13th Annual Rising Voices Workshop in Louisiana
May 20 - May 22
Applications are open through Friday, January 31st!
13th Annual Rising Voices Workshop
Learning from People and Place:
Climate Adaptation and Restoration Action
in Louisiana’s Working Coast
Tuesday, May 20 – Thursday, May 22, 2025
Thibodaux, Louisiana
Website: https://risingvoices.ucar.edu/events/rising-voices-13-2025
We are pleased to announce the 13th Annual Rising Voices Center for Indigenous and Earth Sciences Workshop, which will be held in-person in Thibodaux, Louisiana, from Tuesday, May 20 – Thursday, May 22, 2025.
The application site for the workshop is now open. If you are interested in participating in the 13th Annual Rising Voices Workshop, please apply by Friday, January 31st at 5 pm MST.
For more information about the workshop please visit: https://risingvoices.ucar.edu/events/rising-voices-13-2025. For general information about The Rising Voices Center for Indigenous and Earth Sciences visit: https://risingvoices.ucar.edu/. Please direct specific questions torisingvoicescontact@ucar.edu.
About the Workshop
Louisiana’s coastal landscape and waterscape have been drastically transformed by hydrological, meteorological, and environmental disasters, extractive industries, river management, and climate change, resulting in Louisiana having among the highest land loss rates in the world. Within this context and in response to the rapidly increasing climate crisis, the First Peoples’ Conservation Council of Louisiana (FPCC) and member tribes are leading coastal restoration and climate adaptation actions focused on restoring marshland, protecting sacred sites, reducing land loss and flood risk, increasing tribal resilience and a regenerative future, and land rematriation, for all living relatives.
The Rising Voices Center for Indigenous and Earth Sciences, in partnership with The Lowlander Center, FPCC, and Nicholls State University, is hosting an in-person workshop to focus on navigating place-based climate actions. The workshop will include two-days of site visits to learn from the people and place and one-day of full group discussions in a participatory process to co-learn, share knowledge, and facilitate intercultural collaborations that support climate actions.
This new workshop structure is focused on a more place-based, seasons-round actionable science initiative for intercultural climate collaborations, actions, and commitments. Because of this focus, and out of respect for our host communities, the in person meeting will be limited in size and will be focused toward Indigenous communities and scientists, including students, addressing disruption to local water cycles.