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DTSTART;TZID=Australia/Melbourne:20260311T093000
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DTSTAMP:20260424T191740
CREATED:20251207T152928Z
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UID:5560-1773221400-1773225000@www.plantsuccess.org
SUMMARY:Do Sacred Plants Have Standing? Religious Freedom of Expression & Biocultural Recovery of Sacred & Ceremonial Plants
DESCRIPTION:Presented by Gary Nabhan. \nIndigenous communities and other traditional ethnic enclaves have long integrated sacred and ceremonial plants into their spiritual traditions\, but the affirmation of their legal rights to protect and maintain cultural access to such plants has been fraught with outdated conceptions of what “religion” and “legitimate practice of spiritual traditions” entails\, especially with respect to plants and animals used in ceremonies and their legal status as “sacred persons”. Case studies from the contested U.S.-Mexico border and war-torn Middle East will suggest some ways that public perception and case law are evolving to accommodate these Indigenous rights more fully. \n \nBiography\nGary Nabhan PhD is a contemplative desert ecologist and Franciscan Brother. He founded the Sacred Plants Biocultural Recovery Initiative and worked with indigenous spiritual leaders and elected officials to declare the saguaro cactus as a sacred sentient being with legal protection on 100\,000 ha of Sonoran Desert lands. He is author\, Coauthor or editor of 35 books in 6 languages and over 150 scholarly articles and book chapters. \n  \n  \n  \n  \nAbout People\, Plants and the Law Online Lecture Series\nThe People\, Plants\, and the Law lecture series explores the legal and lively entanglements of human and botanical worlds. \nToday people engage with and relate to plants in diverse and sometimes divergent ways. Seeds—and the plants that they produce—may be receptacles of memory\, sacred forms of sustenance\, or sites of resistance in struggles over food sovereignty. Simultaneously\, they may be repositories of gene sequences\, Indigenous knowledge\, bulk commodities\, or key components of economic development projects and food security programs. \nThis lecture series explores the special role of the law in shaping these different engagements\, whether in farmers’ fields\, scientific laboratories\, international markets\, or elsewhere.
URL:https://www.plantsuccess.org/event/do-sacred-plants-have-standing-religious-freedom-of-expression-biocultural-recovery-of-sacred-ceremonial-plants/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:People Plants and the Law
ORGANIZER;CN="Plant Success":MAILTO:admin@plantsuccess.org
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DTSTART;TZID=Australia/Melbourne:20260428T160000
DTEND;TZID=Australia/Melbourne:20260428T170000
DTSTAMP:20260424T191740
CREATED:20251207T153106Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251207T154835Z
UID:5562-1777392000-1777395600@www.plantsuccess.org
SUMMARY:Bad to Think With: Plants and Property Relations
DESCRIPTION:Presented by Veit Braun. \nAnimals\, Claude Lévi-Strauss famously said\, are not just good to eat but good to think with: they elucidate the structure of social relations. But what about plants? In this talk I argue that the ways we relate to plants on the one hand and the matrix of people and things on the other offered by property thought are a bad match. Much of what plants are and do does not neatly fit into the categories of subject and object or body and idea; nor can the problems caused by intellectual and tangible property in plants easily be addressed by the critique of property. To elaborate this point\, I want to sketch the trajectories on which plants go astray and slip through our matrices of property (including my own) by exploring some of what has happened in the legal landscape of especially European plant breeding over the last 20 or so years. Whether we should run after plants and leave property behind or\, conversely\, try to patch up the structure of property relations depends on what we care about more: saving plants or saving property. \nRegister here >\nBiography\nVeit Braun is a sociologist and Research Associate at the University of Augsburg\, Germany. His work is situated at the intersection of law\, economics and biology. Veit has studied the contemporary crises of property in plant breeding and the organisational and temporal logics of animal biobanks. He is currently leading the research project ‘More and Less’ on the mutable identity of nitrogen in society. His book At the End of Property: Patents\, Plants and the Crisis of Propertization was published by Bristol University Press in 2024. \n  \n  \n  \nAbout People\, Plants and the Law Online Lecture Series\nThe People\, Plants\, and the Law lecture series explores the legal and lively entanglements of human and botanical worlds. \nToday people engage with and relate to plants in diverse and sometimes divergent ways. Seeds—and the plants that they produce—may be receptacles of memory\, sacred forms of sustenance\, or sites of resistance in struggles over food sovereignty. Simultaneously\, they may be repositories of gene sequences\, Indigenous knowledge\, bulk commodities\, or key components of economic development projects and food security programs. \nThis lecture series explores the special role of the law in shaping these different engagements\, whether in farmers’ fields\, scientific laboratories\, international markets\, or elsewhere.
URL:https://www.plantsuccess.org/event/bad-to-think-with-plants-and-property-relations/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:People Plants and the Law
ORGANIZER;CN="Plant Success":MAILTO:admin@plantsuccess.org
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