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Global Ecovillage Educators
Gaia Education was created over a
series of meetings among international ecovillage educators. The
group decided to call itself the GEESE (Global
Ecovillage Educators for Sustainable Earth) to acknowledge the
importance of collaboration and roving leadership as it is exhibited
by the migration behaviour of a flock of geese.
The current members of GEESE have designed the
Ecovillage Design Curriculum and compose the Board and various
working groups focused on areas such as programme development,
outreach, certification, strategy and finance, and publishing.
Brief biographical profiles of the GEESE:
Massimo Candela is resident of Ecovillage Torri
Superiore, near Ventimiglia, Italy, since 1993 (www.torri-superiore.org).
He is president of the Ture Nirvane Cooperative Company that runs
the ecological guest house and the course programmes. He holds
Permaculture Design and Permaculture Teaching diplomas. He is
one of the founders of the Italian Permaculture Academy. Experience
includes: Ecovillage Design Course and Practicum led by Max Lindegger
at Crystal Waters (2001); Ecovillage Design Course at Torri, with
Morag Gamble and Evan Raymond from SEED International. He taught
with Lucilla Borio Ecovillage Creation courses in Torri, Croatia
and Bosnia.
Giovanni
Ciarlo is co-founder of the ecovillage Ecoaldea Huehuecoyotl,
a centre for the exploration of the arts and ecology in central
Mexico www.huehuecoyote.org.
He helped form the Ecovillage Network of the Americas http://ena.ecovillage.org
and serves on the Board of the Global Ecovillage Network.
He is also a professional Arts-In-Education Consultant and a trained
group facilitator. He is an associate member of the International
Institute for Facilitation and Consensus (www.iifac.org)
and leads workshop trainings in Group Facilitation in the US and
Mexico. Since 2003 he has co-directed sustainability programs
in Mexico in collaboration with Goddard College of Vermont and
Living Routes Ecovillage Studies of Massachusetts. He currently
divides his time between the US and Mexico, linking community
sustainable projects in both countries.
Jonathan
Dawson is a sustainability educator and activist. He
has spent much of the last 20 years involved in development work
in Africa and South Asia, as a researcher, author, project manager
and consultant, working primarily in the field of small enterprise
and community economic development. He lives at the Findhorn Community
(www.ecovillagefindhorn.org),
where he teaches human ecology and applied sustainability studies.
Jonathan is Executive Secretary of the Global Ecovillage Network
for Europe in which capacity he is heavily involved in writing,
representational and networking activities.
May
East is a Brazilian social change activist who has spent
the last 30 years working internationally with music, indigenous
people, women, antinuclear, environmental and sustainable human
settlements movements. Since 1992 she has lived at the Findhorn
Foundation ecovillage in Scotland (www.ecovillagefindhorn.org)
where she is the Ecovillage Project Education Coordinator, the
Director of International Relations between the Foundation, the
Global Ecovillage Network and the United Nations, as well as a
Trustee. May is a teacher of the International Holistic University
and works internationally as an ecovillage consultant and educator.
She currently is coordinating the actions of the Global Ecovillage
Network and Gaia Education vis a vis the United Nations Decade
of Education for Sustainable Development 2005-2014.
Hide
Enomoto has been a professional coach for more than 10
years and has been offering coaching and leadership trainings
around the world. He is passionate about bringing empowerment
to wherever it is needed and, most recently, his central interest
revolves around how to empower communities so that they can take
responsibility in creating the change they want to see in their
world. He currently lives in Scotland near Findhorn with his family
to explore and expand new possibilities both on the personal front
and the professional front. He is also a successful entrepreneur
and an author, and has played a key role in introducing coaching
to Japan.
Daniel
Greenberg has studied and directed community-based educational
programs for over 15 years. He visited and corresponded with over
200 U.S. intentional communities for his Ph.D. dissertation on
children and education in community, and later spent a year at
the Findhorn Foundation in Scotland working with children and
families there.~ He is the founder and Executive Director of Living
Routes (www.livingroutes.org),
which develops accredited ecovillage-based education programs
that promote sustainability. He lives at the Sirius
Community in Shutesbury, Massachusetts, USA, with his wife
Monique and their two daughters, Simone and Pema.
Maddy
Harland is the editor of Permaculture Magazine,
solutions for sustainable living (www.permaculture.co.uk)
and a co-founder with her partner, Tim, of Permanent Publications,
a company dedicated to publishing solution-orientated practical
books since 1990. Permanent Publications are co-publishers
of Gaia Education's Four Keys series. Maddy helped found the Sustainability
Centre (www.earthworks-trust.com)
in Hampshire, UK, a former military base, now a budding community
which hosts conferences, runs a varied non-residential and residential
educational programme for adults and children, and has an award
winning eco-hostel. The centre is also host to a woodland burial
site, varied community volunteer programmes and Permanent Publications.
Hildur Jackson was born in Denmark in 1942 and
has been married to Ross Jackson for 40 years. She has three sons
and five grandchildren. She is a lawyer, cultural sociologist,
permaculture and ecovillage designer and writer. She initiated
one of the three first Danish cohousings in 1970. Hildur is co-founder
of Gaia Trust (www.gaia.org),
the Danish National Network of Ecovillages (LOS) and the Global
Ecovillage Network (GEN). Ross and Hildur have just initiated
a new project: The Lavegaard project, where they will teach the
EDE. She has authored several books including: Ecovillage Living:
Restoring the Earth and her People (2002), co-edited with Karen
Svensson; Creating Harmony: Conflict Resolution in Community (1998);
and a video: Rashmi Mayur: A Man of the New Global Renaissance.
Ross
Jackson, Ph.D., was born in Canada in 1938, and is Chairman/founder
of Gaia Trust, Denmark (www.gaia.org).
He has an educational background in physics, management, and economics,
specialising in operations research. Ross was for many years a
management consultant and IT systems designer, working in various
branches of the business world, eventually specialising in international
finance, where his foreign exchange know-how provided the financing
for Gaia Trust‚s programmes to support a more sustainable
and spiritual world. He now devotes more time to writing. His
books to date include: And We ARE Doing It: Building an Ecovillage
Future; Kali Yuga Odyssey: A Spiritual Journey; and, hot from
the presses this summer, Shaker of the Speare: The Francis Bacon
Story. Ross is a member of the GEN Advisory Board and is a board
member of the recent Gaia Education initiative.
Anja
Kosha Joubert was born and grew up in South Africa. The
system of Apartheid deeply influenced her life's path: she decided
to devote herself to the study and practice of trustful communication
amongst humans. She has been living in intentional communities
for the past 20 years and presently lives in the Ecovillage of
Sieben Linden in Germany (www.oekodorf7linden.de).
She focalises courses on community-building and is part of a consultancy
team that takes the knowledge gained in ecovillages out to support
projects in the wider society (www.gemeinschaftsberatung.de).
Kosha co-edited the Social Key: Beyond You and Me. Inspirations
and Wisdom for Building Community.
Will Keepin, Ph.D., is President of the Satyana Institute,
a non-profit organization founded in 1996 to integrate spiritual
wisdom into social change leadership (www.satyana.org).
Will's passion is to bridge the inner mystical journey with an
outer life of service. He has been a colleague and friend of the
Global Ecovillage Network since an early planning meeting in 1994.
Originally trained as a physicist, Will's advocacy work on sustainable
energy influenced environmental policy in several countries. Will
is a certified practitioner of Holotropic Breathwork, and has
founded training programs for social activists including Leading
with Spirit and Gender Reconciliation. He has published widely,
and is Adjunct Faculty at the California Institute of Integral
Studies. He leads retreats on interfaith mysticism in India, and
supports interfaith projects for battered women in India.
Max
O. Lindegger is a designer of ecological communities
and sustainable systems of international repute (www.ecologicalsolutions.com.au).
He is a respected and sought-after teacher in the disciplines
of sustainable systems. His reputation is born of 20 years of
hands-on experience and leadership in the design and implementation
of practical solutions to the challenges of sustainability. As
the creator and Director of the Oceania/Asia secretariat of the
Global Ecovillage Network, Max participates in and contributes
to the international flow of current thinking and best practice
in the fields of sustainable systems design and education. Max
was a primary partner in the design and development of the Habitat
Award winning Crystal Waters Permaculture Village, where he lives.
This is a robust ecovillage situated in south-east Queensland,
Australia, and is the site of the award winning EcoCentre learning
facility the venue for many of his courses. He has designed and
consulted on numerous community developments including the Spiers
Project (S. Africa), Gqnubie Green (S. Africa), Living & Learning
Centre (Sri Lanka), Vatukarasa Village (Fiji), Garopaba Project
(Brazil), and China Walls (Australia). Max was awarded the (Australian)
Prime Minister‚s Centenary Medal in 2003 for "distinguished
achievement in the field of developing sustainable communities".
Christopher Mare has been pioneering comprehensive,
transdisciplinary,
multidimensional, fully accredited education in the emerging field
of Ecovillage Design since 1994. Lacking a precedent in Academia,
these studies have been exploratory, producing curricula that
are prototypical. Mare founded and currently directs an educational
nonprofit Village Design Institute (www.villagedesign.org)
whose purpose is to collect, organize, and disseminate a knowledge
base promoting sustainability at 'village' scale. Mare lives in
the Cascadia bioregion of North America, where he conducts workshops
and courses in Ecovillage Design.
Ina
Meyer-Stoll is one of the two executive secretaries of
the Global Ecovillage Network of Europe (www.gen-europe.org).
She has lived in intentional communities since 1984 and is a founding
member of the ZEGG ecovillage in Germany (www.zegg.de).
She is a communications trainer and supervisor, specialising in
the process of building community, and is a networker, a peace
activist, and has visited many ecovillages in Europe.
Marti Mueller from Auroville, South India (www.auroville.org),
vision keeper for GEN and Gaia Trust, has 30 years of experience
in the field of education, 20 years of community experience, and
is former professor at the Sorbonne University in Paris. She is
co-founder of 'Children and Trees Research' with UNESCO and the
Indian Government. Marti is the author of Indigo Spirit for a
Child Friendly Planet. She has also worked on the Earth Restoration
Corps curriculum and The University of the Streets and Alleys.
Her current concerns: Establishing a wildlife sanctuary to protect
a UNESCO World Heritage site in central India, editing a spiritual
anthology on new curricula for communities, and researching a
book on Himalayan tribal people and the protection of their indigenous
customs.
Helena
Norberg-Hodge is a leading analyst of the impact of the
global economy on cultures around the world. A linguist by training,
she was educated in Sweden, Germany, England and the United States,
and speaks seven languages. Ms. Norberg-Hodge is founder and director
of the International Society for Ecology and Culture (ISEC), which
runs programmes on four continents aimed at strengthening ecological
diversity and community, with a particular emphasis on local food
and farming. Ms. Norberg-Hodge also directs the Ladakh Project,
renowned for its twenty-five years of groundbreaking work in sustainable
development on the Tibetan plateau. She is the author of numerous
works, including Bringing the Food Economy Home (October, 2002)
and the 'inspirational classic', Ancient Futures: Learning from
Ladakh, which together with an award-winning film of the same
title has been translated into more than 35 languages.
Géza Varga graduated with degrees in agronomy
+ professional management, specializing in organic agriculture
and alternative technologies. He is the founder of the first Hungarian
ecovillage project called "Galgafarm" since 1988 (www.gaiaalapitvany.hu).
Geza is also director of the "Gaia" Ecological and Rural
Development Foundation since 1990. This Foundation has run a Research
and Education Centre since 1996, which is a residential school
with 36 beds and a restaurant for adult rural people.
Daniel
Christian Wahl studied biology, ecology and zoology at
the University of Edinburgh and the University of California at
Santa Cruz. He has visited, worked and volunteered at a number
of ecovillages and eco-centres in Europe. In 2002, he completed
his Masters in Holistic Science at Schumacher College about ecological
design and the ecovillage movement as a practical expression of
a holistic worldview. He worked as an eco-design consultant in
Spain and regularly publishes with the magazine EcoHabitar. In
2006, Daniel received his PhD in Natural Design from the University
of Dundee, and took part in the first Ecovillage Design Education
training of trainers at the Findhorn Foundation. He joined Gaia
Education in early 2007 and will be teaching on the EDE course
in Thailand in December 2007. Daniel lectures and publishes internationally.
He is his currently working on a documentary on ecovillage design.
Liz Walker is co-founder and executive director
of EcoVillage at Ithaca, Inc. (www.ecovillage.ithaca.ny.us),
a non-profit educational organization which created and continues
to nurture the development of a mainstream ecovillage community
in Ithaca, NY, that includes multiple cohousing neighborhoods,
organic farms, open space preservation and hands-on educational
work. Since its inception in 1991, EVI has received national and
international awards and media recognition. Liz is the author
of the new book EcoVillage at Ithaca: Pioneering a Sustainable
Culture (New Society Publishers, 2005). Liz has spent the last
thirty years working full-time on social change work that promotes
community, environmental responsibility and personal growth. She
is a skilled writer, facilitator, mediator, trainer, public speaker,
and project manager. Liz is a board member of the Gaia Education
initiative.
Marian Zeitlin has been living since 1996 in
Senegal, as a member of the EcoYoff Ecovillage and director of
the EcoYoff Living & Learning Center. Marian has first degree
in mathematics from Oberlin College and Ph.D. in nutritional biochemistry
and international nutrition planning from MIT. She taught and
practised social science research and international development
program design at Tufts University (Boston), and taught human
ecology at Findhorn in 1995. Since 1996 she supervises ecovillage
internships and organizes and teaches sustainable development
courses in Senegal
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