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Intro to 'Ted Takeaways'
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A welcome video with Ted Coopwood III, President and CEO of Coopwood Enterprises and conservation expert.
Ted joined the Landscape Partnership to speak about his leadership and diversity, equity, and inclusion in conservation.
This video accompanies two short podcasts about how to recognize and center diverse voices in conservation and working lands efforts.
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Training
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Online trainings
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Webinars
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Videos: Advancing Inclusive Science Communication
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Watch keynote addresses from the Inclusive SciComm Symposium through the Metcalf Institute
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Training
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Online trainings
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Webinars
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Equity and Inclusion
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The Landscape Partnership Equity & Inclusion space is designed to: Highlight best practices in equity and inclusion for conservation professionals, partners, agencies, and communities; Develop an ever-evolving toolkit of equity and inclusion resources to support work with, and for, underserved communities; and Create a collaborative space where stakeholders can work together to improve equity and inclusion in conservation.
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Harvard University
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Yellowstone to Yukon: Indigenous Leadership in Conservation
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Join the Southeast Climate Adaptation Science Center - Global Change Fellows for a Global Change Seminar:
“Yellowstone to Yukon: Indigenous Leadership in Conservation“
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News & Events
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Events
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OneUSDA Intranet
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Your one-stop shop for USDA news and tools for work.
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Resources
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How to work with communities
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Southeast Climate Adaptation Science Center Event - Partnering with Fire: Learning from Tribal Nations and Indigenous Practices
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Join the South Central Climate Adaptation Science Center, the Southeast Climate Adaptation Science Center, and the U.S. Forest Service for our upcoming virtual workshop “Partnering with Fire: Learning from Tribal Nations and Indigenous Practices.”
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News & Announcements
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Events
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WLFW Events Inbox
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Klamath Tribes
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We are the Klamath Tribes- the Klamath, the Modoc and the Yahooskin-Paiute people, known as mukluks and numu (the people). We have lived in the Klamath Basin of Oregon, from time beyond memory. Our legends and oral history tell about when the world and the animals were created, when the animals and Gmok’am’c – the Creator – sat together and discussed the creation of man. If stability defines success, our presence here has been, and always will be, essential to the well-being of our homeland and those who abide here.
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Modoc Tribe of Oklahoma
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Modoc Tribe of Oklahoma is a federally recognized tribe headquartered in Miami, Oklahoma within the The ancestral home of the Modoc Nation, or Captain Jack’s Band of Modoc Indians, consisted of over 5,000 square miles along what is now the California-Oregon border. On the west loomed the perennially snow-capped peaks of the majestic Cascade Mountains; to the east was a barren wasteland of alkali flats scaling to the peaks of the Warner Mountains in the Sierra-Nevada range; towering forests of Ponderosa pines and shores of majestic bodies of water and rivers were to the north while the Lava Beds, now a National Monument, and the Medicine Lake volcano range to Mount Shasta formed their southern boundary.
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Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians
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The Eastern Band of Cherokee is a federally recognized tribe, and the only tribal nation represented on the Appalachian LCC Steering Committee. The Tribe is located in western North Carolina, holds approximately 56,000 acres, and consists of approximately 14,000 enrolled members.
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