12 Capacity development and education for regenerative development. Competence based framework. Enhancing community participation though empowerment and education. Leadership for co-creation. Development of a Regenerative Project: starting with Unit 1, students will construct a regenerative project for implementation, incorporating the different themes as we go along. Implementing regenerative development in real-life situations – developing a project for on-the-ground implementation. Networking for co-creation. Preparation of an essay on the application of regenerative entrepreneurship. Optional field visit to Costa Rica At the end of the program students have the possibility of visiting sites where regenerative development is being implemented. This visit can be arranged for 1, 2 and 4 weeks of stay.
  • 7. Mentors and invited speakers: Below is a list of some of the confirmed experts that will be participating through webinars, online discussions, video presentations and other platforms. This list will be expanded as the co-creation process advances. Eduard Müller is the founder and rector (president) of the University for International Cooperation, being responsible for the institutional development of the university since 1994. Currently one of the global leaders on promoting regenerative development based on the Planetary Boundaries and the “Safe operating space for humanity”, for creating innovative solutions to the current challenges through transdisciplinary teams, the use of climate change and socio- economic scenarios, working integrally the economic, social, cultural, environmental, political and spiritual realms, seeking to increase the resilience of impacts of global change and especially climate change, facilitating mitigation and adaptation strategies for making a better planet. His over 40 years of experience in five continents and dozens of countries in a wide array of fields, have enabled him to become an internationally recognized trend-setting leader. His work has covered management and innovation in higher education, global and climate change communication, nature conservation and nature based solutions, business and biodiversity initiatives, public private partnerships, conservation and development, sustainable development, sustainable tourism, eco and agrotourism, tourism, rural community development, rural development, local agendas 21, community management for poverty reduction, functional landscapes. He has occupied relevant international positions in wildlife management, protected areas, UNESCO MAB Program, development and evaluation of agricultural and environmental productive projects, breeding and animal production, alternative production systems and veterinary medicine. He has adopted spirituality as the major change-maker in human behavior, working closely with the Earth Charter initiative and more recently the Laudato Sí. He is also the Chair-holder of the UNESCO Chair for Biosphere Reserves and Natural and Mixed World Heritage Sites. He is a member of the Global Council of the Wellbeing Economy Alliance. Allan Savory is the founder and president of Savory Institute. Allan was born in Zimbabwe and educated in South Africa (University of Natal, BS in Zoology and Botany) pursued an early career as a research biologist and game ranger in the British Colonial Service of what was then Northern Rhodesia (today Zambia) and later as a farmer and game rancher in Zimbabwe. In the 1960s he made a significant breakthrough in understanding what was causing the degradation and desertification of the world’s grassland ecosystems and, as a resource management consultant, worked with numerous managers on four continents to develop sustainable solutions. He served as a Member of Parliament in the latter days of Zimbabwe’s civil war and became the leader of the opposition to the ruling party headed by Ian Smith. Exiled in 1979 as a result of his opposition, he immigrated to the United States, where he continued to work with land managers through his consulting business. The growth of that business, a desire to assist many more people and the need for
  • 8. furthering his work led him to continue its development in the nonprofit world. In 1992 Savory and his wife, Jody Butterfield, formed a non-profit organization in Zimbabwe, the Africa Centre for Holistic Management, donating a ranch that would serve as a learning site for people all over Africa. In 2009Savory, Butterfield, and a group of colleagues co-founded the Savory Institute in Boulder, Colorado to serve the world through an international network of entrepreneurial innovators and leaders committed to serving their regions with the highest standards of Holistic Management training and implementation support. The Africa Centre became the first of the Savory Institute’s locally led and managed “hubs.” (Photo credit: Roberto Rosales) Savory’s book, Holistic Management: A New Framework for Decision-Making (Island Press, 1999), describes his effort to find workable solutions ordinary people could implement to overcome many of the problems besetting communities and businesses today. In 2003, Allan Savory received Australia’s International Banksia Award “for the person or organization doing the most for the environment on a global scale,” and in 2010 Savory (and the Africa Centre) received the Buckminster Fuller Institute’s Challenge award for work that has “significant potential to solve humanity’s most pressing problems.” A TED talk Savory gave in 2013 has received over 3.4 million views and in 2014 was voted one of the 50 most intriguing TED talks of all time. The Savory Institute is one of 11 finalists in the Virgin Earth Challenge, a $25 million initiative for the successful commercialization of ways of taking greenhouse gases out of the atmosphere and keeping them out with no countervailing impacts. Alnoor Ladha is an author, activist, anti-preneur. Alnoor’s work focuses on the intersection of political organizing, systems thinking and narrative work. He is the co-founder and Executive Director of The Rules (TR), a global network of activists, organizers, designers, coders, researchers, writers and others focused on changing the rules that create inequality, poverty and climate change. Prior to TR, Alnoor was a partner and head of strategy at Purpose, a political consultancy focused on movement building. Alnoor is a writer and speaker on new forms of activism, the structural causes of inequality, the link between climate change and poverty, and the rise of the Global South as a powerful organizing force in the transition to a post-capitalist world. He is currently writing a book about the intersection of spirituality and politics. He has sat on various boards including Greenpeace International USA, the P2P Foundation and The Emergence Network. He holds an MSc in Philosophy and Public Policy from the London School of Economics. He is also a co-founder of Tierra Valiente (Brave Earth), a postcapitalist community in northern Costa Rica. Daniel Christian Wahl Daniel Christian Wahl works internationally as a consultant and educator in regenerative development, whole systems design, and transformative innovation. He holds degrees in biology (Univ. of Edinburgh), and holistic science (Schumacher College), and his 2006 doctoral thesis (Univ. of Dundee) was on Design for Human and Planetary Health: A Holistic/Integral Approach to Complexity and Sustainability. He was director of Findhorn College between 2007 and 2010, and is a member of the International Futures Forum since 2009 and Gaia Education since 2007. He
  • 9. has collaborated with UNITAR and UNESCO, many large NGO, and as a consultant his clients included companies such as Camper, Ecover and Lush, as well as, local and regional governments and UK Foresight. Daniel is a fellow of the Findhorn Foundation, on the advisory council of the Ecosystems Restoration Camps Foundation and the Ojai Foundation and the research group of the Global Ecovillage Network. He is co-founder of Biomimicry Iberia (2012), and has been collaborating with ‘SmartUIB’ at the University of the Balearic Islands since 2014. His book Designing Regenerative Cultures was published in 2016 by Triarchy Press and quickly reached international acclaim. It was released in Portuguese in 2019 and a Spanish edition will be launched in 2020. The ‘SDG Implementation Flashcards’ he developed for Gaia Education have been taken up enthusiastically by UNESCO and so far have been translated into 7 languages. Daniel's blog on Medium.com has a large and growing international following. Bjørn Heyerdahl is an active explorer, Global Citizen, Father, Explorers Club member (2002), Earth Charter Affiliate www.earthcharter.org , Integral thinker, Biospheric Designer, Global Public Speaker and Philosopher. Founder of Midgard and Integral Climate Change Solutions www.integralclimatechangesolutions.com and the Midgard Expedition www.midgardexpedition.com formally launched at the explorers club 2003. Recipient of the Lowell Thomas Award from the Explores Club in New York 2003, for his contribution to the future for scientific exploration. Awarded the Silver Medal by Micheal Gorbachev at the tenth anniversary of the Green Cross International in Geneva 2003 for his contribution to global ecological awareness, scientific research, functional model building in sustainability, promoting the Earth Charter and furthering the principles inherent in the GCI. Bjørn has sailed, walked, rowed, paddled, swam and climbed all biomes of our planet, oceans, rivers, mountains, deserts, wetlands, jungles and African bushvelt, over the last 30 + years, in the search for adventure and models of intelligent life (life lived in an ecologically, economically and socially sound way), lived consciously, and sustainably. This Trans-Disciplinary learning has been shared in a global dialogue through papers, academia, scientific institutions, organs of the United Nations, The Green Cross International, The Earth Charter International, schools, public presentations, environmental immersive, experiential education programmes and most importantly in building living models of sustainable human habitation and Climate Parks, around the globe, from Mozambique to Italy, from South Africa to the UAE, from the Philippines to Costa Rica, home of the Earth Charter International and UPEACE. Bjørn has a strong Viking identity and linage, dating back to 812 AD and is Grandson of Thor Heyerdahl of the Kon-Tiki Expedition. Bjørn is currently building an authentic Viking Ship.This expedition is not just about crossing oceans and seas as our ancestors did and achieving or having more… its about being more. It’s about growing up, waking up, cleaning up and showing up for what is demanded of global leadership right now. It’s about
  • 10. being conditioned and groomed to become leaders - contemporary Vikings; relevant, contributing, influencing - living models of integral intelligence. The Midgard Expedition crew lead by Bjorn Heyerdahl, a group of global citizens, are exploring globally models of intelligent sustainable human habitation and applying it to their own lives, careers and communities. This learning is shared as a global dialogue so that the lessons can be applied by any interested group or individual.This expedition will trace old Viking pathways, honouring that spirit, courage and skill; it will highlight modern and ancient models of intelligent, integrated life on earth. Bjørn’s intention is to grow global ecological and ethical awareness on what can be done now in response to the collapse of life support systems; and to elevate through Trans - Disciplinary methodology, adults and youth in terms of the various cognitions required to build strong, informed, proactive, ethical leaders to help design the future we want. May East is a sustainability educator, spatial planner and social innovator. Her work spans the fields of cultural geography, urban ecology, and women’s studies. Designated one of the 100 Global SustainAbility Leaders three years in a row she currently works in 54 countries with community-based organisations and intergovernmental agencies in the creation of policy guidance for accelerating the implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals and for delivery of projects seeking to strengthen climate resilience, food security and renewable energies solutions. A UNITAR Fellow she has an MSc in Spatial Planning with specialization on rehabilitation of abandoned villages. As CEO of Gaia Education, her passion is to co-develop Project-Based Learning trajectories supporting indigenous and migrant communities and their traditions to survive in rapidly changing environments while enhancing their opportunities to become the designers of their desired future. She has recently received the Women of the Decade in Sustainability and Leadership award by the Women Economic Forum. Joe Brewerhas dedicated his life to helping humanity navigate global challenges as a complexity researcher, innovation strategist, and transdisciplinary scholar who brings a wealth of expertise to the adoption of sustainable solutions at the cultural scale. He weaves people and knowledge across fields to build capacities for systemic change. He is a co-founder of the Cultural Evolution Society, a global scientific community dedicated to the study of cultural evolution, has been the culture editor for This View of Life at the Evolution Institute since 2014, is the co-founder of Evonomics Magazine dedicated to the evolution of economics, and has worked with a large variety of nonprofits, social-impact businesses, and government agencies to apply insights from the cognitive, behavioral, and evolutionary sciences to large-scale social problems. Joe has joined the leadership team at Regenerative Communities Network to help grow the capacities for this network of regenerative projects around the world.
  • 11. Dr. Stuart Cowan is the Co-Founder of the Regenerative Communities Network, an initiative of the Capital Institute, and has served as its Director/Systems Convener since 2017. He leads the delivery of a full cycle of engagement with each collaborative in the Network while also coordinating the design, governance, and business operations of the Network. Stuart brings a unique combination of practical engagement with circular/regenerative economies, systems science, design thinking, transaction/business experience, netweaving, and community facilitation. Stuart previously served as Chief Scientist for the Smart Cities Council. In this role, he developed knowledge frameworks and tools supporting the integration of smart technologies with urban sustainability and resilience. Previously, Stuart was a Partner with Autopoiesis LLC, which applies complex living systems models and frameworks to regenerate communities, ecosystems, and organizations. Autopoiesis LLC has worked with a wide range of financial institutions, municipalities, state and federal agencies, tribes, non-profits, utilities, companies, and religious orders. Stuart served as a Transaction Manager and founding team member with Portland Family of Funds, an innovative sustainable community investment fund. He helped develop a triple bottom line investment strategy for Portland Family of Funds and its national affiliate, United Fund Advisors, LLC, which have together closed $2.8 billion in transactions, generating 21,000 jobs. He served as Conservation Economy Research Director at Ecotrust, an innovative sustainability non-profit based in Portland, Oregon where he led the development of the Reliable Prosperity framework for a regenerative bioregion. He is the co-author with Sim Van der Ryn of Ecological Design (Island Press, 1996/2007), a visionary overview of the whole systems integration of ecology and architecture, land-use planning, and product design that has been translated into three languages and was reissued in a special Tenth Anniversary second edition. He received his doctorate in Applied Mathematics from U.C. Berkeley with a focus on complex systems modeling and ecological economics. He has taught ecological design, sustainability, and complex systems at a wide range of universities, including the sustainable MBA program at Bainbridge Graduate Institute, U.C. Berkeley, Portland State University, and Naropa University. Stuart serves on the Global Council for the Well-Being Economy Alliance, is a Councilor for the SDG Transformations Forum, and is a member of the Netweaver Network. Ricardo Rozzi is a Chilean ecologist and philosopher who is professor at the University of North Texas (UNT) and the Universidad de Magallanes (UMAG). His research combines both disciplines through the study of the interrelations between the ways of knowing and inhabiting the natural world, proposing a dynamic continuous reciprocal feedback between both domains. His work at UNT forms a central part of the nation's best program in environmental philosophy (www.phil.unt.edu). In addition to his theoretical work, Rozzi has collaborated with the Chilean Ministry of Education, the Latin American Ecology Schoolyard Program, and has participated in the creation of the "Senda Darwin" Biological Station (Chiloé Island, Chile), the Latin American Network of Ethnobotanical Parks, the Omora Ethnobotanical Park (Puerto Williams, Chile), and the UNESCO Cape Horn Biosphere Reserve at the southern end of the Americas, with the aim of incorporating environmental ethics in the practices of conservation and education in Latin America. Currently, he is the director of the Subantarctic Biocultural Conservation Program, coordinated by the University of
  • 12. North Texas in the US, and by the Universidad de Magallanes and the Institute of Ecology and Biodiversity in Chile. With these institutions, he co-directs a biocultural conservation and "field environmental philosophy" program working in collaboration with the Center for Environmental Philosophy. As the co-founder of the Omora Ethnobotanical Park and the leader in the creation of the Cape Horn Biosphere Reserve, his academic work has been strongly associated with application and includes a novel focus on "biocultural conservation" and the "linking of human well-being with the environment." Within this same line of inquiry, Rozzi coined the terms "biocultural ethics" and "field environmental philosophy" to denote his emphasis on applying philosophy to real life situations using direct encounter experiences to enrich both academic formation as well as inform social processes, such as decision- making and ecotourism.[2] For example, based on the discovery of the outstanding diversity of mosses, lichens and liverworts (5% of the world's total) in the Magellanic sub-Antarctic ecoregion, Dr. Ricardo Rozzi and his colleagues has coined the term Tourism with a Hand Lens to refer to a new speciality tourism being promoted in the Cape Horn Biosphere Reserve. Rozzi has called upon tourism operators to place this narrative into their offering for the region and take advantage of this biodiversity hotspot for non-vascular flora. In turn, Rozzi and the Omora Ethnobotanical Park have metaphorically called these small plant communities the "Miniature Forests of Cape Horn" to help the broader society understand the ecological role played by these tiny, but diverse, abundant and important organisms. Alvaro Cedeño Molinari was born in Costa Rica, where he obtained a degree in Law. He worked as an official translator and interpreter while being an international volunteer promoting intercultural competence for peace around the world for ten years. He then obtained a Master’s degree in Peace and Conflict Transformation from Tromsø University in the Norwegian Arctic region, where he also developed a personal concern for the impact of climate change on both the Arctic and Antarctic regions of the world. He later obtained a Master’s degree in Public Policy and Management from Carnegie Mellon University in Adelaide, South Australia, where he was trained and developed a keen interest in digital technologies. His main fields of interest are conflict transformation, regenerative development and the digital economy. Currently he is a Fellow at the Geneva Centre for Security Policy where he focuses on the leadership at the convergence of the Fourth Industrial Revolution and Climate Action. He is also a founding partner of IoTRepublik, where he leads projects that relate Internet of Things and climate action. He lives in Geneva with his wife and two daughters. He started his diplomatic career as Commercial Counselor opening his country’s Embassy in Beijing, China, after the establishment of diplomatic relations in 2007. He has served as a Costa Rican public servant for 13 years including eleven in diplomacy, eight of which were as Ambassador for his country to Japan and to the World Trade Organization in Geneva, Switzerland. In Japan he established a bilateral green growth agenda and he also developed great concern for Japan’s ecological footprint, which led him to become an advocate of bioliteracy and regenerative development. At the WTO he had the original mandate of advancing the conversation of trade and climate action and founded the coalition member states called Friends Advancing Sustainable Trade (FAST), in addition to a coalition called Friends of E-commerce for Development (FEDs), which became a formal plurilateral negotiation.
  • 13. Dr. Katherine Trebeck is Policy and Knowledge Lead for the Wellbeing Economy Alliance. She has over eight years’ experience in various roles with Oxfam GB - as a Senior Researcher for the Global Research Team, UK Policy Manager, and Research and Policy Advisor for Oxfam Scotland. Katherine, with Lorenzo Fioramonti, instigated the group of Wellbeing Economy Governments; developed Oxfam's Humankind Index; and led Oxfam's work on a 'human economy'. She was Rapporteur for Club de Madrid's Working Group on Shared Societies and Sustainability and is on the advisory board for the Centre for Understanding Sustainable Prosperity (University of Surrey); the Living Well Within Limits project (University of Leeds); A Good Life for All Within Planetary Boundaries (University of Leeds); the Economic Democracy Index project (University of Glasgow); and the Omina Foundation. Katherine has Bachelor Degrees in Economics and in Politics and holds a PhD in Political Science from the Australian National University. She is Honorary Professor at the University of the West of Scotland and Senior Visiting Research Fellow at the University of Strathclyde (based at the Fraser of Allander Institute). Her most recent book The Economics of Arrival: Ideas for a Grown Up Economy (co-authored with Jeremy Williams and published by Policy Press) was published in January 2019. Maria Emilia Correa is a Colombian and Chilean national with 30 years of international experience in business, civil society and academia and is recognized as a leader in sustainability and entrepreneurship in Latin America and abroad. After an early career in biological conservation and sustainable development, became the first Vice President for Sustainability for a multinational corporation in Latin America. In 2012 she co-founded Sistema B, a movement advancing a new economy where success is measured in terms of wellbeing for people and planet. Recognized for the ability to take ideas into action, build bridges between “improbable partners”, and effectively advocate change. Some of her achievements are being a member of the jury at the 2016 Rolex International Awards, Leading Women in Environment Awards and 100 Female Leaders in Chile in 2013. She was also chosen as one of the 30 more recognized female intellectuals in Iberoamerica by ESGlobal in 2017. She is also a 2019 Fellow at Harvard University’s Advanced Leadership Initiative. Maria Emilia has proven talent for nurturing enthusiastic communities of multi stakeholder parties, facilitate critical connections, and create conditions to foster trust. Ms. Correa also headed social and environmental responsibility for Latin American GrupoNueva, directed sustainability at Brazilian cosmetics company Natura Cosmeticos, and led biodiversity conservation in Colombia for The Nature Conservancy. Correa serves as board member of for profit companies -Colbún, Córpora, and Explora in Chile-, and non for profit Fundación Bancolombia and Fundación Gaia in Colombia.
  • 14. Franz Josef Allmayer is founder of Integrity.Earth where he leads multilateral transdisciplinary efforts in converging key partners towards streamlining solutions for today’s grand challenges. He is currently working with communities in Central America to introduce micro hydro power solutions to build capacity for energy sovereignty in disenfranchised rural communities. Previously, he was a Program Coordinator with Advanced Development for Africa, leading multidisciplinary approaches to address the Millennium Development Goals throughout Africa. More recently, with the Clinton Health Access Initiative (CHAI) he developed the global strategy for mHealth/eHealth, engaging governments and partners to address large-scale barriers to effective treatment and care. Previously, he worked as a Program Coordinator with Advanced Development for Africa, where he led multidisciplinary approaches to address the Millennium Development Goals throughout Africa. Franz Josef served as an Innovation Scout for the AFAQ Group, where he identified innovative renewable energy and technology solutions to introduce in UAE and Middle Eastern markets. He worked in planning, executing, and commissioning turnkey hospital projects throughout Latin America with VAMED. Previously, Franz Josef worked for the World Health Organization in the Reproductive Health and Research Department, mapping transformative solutions to leverage Information and Communications Technology for public health. Franz Josef possesses a joint MSc on Health Policy, Planning, and Financing from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and the London School of Economics; a BSc in Biomedical Engineering from the Technikum Vienna University; and received Graduate Tuition in Development Communications from the Harvard Extension School. Franz Josef has served as Grand Jury President at the World Summit Youth Awards (WSYA), serves as á Member of the Jury of the World Summit Awards and the European Youth Awards. He was selected to form part in FutureLab Europe, an initiative for young European leaders playing an active role shaping the future of Europe. He was selected as a member of the Ashoka ChangemakerXchange community, a global collaboration platform for social entrepreneurs. Franz Josef is a Member of the Board of Primeros Pasos, a civil society organization improving access to medical services, food security, and improved education programs to rural communities of the Palajunoj Valley of Quetzaltenango, Guatemala. He served as a lecturer for the module Global Health Informatics to Improve Quality of Care offered by the Harvard-MIT collaboration in Health Sciences and Technology (HST). Miguel A Altieri studied agronomy at the University of Chile, where he received a BS. He also obtained a Masters at the National University of Colombia. He graduated with a Ph.D. in entomology at the University of Florida. In 1981 he became Professor of Agroecology at the University of California, Berkeley in the Department of Environmental Science, Policy and Management and after 37 years of service he is now Professor Emeritus. At Berkeley he taught agroecology and urban agriculture, but he also serves as guest professor in numerous universities in Latin America, Spain and Italy. He has conducted most of his research in California and Latin America working closely with farmers to implement principles of agroecology to design productive, biodiverse and resilient farming systems.
  • 15. Altieri served as a scientific advisor to the Latin American Consortium on Agroecology and Development (CLADES) Chile, an NGO network promoting agroecology as a strategy for small farm sustainable development in the region. He also served for 4 years as the General Coordinator for the United Nations Development Programme’s Sustainable Agriculture Networking and Extension Programme which aimed at capacity building on agroecology among NGOs and the scaling-up of successful local sustainable agricultural initiatives in Africa, Latin America and Asia. He was the chairman of the NGO committee of the Consultative Group on International Agriculture Research whose mission was to make sure that the research agenda of the 15 International Agricultural Research Centers benefited poor farmers. He was Director of the US-Brasil Consortium on Agroecology and Sustainable Rural Development (CASRD), an academic-research exchange program involving students and faculty of UC Berkeley, University of Nebraska, UNICAMP and Universidad Federal de Santa Catarina. He also served as scientific advisor to the Food and Agriculture Organization Globally Important Agricultural Heritage Systems (GIAHS) program, which is devoted at identifying and dynamically conserving traditional farming systems in the developing world. He was the President of the Latin American Scientific Society of Agroecology (www.socla.co). In 2015 he was awarded a Doctor Honoris Causa at the Universite Catholique du Lovain, Belgium. In 2017, he became Honorary Professor of the University of La Frontera in Chile. In February 2018 he was inducted to the Earth Hall of Fame by the Kyoto Prefecture, Japan. In December 2018 he received from the Universidad de Guadalajara in Mexico the prize “Biodiversidad, Sociedad y Territorio”. He has written more than 250 scientific articles and more than 20 books among them Agroecology: the science of sustainable agriculture, Biodiversity and pest management in agroecosystems and Agroecology: science and politics. Mel Landers is an Environmental Biologist, former workflow and usability analyst and former agro-forester. He and his wife, Biologist Margarita Lorío teach the ancient Indigenous American Agroforestry system mentioned in the IPCC’s 2007 climate assessment as the technology needed to adapt to and mitigate the effects of climate change. Mel also studied crop production and paleo climatology in individual study. After a life altering experience teaching agricultural practices to the formerly hunter gatherer tribe, the Urarinas of the Peruvian Amazon, Mel began his lifelong study of the system adapted from the forest ecosystem by Indigenous American women over a period of thousands of years. Mel became fascinated by natural systems as a young child. This was amplified by his early study and field work in Archaeology and Paleontology. His understanding of past earth systems, that were unlike that which exists today; coupled with his systems analysis approach, an indigenous world view and his holistic ecosystems training have given him a unique perspective on the problems faced by today’s world system. They are also helping him formulate realistic, matter of fact opinions about how to reduce the damage humans have inflicted on the present earth system.
  • 16. Ranulfo Paiva Sobrinho, PhD from Brazil has 10 years analyzing and working with blockchain technology, 20 years of experience in economy, sustainability, local currencies and Decentralized Autonomous Communities (DAC) design. PhD in Economics and postdoc in Environmental Cryptoassets for Sustainability. Co-Founder of Sustainability School and BeSpiral. Co-Author of New Money for Sustainability. Currently, he is designing applications using blockchain technology to solve socio-ecological problems, for example, a cryptocurrency to help restore and conserve watersheds, as well as, conservation of biomes. He is designing blockchain DACs (Decentralized Autonomous Corporation) to help to promote sustainable development. He is a co-founder of Spiral, a DAC which is in Singularity University incubator, California, USA. He is a co-founder of Sustainability School. Ranulfo also helps governmental organizations in decision analysis process using multicriteria methods like MACBETH (Measuring Attractiveness by a Categorical Evaluation Technique). He is a writer, New money for sustainability; This is mutual credit clearing system, Blockchain for Entrepreneurs (coming soon). Also, he is a fellow from the Empowering Sustainability promoted by the University of California (Irvine campus). M.Sc. Karla Córdoba Brenes is a happy Costa Rican living in Brazil, passionate about communications, sustainability, new types of money, community development and new organizational models, including DAC design and social currencies. Masters in Community Development. Co-Founder of Sustainability School, BeSpiral and co-Author of New Money for Sustainability. Singularity University Alumni and Shuttleworth Foundation Fellow. Karla is passionate about sustainability, innovation, new types of money, exponential tech and organizations... but mostly, she believes in our capacity to transform the world in a better place. Communications + Sustainability + Creativity + Strategy + Design + Disruptive Technology + Innovation + Online Education + Blockchain + Social Impact + Leadership + Gender Equality + Spirituality + Community Development + Social Organizations + Facilitation + Exponential Transformation + Latin American Music MA. Marieke Veeger is a scenarios and policy researcher for the CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS) and the University for International Cooperation (UCI). Bringing together key stakeholders from the public, private and research sectors on regional, national and local levels, she designs and coordinates participatory scenario-guided policymaking processes in Latin America since 2013. Within this science – policy interface, she works with decision makers to establish the capacities and institutional support fundamental for policy design under uncertainty. Her main research topic is currently anticipatory climate governance, and how it can support the formulation of ambitious emission reduction goals. A geographer by training graduated from the Vrije Universiteit (VU) in Amsterdam, Marieke studied institutional, policy and behavior changes in natural resource management. Working in social innovation has convinced her of the strength of multidisciplinary teams.
  • 17. Steve Waddell, PhD.Responding to the 21st century’s enormous global challenges and realizing its unsurpassed opportunities require new ways of acting and organizing. Steve supports organizational, network, and societal change and development, through consultation, education, research, and personal leadership. In particular, he focuses upon intersectoral (business-government-civil society), inter-organizational collaboration and networks to produce innovation, enhance impact, and build new capacity. Steve has done this for nearly 30 years, working with others as clients, funders, sponsors, and project partners. This includes the Global Knowledge Partnership, the UN Global Compact, World Bank, Global Reporting Initiative, Ford Foundation, Humanity United, Civicus, International Youth Foundation, USAID, International Development and Research Centre, Forest Stewardship Council. He founded the Boston College executive management program Leadership for Change, and is founding Lead Steward for the SDG Transformation Forum. Steve is currently the Lead Staff of the SDG (Sustainable Development Goals) Transformations Forum, which is growing systems of people, organizations and locales, who are developing transformations systems as key infrastructure to accelerate deep change. He connects diverse groups to take collaborative action and evolve strategic directions in the context of great challenges of paradox, complexity and scale. Jennifer Menke is Project Director of Regenerative Economy Lab, and President of Regenerative Earth a nonprofit corporation. In 2015, she was nominated as an emerging global leader by the Academy for Systems Change and resides as a fellow of the organization. Jennifer has been managing a project in the Osa Peninsula, Costa Rica for the past 3 years, facilitating local communities and governments to develop and implement a regenerative rainforest economy in which the community, ecosystem, and economy all thrive. Jennifer’s community resource mapping and facilitation techniques translate to diverse projects around the world, facilitating the rapid evolution of sustainable economic models. She also curates nature-based immersion retreat experiences for executives, investors, and leaders in their field. Jennifer is an entrepreneur and nature whisperer in the fields of design and sustainability who is passionately helping bring forth an enhanced relationship and comprehensive dialogue between humans and their internal and external environments. Through 15 years of dedicated training to actualize her vision, she started with a BA in environmental studies and ecopsychology from University of Colorado and Naropa University. She deepened her studies with 13 different North and Central American indigenous cultures, nature based spiritual elders, social sustainability entrepreneurs, and the Earth directly. For 11 years during this time she apprenticed with John P. Milton and The Way of Nature, spending over 500 days combined in nature solitary retreats, and has worked as a senior guide of Sacred Passage for the past 5 years. Currently studying with La’ne Saan Moonwalker, an internationally recognized Native American spiritual teacher and healer, Jennifer has been initiated as an environmental guardian and is following a traditional path to become a spiritual elder herself. Through her work Jennifer has brought many individuals into deep relationship with all living things, opening hearts to the realization of Source, and regenerating native ecosystems in urban environments through her landscape design business and nature based retreats. Her guidance has inspired leaders in their
  • 18. fields to create sustainable change within themselves, their communities, and their businesses, to the benefit of all. More recently she has been lead to collaborate on projects and initiatives that address the interface between social, economic, and biological systems and how to bring these into optimal harmony for the purpose of regenerating some of our most critical ecosystems globally. Hunter Lovins L.is the President and Founder of Natural Capitalism Solutions(NCS). A renowned author and champion of sustainable development for over 35 years, Hunter has consulted on business, economic development, sustainable agriculture, energy, water, security, and climate policies for scores of governments, communities, and companies worldwide. Within the United States, she has consulted for heads of state, departments of defense, energy agencies and hundreds of state and local agencies. Hunter believes that citizens, communities and companies, working together within the market context, are the most dynamic problem-solving force on the planet. She has devoted herself to building teams that can create and implement practical and affordable solutions to the problems facing us in creating a sustainable future. Hunter has co‐authored fifteen books and hundreds of articles, and was featured in the award‐winning film, Lovins On the Soft Path. Her best‐known book, Natural Capitalism, won the Shingo Prize. It has been translated into a more than three dozen languages and summarized in Harvard Business Review. Its sequel, The Way Out: Kickstarting Capitalism to Save Our Economic Ass, won the Atlas Award. Her latest books are Creating a Lean and Green Business System that again won the Shingo Prize and A Finer Future. Luis Martin del Campois an entrepreneur, futurist, global sustainability strategist, writer and speaker dedicated to the development of human potential and a new cultural narrative. Luis trains change makers, designs and implements Regenerative/Circular Business Models. Co-Founder of Kala Institute, a school for human development and training change makers. Kala Institute works with "human software", the worldview, habits, and capacities of people, companies, and communities, helping them rediscover their essence, aligning their habits and processes toward incredible results, and building the capacities to restore human and ecological sustainability with circular economies. Our mission is to light up the spark of change in 1 billion people by 2038. Founder of Sporah, a consultancy firm focused on Blue Economy and circular, sustainable business models. Holds a degree in International Business and studies an MSc in Renewable Energy. Leads Destino Solar, a young clean energy company in Mexico. He is a Blue Economy Scholar, and attended the first Blue Economy Living University in 2016 with the Zero Emissions Research and Initiatives. Recognized in 2016 as one of the top 250 Young Leaders of the Americas by the Obama Administration´s Department of State.
  • 19. Tom Newmark spent fourteen years in the natural products industry, helping to build New Chapter into a premier brand in the natural retail channel. Proctor & Gamble purchased New Chapter about seven years ago, and since that time Tom has focused on environmental activism with specific attention on regenerative agriculture. Tom is the co-owner of Finca Luna Nueva Lodge, an organic and biodynamic farm and ecolodge in the mountainous rainforest of Costa Rica that teaches regenerative agriculture. www.fincalunanuevalodge.com. Finca Luna Nueva has a holistically managed dairy and extensive agroecological plantings of cacao, vanilla, black pepper, ginger, turmeric, allspice, nutmeg, cinnamon, and more than 300 other tropical fruits and spices. He is a founding member and chair of Tero Kuraĝa, a regenerative trading company just formed in Costa Rica that will support the carbon-negative commercialization of regenerative agriculture. He is the co-founder and board chair of The Carbon Underground, co-founder of the Soil Carbon Initiative and a founding member of that standard’s Design Team, past board chair of the Greenpeace Fund USA, and a founding member of the Regenerative Agriculture Initiative of California State University – Chico. He is also the past board chair of the America Botanical Council, publisher of the peer-reviewed journal HerbalGram. In his past he was also a corporate attorney and entrepreneur, from which he claims to be recovering. Federico Bellone has twenty years professional experience in international development, strategic philanthropy, and partnership- building for sustainable development and social impact in Latin America, USA, and Europe. His current professional focus is on regenerative development. He is undertaking a year of study and exposure in the field of regenerative business, as well as ways in which we can effectively educate and train regeneration professionals, primarily in Latin America, but drawing on international best practice too. Previously Federico focused on effective philanthropy at Porticus, a global international private foundation (www.porticus.com). As Executive Director for Latin America, I lead the transformation from traditional charitable-giving to strategic philanthropy, and served as a member of the Global Leadership Team. He also served as international portfolio manager at Avina Foundation, one of Latin America's largest philanthropic organizations whose mission is to support leadership and social entrepreneurship for sustainable development, and with the Spanish International Development Agency (AECID), redesigning biodiversity and sustainable livelihood programs across Latin America. Federico’s career interests have been shaped by addressing the question of how to live within Earth's limits, and what social, economic, and ecological arrangements come into place to achieve this with dignity and prosperity.
  • 20. Pablo Jenkins is Co-Founder and President of Ideas en Acción, a donor-advised fund and co-creation platform that implements regionally scalable projects combining technology, social innovation, and youth leadership. He is also an active investor focusing on sustainable development through impact investing in wellbeing, education and technology. Pablo is co-founder of the Costa Rica Chapter of Conscious Capitalism. Pablo has served as an advisor to four Ministers of Science and Technology of Costa Rica on topics related to broadband and innovation policy. He was Intel Capital’s youngest strategic investment manager, Director of International Expansion for Endeavor Global during its expansion into the Middle East and Asia, and the co-creator of the Sustainable Investments Group in Brazil, with leading local family offices. Pablo has been co- organizer of TEDxPuraVidaJoven since 2011 and the first Do Lectures in Latin America. Pablo graduated with a B.A. from Princeton University and an MBA and an MPA from Harvard University. Pablo is part of the Aspen Global Leadership Network and a 2015 Young Global Leader of the World Economic Forum. He is on the board of directors of Estrategia Siglo XXI, Fundación Gente, and Cenfotec University. Mirian Vilela is the Executive Director of the Earth Charter International Secretariat and the Earth Charter Center for Education for Sustainable Development at the University for Peace. She is a professor at the University for Peace and coordinates the UNESCO Chair on Education for Sustainable Development with the Earth Charter. Mirian has been in the leadership of the Earth Charter Initiative since January 1996. For more than 23 years, she has facilitated multi-cultural and multi-sectoral workshops, courses, and dialogues related to sustainability, values and education. She has a Master´s in Public Administration from Harvard University and is a PhD Candidate on Education from LaSalle University in Costa Rica. Mirian has been working in the field of sustainability since 1990, when she worked for the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED) in preparation to the 1992 UN Earth Summit. Prior to that she worked for the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD). Over the years her work involved leading numerous international workshops, seminars and courses especially in the field of values and principles for sustainability. Since 2005 she has been teaching courses on Sustainable Development, Education for Sustainable Development and Environmental Governance at the University for Peace. She has organized and facilitated numerous international workshops and seminars on values and principles for sustainability. Miriam is a member of the UNESCO Expert Reference Group for the Decade of Education for Sustainable Development (DESD).
  • 21. Marije van Lidth de Jeudeis a M.Sc. graduate in Cultural Anthropology with a specialization in gender and development studies; and a B.Sc. graduate in Commercial Economy. She has a professional record of more than twenty years in sustainable development, in particular with multi- and bilateral agencies, governmental institutions, academia, producer cooperatives, small enterprises, community-based organizations and other civil society stakeholders. Marije is specialized in conducting gender capacity assessments and development strategies as well as participatory baseline studies, mid-term and end evaluations with a gender perspective. Her expertise was established as program officer (amongst others for Oxfam-Novib and IFAD) and during research and consultancy assignments related to all phases of the project-cycle. She combines qualitative participatory research methods with quantitative data collection and analysis. Her thematic specializations are: participatory design for sustainable cities; Gender equity and empowerment; capacity building and behaviour change; socio-economic vulnerability of children and youth, indigenous people, migrants; social performance of financial services and business development. Marije has been living in Costa Rica for the last seventeen years, from where she works in the whole Latin America region and beyond. Oliver Schütte is an expert on bio-climatic architecture and sustainable urban development. He worked for worldwide renowned offices like the Office for Metropolitan Architecture (OMA) and its research counterpart Advanced Media Operations (AMO). In 2014 he was head commissioner and curator, together with Marije van Lidth de Jeude, of the national pavilion from Costa Rica in the Venice Architecture Biennale where a critical view on the urban development model of the country and its implications on spatial fragmentation and social segregation was given. Together with Marije he was also the lead investigator of the Sustainable Cities project developed by A Foundation with Cordaid Urban Matters, which was presented at the World Urban Forum in 2012 and will be published in Costa Rica in 2016. In 2012, he was working as leading architect, also together with Marije and contracted by Cordaid Urban Matters, on the participatory design process of a mixed use neighbourhood providing “attainable” (affordable and sustainable) housing in highly vulnerable areas, both environmentally and socially speaking. The project site is located in Soyapango, San Salvador, between two territories confiscated by two rivalling Maras and is projected to encourage social integration through shared public and collective, work and recreational, spaces. Allan Valverde is currently the Dean of the Faculty of Environment and Development and Director of the Latin American School for Protected Areas at UCI. He is also the regional vice-chair for Central America of the World Commission on Protected Areas, IUCN. Allan started his professional life having worked for more than six years as an officer of Tortuguero National Park National in the National System of Conservation Areas of Costa Rica, serving as manager of public use, environmental education, voluntary and control and protection. Afterwards he moved to UCI, where he has accomplished an impressive career, not only in protected area management but also in education. His experience in protected area management has led him to manage several large-scale projects in Bolivia, Brazil,
  • 22. Colombia, Chile, Ecuador, Peru and others. His expertise in education and learning, competence based learning, project based and online learning has placed him as one of the most talented experts in the interphase of protected area management and education. He designed the curricula and courses for the Global Partnership for Professionalizing Protected Area Management. Félix Cañet is currently the Dean of the One Health Faculty and Director of the Master’s Program in Health Management with Emphasis on Food Safety at UCI. He is co-founder of the Urban Family Organoponic initiative in Cuba. He is an international consultant in Agriculture and Food, Lead Auditor in Good Agricultural Practices EurepGap and in Food Safety Management Systems (Norms of the ISO 22000 family) and Quality Management (standards of the ISO 9000 family (2013). He is a specialist in Food Inspection Based on Risks, Risk Analysis, Post-Harvest Technology and Application of the Ecosystem Approach in Agriculture and Food, in production systems based on conventional, organic agriculture, family, urban and peri-urban, with experience in exporting fresh fruits and vegetables to markets in Canada, the US and Europe. He has provided technical and consulting services in the public, NGO and and private sectors of Costa Rica, Cuba, Mexico, Panama, Saint Kitts Nevis and Venezuela. From 1999 to 2010 he was Director of the Division of Nuclear Techniques, Plant Physiology and Postharvest, of the Institute of Fundamental Research in Tropical Agriculture "Alejandro de Humboldt", (INIFAT), Havana, Cuba. Among the activities under his charge, was the Food Safety and Quality Management of the National Program of Urban Agriculture of Cuba. Tania Moreno is the Coordinator of University Social Responsibility at UCI and also serves as the Executive Coordinator of the UNESCO Chair in Biosphere Reserves and natural and mixed World Heritage Sites. She was the lead person for the establishment of the Water and Peace Biosphere Reserve and has since then collaborated with several biosphere reserves in Latin America and also coordinated several networks related to biosphere reserves and UNESCO Chairs. She is part of the MAB Roster of Experts and assisted the UNESCO-MAB Strategy Group in the preparation of the MAB Strategy and Action Plan 2015- 2025. She is part of the Costa Rican MAB National Committee as representative of UCI and Secretary of Board during the periods 2012-2018 and vicepresident since 2018. She also works with the Foundation of the Water and Peace Biosphere Reserve with technical assistance, capacity building activities and fieldwork. Tania also represents UCI in the Costa Rican Network of Sustainable Educational Institutions (REDIES). Member of IUCN Commission on Education and Communication (CEC) and Commission on Ecosystem Management (CEM). Juan Sostheim, a former corporate maven, is the founder of Rancho Margot and a proven regeneration practitioner, a pioneer in scalable, sustainable living. As a luxury eco-tourist resort, educational facility and organic farm in Costa Rica, he's demonstrating that "living off the grid" is not only possible but practical for large-scale communities. Juan fuels the kitchen with methane gas from cows and pigs, generates his own electricity and creates bio-fuels. Rancho Margot was started in 2004 after former fast-food
  • 23. executive Juan Sostheim and his family purchased 400 acres of former cattle range. They set about turning the largely treeless land into what it is today — a rich and verdant spread of land bursting with life. They take a holistic view of sustainability at Rancho Margot and design their systems to be closed looped and productive — the pigs eat food scraps from the kitchen which is turned into poop that is used to produce energy (the solids are composted to create hot water while liquids are put in a bio- digester to create methane gas) before being applied to fields to fertilize organic crops, which are then eaten by Rancho Margot's staff and guests. Rancho Margot produces their own electricity through a small hydropower plant. The workers of Rancho Margot grow and raise most of the food eaten on site and make their own soap. Their furniture is built using wood harvested from trees growing on-site. Rancho Margot is a partner in the Regenerate Costa Rica Hub. Alexis D. Gaillard is an artist and photographer. His focus on traveling, nature, art, photography, and the blossoming of human nature brought him, in 2006, to the realization of his first artistic project: “Galactical Nature.” Parallel to his artworks, Alexis D. Gaillard materializes his interests through diverse social, cultural and entrepreneurial projects such as "Natural Pact" which does reforestation through a seasonal and timeless land art where he is co-founder and manager. Natural Pact Land Art is a compensation service for greenhouse gas emissions unique in the world. This program works through an unprecedented Land Art reforestation method. It offers the opportunity to be a sponsor of reforested trees for a period of 20 years. Our natural works allow us to participate in the insertion of trees that are protected for life within our private nature reserve. Each tree is certified and geolocated thanks to our methodology. Land-Art and Natural Pact will be used in the regeneration of degraded land. Natural Pact, Alexis co-founded and managed "Zoom Social 200 – ZS200" / Art photography workshops, the "Brussels Art Factory – BAF" / Artistic production and distribution center and co-created "The World With You" / Offers and demands' window on the social and humanitarian Belgium world. Natural Pact is a partner in the Regenerate Costa Rica Hub.
  • 24. Program cost: This program can be taken in parallel to the Master’s in Project Management and also by any UCI current student at a cost of US$1300 payable in four payments of US$325. For non-regular UCI students, the cost is US$1600. Optional field visit in Costa Rica At the end of the program, a field visit is available to all participants at an additional cost which will depend on length of stay. Students will have the chance to visit sites where regenerative development is being implemented. The Regenerate Costa Rica Hub is working initially in these seven territories where regenerative experiences are taking place. For more information: University for International Cooperation www.uci.ac.cr Phone: (+506) 22536464 rectoria@uci.ac.cr