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Land Air Water Law Center University of Oregon Eugene, OR 97403 503-346-3828 tel 503-346'-3985fax landairwater@ Igc.org Emaii 'oCr1:--7 ::>~ z;;;,;cr uS~ D~ J Euger'€ CQ Penn.. "'00.63 Please bring your brochure to the Conference or give to a friend who will ~ Printed on Recycled ':I Paf'erlSoy Ink - - -- ..., , - 1993 .... Public Interest Environmental Law Conference Indigenous Peoples: Sacred Roots, Sacred TIes N E Thursday, March 4 through Sunday, March 7, 1993 University of Oregon School of Lpw Eugene, Oregon Sponsored by: Land Air Wate.L(LAW)

1993 - PIELC · role at the Earth Summit in Rio and has courageously pursued his activism,. '" ..d,2pite poJ!tJp~Jepres.§.ig1)., - "' '"~ -" "" ~ DR. GEORGE SCHALLER, Director, Wildlife

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Page 1: 1993 - PIELC · role at the Earth Summit in Rio and has courageously pursued his activism,. '" ..d,2pite poJ!tJp~Jepres.§.ig1)., - "' '"~ -" "" ~ DR. GEORGE SCHALLER, Director, Wildlife

Land Air WaterLaw CenterUniversity of OregonEugene, OR 97403503-346-3828 tel503-346'[email protected]

'oCr1:--7::>~ z;;;,;cruS~

D~ JEuger'€ CQ

Penn.. "'00.63

Please bring your brochureto the Conference orgive to a friend who will

~ Printed on Recycled':I Paf'erlSoy Ink

- --- ..., , -

1993 ....

Public Interest Environmental Law ConferenceIndigenous Peoples: Sacred Roots, Sacred TIes

N

E

Thursday, March 4 through Sunday, March 7, 1993University of Oregon School of Lpw

Eugene, OregonSponsored by:

Land Air Wate.L(LAW)

Page 2: 1993 - PIELC · role at the Earth Summit in Rio and has courageously pursued his activism,. '" ..d,2pite poJ!tJp~Jepres.§.ig1)., - "' '"~ -" "" ~ DR. GEORGE SCHALLER, Director, Wildlife

ABOUT THE CONFERENCEThe Public Interest Environmental Law Conference is the premiere annualgathering for the study of environmental issues worldwide. Now in its eleventhyear, the Conference unites students, attorneys, activists and others to sharetheir experiences and expertise. With over eighty panels, workshops, andnumerous speakers and activities, the Conference has become a beacon ofenergy, innovation and inspiration for all who participate in the evolvingenvironmental movement. The theme of this year's Conference: INDIG-ENOUS PEOPLES:- SACRED ROOTS, SACRED TIES.

Keynote Speakers:WALT ,BRESETTE, Founder, Lake Superior Green Party. Bresette is aChipptwa Indian, treaty rights activist, and inspiring speaker on environmen-tal and land issues .from a Native American perspective.

DAVID BROWER, the inspiration behind the environmental protection move-ment in the U.S. Founder and Chair, Earth Island Institllte, former ExecutiveDirector of the Sierra Club and Founder of Friends of the Earth. .'

DAVE FOREMAN, Co-Founder, Earth First! Environmental writer andpublisher. Foreman works continually to keep environmental activism vitaland responsive to new challenges. A leading voice for deep ecology.

SARA JAMES, Chair, Gwich'in Steering Committee. Indigenous to theAlaskan Arctic, James describes the Gwich'in as the "Caribou People." TheGwich'in depend on the Alaskan caribou herds for food and other produc;ts,and for their place in spiritual and cultural life. She led the fight against oildrilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.

OREN LYONS, Chief and spiritual leader, Onondaga Iroquois Nation (NewYork). Professor at SUNY-Buffalo and is a powerful spokesperson for indig-enous rights and environmental protection, most recently atthe Earth Summit.Leading historical scholar on Iroquois ideas of government and law and theirinfiuence on the shape of the U.S. Constitution and American democracy.

RIGOBERT A MENCHU (Invited), 1992 Nobel Peace Prize winn'er. A QuicheMaya lodian (Guatemala) whose family was killed in the struggle for basichuman rights in her country. Menchu has fought tirelessly for political,economic and human rights for her people against one of the most repressivegovernments in the Western Hemisphere.

ANDERSON MUTANG, ,Founder,Sarawak Indigenou~pples' AJliance.Anative ofthe Malaysianprovinceof Sarawak,Mutang i~ .iernationalleaderfor indigenous rights and rain forest protection. Muta~ayed a prominentrole at the Earth Summit in Rio and has courageously pursued his activism, .

'" .. d,2pite poJ!tJp~Jepres.§.ig1).,- "' '"~ -" ""~ DR.GEORGESCHALLER, Director,Wildlife ConservationInternational. Dr.

Schaller is world renowned for his pioneering wor~dl1\,animal behavior,conservation biology, and habitat protection and knOl' "'his work to savethe mountain gorilla, snow leopard, giant panda, a"-,,,any others, fromextinction.

MlliLANI B. TRASK, Kia'aina, Ka LahuL Hawai'i (Governor, SovereignNation of Hawai'i). A Native Hawai'ianlawyer, Trask leads the movement tohave her peoples' sovereign rights recognized, a status enjoyed by NativeAmericans but not Native Hawai'ians and Native Alaskans.

PRACTITIONERS WORKSHOPS

Land Air Water is pleased to offer intensive three-hour practitioners' work-shops during this year's Conference. The workshops are: 1) Clean Water ActCitizen_Suits, 2) Endangered Species Act, 3) Wise Use Movement, 4) StartingNon-Profit Corporations, 5) Environmental Justice, 6) Using and PracticingLaw as a Healing Art, 7) Researching Corporate Charters. Some advanceregistration fees may apply. See registrationJorm.

REGISTRATION

Generiil Registration: Complete the enclosed registration form and returnit to: Land Air Water. Registration for attorneys and other professionals

,postmarked by February 18 is $60. Late and door registration is $75. Publicinterest attorneys and professionals may lessen or waive the fee based onneed. Because of increasing difficulty in obtaining foundation support, V>{6must ask a $10-25 sliding scale contribution from citizens and students.Please make checks payable to: Land Air Water.

Meal Registration: Must be postmarked by February 18, after which mealreservations will be on a first come, first serve basis. Our limit is 400 personseach for Satu'rday's lunch and dinner. An additional 100 seats will be availablefor each meal for persons,not eating. See registration form. Again, the menuat this year's Conference will be meatless.

FOOD POLICY

LAW. serves no meat at its functions and is committed to using organicproduce whenever possible. Although the individual members of L.A. W. havediverse beliefs and diets, we are unified in ourconcern forthe environment andour impact on it, including our food consumption. Most meat avaifable to usis not organic, nor is it produced or gathered in a sustainable or ethical manner.We do not condemn other cultures, traditional or modern: We celebrate thediversity of our membership and Conference guests. Our food policy isdesigned merely to lessen the impact of this Conference on the environment.

"!Ir"X.. ,'-

'Coffee mugs and beverage cups will be avaifable at the Conference. No,disposable coffee cups or drinking cups will be provided !'It the Conference,so please either order cups, or brinl;!your own. -

CLE Credit for Attorneys: Last year, Oregon awarded 28 hours GeneralEducation CLE credits. Washington State awarded 24 hours. This year,California may award CLE credits for the first time. Please pick up CLE formsat the Conference.

ELECTRONIC MAIL: Staffersfrom ECONET/PEACENET(globalelectroniccommunication) will provide free training in electronic mail througl)out theconference and offer reduced-rate sign-up opportunities.

TRANSPORTATIONDiscountairfare isavailableon UnitedAirlines through Beyondthe Bay (travel.agency for Sierra Club) in San Francisco. Call 1-800-542-1991 and ask forPatty. Beyond the Bay will book the lowest airfare available less a 5%discount. Also, booking willearn the Conference a 1%commission and1 free ticket per 30 purchases, to be used to provide transportation forspeakers who would otherwise be unable to.attend.

HOUSINGFree accommodationsare available on a first come, first serve basis. Guestsmay stay with law students, faculty and community members on extra beds,couches, and floors by filling out and returning the housing registration formto L.A.W., postmarked by February 18, 1993. See you'rregistration form forinformation about other reasonably priced accommodations.

CONFERENCE SPONSORSLAND AIR WATER (L.A.W.) is the world's oldest environmental law studentsociety. L.A.W.'s over 100 members organize the Public Inter~st Environ-mental Law Conference on a purely volunteer basis. L.A.W. members alsoconduct legal research on environmental law cases, and publish both theWestern Environmental Law Update and the Directory of EnvironmentalLawyers. -FOR MORE INFORMATIONPlease address all inquiries regarding the Conference to: Land Air Water,Univ. of Oregon School of Law, Eugene,OR 97403. Phone': (503) 346-3828.Fax: (503) 346-3985. Email: [email protected]. Conf. Co-.Dirs: DavidEvans, Kari Grabowski; L.A.W. Co-Dirs: Mark Johnst<,~' -"arty Bergoffen,HillaryWray, Todd Sigaty. For information regardin!L JJniv. of OregonSchool of Law, Natural Resources Law curriculum or t~estern Environ-mental Law Cli'nic,please write to: Western Environmental Law Clinic, Univ.

.of Oregon ScI:!ool of L§lw, Eugene, OR 97403..

SPECIAL THANKSThe Laurel Foundation, Talking Leaves, World Peace l~ilierslty, SurvivalCenter, Eugene Greens, E-LAW,and The Western Envl ...ental'LawClinicfor their support! "'-'"

WESTERN ENVIRONMENTAL LAW CLINICThe Clinic is the foundation of the law school's environmental law program.Law students are supervised by staff attorneys who provide free advocacy toclients in environmental litigation and administrative proceedings.

Michael Axline, Professor and Co-Director, Western Environmental LawClinic, ProfessorAxlinewas counsel in the PortlandAudubonSocietyv. Lujancase, and co-author of Plaintiff's Guide to Toxic Torts. His new book, Guideto Citizens Suits, is the first ever treatment of the citizen suit as a distinct fieldof law.

I'I

, IJohn Bonine, Professor and Co-Director, Western Environmental LawClinic. Professor Bonine litigates in pollution law and freedom of informationsuits. His,textbook, The Law of Environmental Protection, is the law student'scompass for environmental law.

To Our Hero: Kathy Cannon! Office Manager of Th~ WesternEnvironmental Law Clinic. Thank you for your selfless dedication!

ABOUT THE,ARTISTS

Ramon Murillo, poster, "Growth V,ision Site." Ramon is a Shoshqne-Bannock, and teaches art at the Center for Fine Arts and Cultural Studies inSanta Fe, New Mexico.

Deb Thomas, t~shirt design. Deb is a graphic artist and illustrator and nowdoes screen printin,g and graphic design for her own business, Full MoonGraphics, Eugene,~Oregon. Deb only uses non-toxic processes; conse-quently, our t-shirt is,non-toxic for the first time this year.

DISCLAIMER

The statements and opinions expressed at the Conference belong solely to"the individual speakers., No statement made at the Conference represeI\1s IN!position of the Law School, the Univ. of Oregon, or Land AJr Water

Page 3: 1993 - PIELC · role at the Earth Summit in Rio and has courageously pursued his activism,. '" ..d,2pite poJ!tJp~Jepres.§.ig1)., - "' '"~ -" "" ~ DR. GEORGE SCHALLER, Director, Wildlife

''\.

***************************THURSD~ V, MARCH 4REGISTRATION

PANELS.Cow Free Wilderness.Trojan: Closed But Not Gone.Indian Religiou$ Issues I.International Trade in Endangered Species.Stewardship and Ecological Restoration: Northwest Native American

Perspectives. Management of Timber in State Forests: Trust or No Trust?

WORKSHOPS

. Clean Water Act Citizen Suits Workshop (2:45-4:15).Endangered Species ActWorkshop

BREAK

PANELS

.Environmental Cleanup: The Constitutional Basis for Environmental Law.Sustainable Communities: Self Reliant Living for Today,. Bhuddismc1:md Ecology. Environmental Investigative Reporting.Salmon: Harvest and Hatcheries

6:0Q-8:00 DINNER BREAK

Note: To avoid disruption of academic activities at the Law School on Thursday,plan to arrive at the Law School for opening ceremonies no earlier than 7:30 p.m..

. Welcoming is at 8:00cp.m. Thank You!

8:00-10:00 WELCOMING ADDRESS

" Dave Frohnmayer, Dean, University of Oregon School of Law

; OPENING ADDRESSESDavid ~rower, Founder al1d Chair, Earth Island Institute

~. . .Sara James, Chair, Gwich'in Steering Committee" ;,;;:;~.:J::;~;.,...; " .. = cDrt"GeorgeSi:haller, Director, WilCllifeCOhservatloii'lnlernationa' =.----

12:00-4:00

2:45-4:15

t..

2:45-5:45

I-IU

4:15-4:30

4:30-6:00

II

f;I

Ir.I'

J8:00-5':mV

10:00-11:30

FRIDAY, MARCH 5

"I'

REGISTRATION

PANELS

.Watershed Management: The Holistic Approach.Civil Disobedience: Past and Present Experience.Intellectual Property Rights and Medicinal Plant Knowtedge

. Keeping Tabs on the Forest Service

. Alaskan Subsistence Issues.Population Programs and the Effect on Women Around the World.Peruvian Environmental Law

.Tatshenshini to Columbia: B.C.'s Progressive Solution to Natural ResourceDisputes

LUNCH BREAK

WORKSHOPS

.Environmental Justice Litigation

. Starting A Non-Profit Corporation

PANELS

.Poaching: Issues in Domestic Wildlife Harvest.Salmon: tfabitat and I;-Iydroelectriclssues

. Workers, the Environment and Native Americans: A Common Ground.Clean Air Act Enforcement.Biodiversity: The Seamless Web.Environmental Artists: Ecovisions.Cultural Resource Preservation: What's Being Done, What Needs To Be DonePANELS

.Cultural Resources and Repatriation

. Eastern European Cleanup: Where Do We Begin?.Shoreline Protection: Eroding the Public Trust.AI?skan State Government's EnvironmentaJ Deceptions.Sustainable Development: Striking <;IBalance.. NativeCanadiansandthe Law., ".. Asian Environmental Law

11:30-1 :00

1:00-4:00

11

1:00-2:30

2:45-4: 15

2:30-5:30

4:15-4:30

4:30-6:00

6:00-10:00

....6:00-7:00

7:00-8:00

8:00-9:00

9:0Q-10:00

8:00-12:00

8:30-9:30

8:15-9:45

8:15-11:15

9:45-10:00

10:00-11 :30

For the Environmental Pe..Julie Norman, President. !

Andy Kerr, Conservation DPortland, Oregon.

Todd True, Sierra Club Lege;

For the Timber Industry Pars::!Ilene Waldorf, VicePresider'"-

Oregon.Dick Baldwin, President anaSteve Cornacchia, Lane Co-,MODERATOR: Peter'Def .

*******************************

BREAK

PANELS

..Ozone: Plugging the Hole

.. Environmental Writers/Artists:

.Yew Trees: Saving Them a

.. Indian Religious Issues II.Rio: What Happened? Whffi j.. Hydroelectric Development 'n I..Chilean Environmental Law

PIZZA, KEG PARTY, AND ENlACOUSTICAL ENVIRONMENl

EVENrNG ADDRESS

Anderson Mutang, Founder, ~

EVENING ADDRESSTBA

VIDEO P.RESJ:NT~TION/LECT"Logging Siberia" presented by !VIDEO PRESENTATION

"Crop Circles: Ecological MessaColin Andrews, narrator

SATURDA 1

REGISTRATION

RUN FOR THE RAINFOREST,

PANELS

.. Indigenous Persons' Portrayal

.. NAFT A: CanadLan PerspectivE.Minjng: Riches or ruins?

.. Who Defines "Sacred"?: The ,.,

. OceanLawResources:Issue:.Redefining the Corporation: NiJustice

WORKSHOPS

.. Wise Use Movement: Challen!

BREAK

PANELS.Oil and Fossil Fuels: A Viscou:

.. Native Religion, Christianity ar

. NAFTA:U.S.Perspectives

.. Animal Damage Control: Preyi.. Deep Ecology: Deliberate Livir.Natural Resource Damage ASi.Siberian Forest Issues

Page 4: 1993 - PIELC · role at the Earth Summit in Rio and has courageously pursued his activism,. '" ..d,2pite poJ!tJp~Jepres.§.ig1)., - "' '"~ -" "" ~ DR. GEORGE SCHALLER, Director, Wildlife

NDA.

It***************************************************

.EVENTr elecom Classroom

1iversity of OregonROM STALEMATE TO SOLUTIONS

ve:

vaters, Ashland, Oregon.

)r, Oregon ~atural Resources Council,

3fense Fund, Seattle, Washington.live:

)regon Small Woodlands Association, Salem,

:0, The Springfield Group, Springfield, Oregon.(Commissioner, Eugene, Oregon.

Congressman, D-Oregon

enfTo Be Broadcast!!!!!!!

.,OPB)********************************************~*******

rranslating for NatureSaving Us

Jext?1dia:Social,andEnvironmental Qonsequences

ERT AINMENT

AL MUSIC-Casey Neill and Timothy Hullc---IrawakIndigenous Peoples Alliance-

lJRE»haron Jenasci

~e From The Cosmos?"

r, MARCH 6

I\lton Baker Park, Eugene.

Through the Educational Systems

lount Graham Controversyi for the 90'sw Strategies for Environmental and Economic

es and Opportunities

Cycle:I Federal Indian Policy

19Upon Predators9essment

11 :30-12:00

12:00-2:00

2:00-2:30

2:30-4:00

4:00-4:30

4:30-6:00

6':00-7:00

7:0V

9:3r ')0

~

8:30-11 :30

8:45-10:15

10:15-10:30

10:30-12:00

12:30-2:00

3:00-5:00

BREAK

LUNCH Erb Memorial Union Ballroom

John "ejohn" Bonine, Western Environmental Law Clinic, IntroductionsLUNCHEON ADDRESSESDave Foreman, Ecowarrior, Earth First!

BREAK

PANELS

.Destruction by Salvage: Oregon's Blue Mountains

. Environmental Parachuting: An Ecocentric Assault?-.NAFT A: Mexican Perspectives.Native Sovereignty.Public Trust.Doctrine.Grazing: Mooing the West.Damned Dams: Four Countries, Four ProjectsBREAK

PANELS

. Canadian Indigenous People's Issues

. OverpopulatiQnand,the Environment: Life in Balance.NAFTA Roundtable Symposium including authors published in v.7, Journal

of Environmental Law and Litigation, University of Oregon, GATT/NAFTASymposium (available now)..Wetlands Mitigation.Australian Aborigines and the Land.Hemp for Victory!.Old Healing Arts and Contemporary Cult~re

NO HOST BAR, Erb Memorial Union

DtNNER, Erb Memorial Union Ballroom

Michael Axline, Western Environmental Law Clinic,IntroductionsDINNER ADDRESS

Mililani Trask, Governor, Soveretgn Nation oi Hawafi

ENTERTAINMENT, Erb Memorial Union Ballroom"-

Joanne Rand and The Little Big Band. Northwest band dedicate~eresurgence of wilderness.

SUNDAY, MARCH 7,WORKSHOPS

.Using and Practicing Law as a Healing Art.Researching Corporate Charters

PANELS.Women and Land.Prosecution of Felony Environmental Crimes.Exponenti?1 Popu,lation Growth: Enough Already!

* Pres~rvation of Indige,nous Sacred Sites in Oregon* Australian Environmental Law.So'uth American Environmental Issues

BREAK

PANELS

.MRS's:The Burial of Spent Nuclear Fuel Rods on Indian Reservations.Environmental Taxes,

.Coral Reef Degradation* ,Population: Too Many People. Why Have White Men Dominated the Environmental Movement?.Human Rights Threats'to Environmental Lawyers

CLOSING SESSION

CLOSING ADDRESSES

Oren Lyons, Chief and spiritual leader, Onondaga Iroquois Nation.Walt Bressette, Founder, Lake Superior Green Party.

NETWORKING SESSION

.Meeting with Attendees of First Annual Public Interest Science Conference,Atrium, Willamette Hall, Univ~rsity of Oregon.

'I

,- ~.

Page 5: 1993 - PIELC · role at the Earth Summit in Rio and has courageously pursued his activism,. '" ..d,2pite poJ!tJp~Jepres.§.ig1)., - "' '"~ -" "" ~ DR. GEORGE SCHALLER, Director, Wildlife

PANcELS AND PANELISTS

.,

THURSDAY MARCH 4, 1993 2:45-4:15COW-FREE WILDERNESSElaine Reese, Board Member; Oregon Natural Desert Association;grassroots activist for 9 years on public land protection.Randy Morris, Chairperson, Committee for Idaho High Desert; primarysponsor of Idaho desert protection.Steve Koteff, Staff Attorney, Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance, SaltLake City, Utah; UO alum.

TROJAN: CLOSED, BUT NOT GONELloyd Marbet, antinuclear activist; Board of Directors, Don't Waste Oregon.

- Nancy Newell, Member, Northwest Environmental Advocates; led 20-year effort to close Trojan.Dan Meek, environmental and anti-Trojan activist.

RELIGIOUS ISSUES ICalvin Hecocta, Paiute, Founder, Willamette Valley Sacred Sites Pres-ervation Committee.

Ynez Talamantez, Ph.D., Associate Professor, Religious Studies, Univ.of California at Santa Barbara; Mescalero Apache/Chicana.Robin Silver, M.D.; Conservation Committee of Maricopa AudubonSociety; Board Member, Apache Survival Coalition; Director, S.W. Centerfor Biodiversity.

INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIESTom Riley, Depl,lty Assistant RegionalDirectorof Law Enforcement, U. S.Department of Interior, Fish and Wildlife Service.Chris Wold, attorney, Center for International Environmental Law,Washington D.C.Ed Espinoza, criminologist, National Fish and Wildlife. Forensics Lab,Ashland, Oregon.Holly Reid, invited.Richard Littell, invited. ,

STEWARDSHIP AND ECOLOGICAL RESTORATION:NORTHWEST NATIVE AMERICAN PERSPECTIVESCarol Craig, Tribal Informatfonand Education Coordinator; ColumbiaRiver IntertribalFishCommission,YakimaTribal Member;HowardSimonsFellow recipient for American Indian Journalists.Dennis M 'ez, American Indian Cultural Center; Board Member,Rogue In~of Economy and Ecology; Restoration Consultant to 10-tribe Inter-trm'alSinkyone Wilderness.Gordon Bettles, Director, MOseumof Klamath Nation; cultural heritagespecialist focusing on cultural preservation and enhancement, languagerecoveryandsacred siteprotectionforthe Klamath,Modoc and Yahuskin.MANAGEMENT OF TIMBER IN STATE FORESTS: TRUSTOR NO Tp..~~T?Marc McUr; Counsel, Selkirk-Priest Basin Association; currentlychallengingthe Idaho Land Board's management of timber resources onschool trust land.Sally K. Fairfax, Associate Dean, Professor, College of NaturalResources,Univ.of California,Berkeley. ,

Phil Keisling, Secretary of State of Oregon (second highest official inOregon), Oregon Land Board.

rI.

I

tII.I,

I

I

I

WORKSHOPS THURSDAY 2:45-5:45

CLEAN WATER ACT CITIZEN SUITS WORKSHOPMike Axline, see Western Environmental Law Clinic bio.TBA

ENDANGERED SPECIES ACT WORKSHOPBob Irvin,Counsel,NationalWildlifeFederation,FisheriesandWildlifeDivision.TBA

I

r

THURSDAY MARCH 4,19934:30-6:00 P.M.ENVIRONMENTAL CLEANUP: THE CONSTITUTIONALBASIS FOR ENVIRONMENTAL LAWMichael Diamond, poet, lawyer; lectures widely on his original researchinto the "domestic violence" clause (Article IV, Section 4) of the U.S.Constitution.William Boyer, Professor Emeritus, Univ. of' Hawaii;Founder, Environmental Rights.

SUSTAINABLE COMMUNITIES: SELF-RELIANT LIVINGFOR TODAYMeg Letterman, Co-Foun~er, Ponderosa Village, self-reliance community.Fred Lanphear, organizing member of the N.W. SustainableCommunities Association.Tim Southworth, woodworker and house builder.Tobiah Israel, Founder, Institute for Sustainable Technology.

BHUDDISM AND ECOLOGYWim Aspeslagh, Professor, Univ. of Oregon, Sustainable Development;facilitator in Experiential Ecology Workshops; Bhuddist practitioner.Bill Devall, Professor of Sociology, Humboldt State Univ., Arcata,Califor-nia; author, "Deep Ecology: Living as if Nature Mattered."Lesley Spector, environmental activist; Bhuddist practitioner; mernalhealth worker.

ENVIRONMENTAL INVESTIGATIVE REPORTINGBob Wolfe, free-lance investigative reporter (environmental); columnist,national or9anicsma9azine; formerly of Greenpeace.

I

FRIDAY MARCH 5, 19931 :00-2:30 P.M.POACHING: ISSUES IN DOMESTICWILDLIFE HARVESTEd Espinoza, see Int'l Trade in Endangered Species.Tom Riley, Asst. Deputy of Enforcement for the USF&WS, Region 1.Wilbl!r Siockish, Jr.; Columbia River Defense Project, The Dalles,Oregon. Tribal member.Ginny Van Loo, current Treasurer and former president, Oregon Wildlife

. Federation; former president, Nocthwest Steelheaders; President, TheOregon Hunters Assoc.; Legislative Ass!. for State Rep. Larry Sowa.

SALMON: HABITATAND HYDROELECTRIC ISSUESAdam Berger, project attorney, Sierra Club Legal Defense Fund, Seattle,Washington; specializes in public lands andendangeredspecieslitigation.Roy Fox, Coordination and Review Manager, Office of Power Sales,Bonneville Power Administration. .Conrad Mahnken, see Salmon: Harvest and Hatcheries.Carol Craig, see Stewardship and Ecological Restoration.

WORKERS, THE ENVIRONMENTAND NATIVE AMERICANS:A COMMON GROUNDDorothy Ackerman, Korean War Veteran (Women's Air Force); activewith Indian Women's Group, American Indian Movement, and NativeAmerican Prison Support Gr01Jp.Calvin Hecocta, see Indian Religious Issues I.David West, Director, Labor Coalition for Environmental Responsibility;member, United Steelworkers of America Local #8378; Oregon AFL-CIOEnvironmental Affairs Committee.Gene Lawhorn, active with Labor Coalition for Environmental Responsi-bility and Earth First; home construction industry.

CLEAN AIR ACT ENFORCEMENTJulie Matthews, Assistant RegionalCounsel,U.S.£nvironmental Protec-tion Agency; Primary emphasis on Clean Air Act.Pete Sorenson, public interest environmental attorney specializing intoxic torts and citizen suits, Eugene, Oregon.Sara Laumann, representative, Oregon Department of EnvironmentalQuality.BIODIVERSITY: THE SEAMLESS WEBJasper Carlton, Dg" 'gr, Biodiversity Legal Foundation.Kim Nelson, Res Wildlife Biologist, Oregon Cooperative WildlifeResearch Unit, Ore -State Univ.; Chair, Marbled Murrelet TechnicalCommittee of the Pacific Seabird GroupTom Atze:. v S ~cres 5ef' ce ""-ea Eoo 't'g:s'O S ~ ~ "'e-'CeoftheCO"'"'~t1e€;ha,de'.eopeo ~~e-'-0a.:-~.c .~.. 1.1a--a~::;, :t'-Vinay Gidwani, Ph.D. candidate'" W Idia:"<IResou,':;e s...~ a; ~€ :.e:;= -mentofForestryanr\-~ourceManagemef'lt, un. o'Ca 'omla 6e".ee.

ENVIRONMEN~RTISTS: ECOVISIONSSusan Applegate, artist, Eugene, Oregon; currently working on "land-marks," a series of paintings for the 150thanniversaryof the Oregon Trail,focusing on the effects of immigration and population growth on theOregon Landscape.Jim-Denney, painter;working in thetradition of 19thcentury Hudson Riverlandscape painting; depicts contemporary images and issues facing theNorthwest today.Kuiz Lopez Kalli Kalkoatl, President, Sociedad Cultural Anahucca.Mexico; artist, philosopher, Medicine Man, and keeper of ancient Aztecmyth and tradition.Jim Evangelist, muralist, Eugene,Oregon; Evangelistcreates publicartsprojects that satisfy community enjoyment and appreciation and estab-lishes business participation.CULTURAL RESOURCE PRESERVATION: WHArS BEINGDONE, WHAT NEEDS TO BE DONEDr.Felicia Beardsley, Fi~d Archaeologist, InternationalArchaeologicalResearch Institute, Inc.;former DistrictArchaeologist,Willamette NationalForest.Michael Davis, Board Member, Apache Survival Coalition; Son of theClan Chief of the MississippiBand of Choctaw Indians.David Ellis, Project Archaeologist, Archaeological Investigations North-west Inc.;PublicIssuesCoordinator,AssociationofOregonArchaeologists.Michael Nixon, Environmental Law Specialist, Oregon Department ofEnvironmental Quality; consultant to Cascade Geographic Society andNative Americans for Enola.**********************************************************************************

SPECIAL EVENT 2:30-5:30 P.M.

IMC Broadcast Studio -University of OregonNORTHWEST FOREST SUMMIT:

FROM STALEMATE TO SOLUTIONS

Environmental Perspective:Julie Norman, President, Headwaters, Ashland,Oregon. Advocateforfederal forestrypractices reform.Andy Kerr, Conservation Director,Oregon Natural Resources Council,Portland, Oregon. Leadingcriticof forestrypractices across the board.Todd True, Sierra Club Legal Defense Fund, Seal\le, Washington.Litigationexperience includesSeattle AudubonSocietyv. Lujan,ongoingSpotted Owlcase; UOalum.Timber Industry Perspective:Illme Waldorf. ViGA PrARirtent {)rP.f1on Small WfVVi\anliR A.c;.<;1"""~'.,.".,

Page 6: 1993 - PIELC · role at the Earth Summit in Rio and has courageously pursued his activism,. '" ..d,2pite poJ!tJp~Jepres.§.ig1)., - "' '"~ -" "" ~ DR. GEORGE SCHALLER, Director, Wildlife

I.U"'II"~""~I.-"""III, l joJVI,I,.IoJI, 1,111oJ 1 ~VIIiUII, I-.lV"- -.1,,-,

Paul Nyden, reporter,CharlestonGazette,West Virginia,covering miningissues.

SALMON: HARVEST AND HATCHERIESConradMahnken, Program Manager, National Marine Fisheries Service,NorthwestFisheriesScienceCenter,Seattle,Washington.~- ii'"Anne Watanabe, Columbia River Intertribal Fish Commission; formerlywith Western Ancient Forest Campaign; UO alum.Thane Tienson, attorney, Portland; author "Alyeska v: Wilderness Soci-ety, Demise of the Private Attorney General".Bill Bakke, Director, Resource Conservation for Oregon Trout; twentyyears protecting and restoring populations of native fish and their habitats.Ted Strong, Yakima Tribal Member, Executive Director of Coh.imbfa RiverInter-Tribal Fish Commission.

GOATEMALAN ENVIRONMENTAL LAW.Renee Arrecis, Attorney with IDEA, Guatemala City, Guatemala.Alejandra Sobenens, Co-Founderof IDEA, Guatemala City, Guatemala.Tom Atkerson, developing model framework for Central American,biodiversity treaties, joint project with CEDARENA in Costa Rica.

FRIDAY MARCH 5, 199310:00-11:30 A.M.WATERSHED MANAGEMENT: THE HOLISTIC APPROACHArthur Sappington, Public Forestry Foundation; expert on the GeographicalInformation System (GIS), and its application to watershed management.Anne Watanabe, see Salmon: Harvest and Hatcheries.Doug Heiken, Water Resources Specialist, Waterwatch of Oregon; UO alum.

CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE: PAST AND PRESENT EXPERIENCEBob Castillo, American Indian Movement, San Francisco; organizedColumbus Day Protest at Fishermans Wharf.Karen Wood, Earth First!activist; non-violent direct action trainer; partici-pated in direct actions ranging from ancient forests to homelessness.Brian Hoop, student organizer, Univ. of Oregon; Co-Editor, StudentInsurgent; student senator.Anderson Mutang, see keynoter bio.INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTSAND MEDICINALPLANT KNOWLEDGEJanet McGowan, attorney; Project Manager for Cultural Survival, Inc.Dr. Elaine Elisabetsky, Ph.D., Pharmacology;establishedthe first Labo-ratory of Ethnopharmacology in Brazil; Board Member, InternationalSociety of Ethnobiologyand InternationalSociety of Ethnopharmacology.Donna House, Navajo;botanist;ProgramDirector,NatureConservancy'sTribal Lands; activist in environmental issues affecting American Indians.Douglas [' ':;urator,Amazonian Botany, New York Botanical Garden.KEEPIN~S ON THE FOREST SERVICEBradley C. Bobertz, Assistant Professor of Law, Univ. of Nebraska

~ ~ C911~~of L!'iwjormer sta.fta.ttorney~Et:1)!if9nn1!'Jntal-L!'iwInstltut~ ~- .. ,', ""'Jifu "Jentz;"If:'$: Representativ~:rnaiana, 1987-1992;1ruthor; "TheAncient Forest Protection and Timber Sales Cost Recovery Acts".Erin Noel, gr""'sroots forest activist; formerly with NRDC and the Sjerra Club.

ALASKA, JlBSISTENCE ISSUES "

Carol Jor~on (invited), Regional Advisory Council Coordinator ofSubsistence, Alaska Region of the Forest Service.Joe Johnson, Statewide Litigation Attorney, Alaska Legal ServicesCorporation.Ernestine Hanlon, Tlingit Indian; renowned Northwest Coast basketweaver; former Board Member of Southeast Alaska ConservationCouncil; lead plaintiff in Hanlon v. Barton.

POPULATION PROGRAMS AND THE EFFECT ON WOMENAROUND THE WORLDMonique Miller,NetworkCoordinator, Carrying Capacity Network.TBA

PERUVIAN ENVIRONMENTAL LAWJorge Gutierrez, executive director, E-LAWPeru; Co-founder of SPDA, Peru.Carlos Deustua, staff attorney, E-LAW Peru.Mercedes Lu, staff scientist, E-LAW Peru. Specializes in Amazonian issues.

TATSHENSHINI TO COLUMBIA: B.C.'s PROGRESSIVESOLUTION TO NATURAL RESOURCE DISPUTESSteve Owens, Commissioner on Resources and Environment, B.C. Govem-ment; former ombudsman for B.C.Joanie Vance, Associate, B.C. Commission on Resources and Environment;former attomey with B.C. Public Interest Advocacy Center.Calvin Sandborn, Associate, B.C. commission on Resources and Environ-ment; former attomey with West coast Environmental Law Association.Murray Rankin, public interest lawyer and adviser to B.C. Govemment on landuse; fornier environmental law professor, Univ. of Victoria.

'I.

~I,

Ii

Iif:11~

WORKSHOPS 1:00-4:00 P.M.

ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE LITIGATION WORKSHOPLuke Cole, attorney" California Rural Legal Assistance, San Francisco;represents Kettleman City community organization in struggle againstChem Waste's proposed Kettleman Hills incinerator.Joel Reynolds, Senior Attomey, NRDC, Los Angeles; represents communityand environmental organizations on various environmental justice issues.

STARTING A NON-PROFITCORPORATION WORKSHOPDavidAtkin,CEO.Non-profitSupportServices,Eugene,Oregon;UO alumFundraiser, TBA

I.

~alem, Oregon. 'Advocate for private owners of forest lands of 5,OOCa'C'eSor less.

Dick Baldwin, President and CEO, The Springfield Group, Springfield,Oregon. Thirty-five-year veteran of the forest products industry, operatingsix "second growth" mills in Oregon producing plywood and veneer.Steve Cornacchia, Commissioner, Lane County. Expert on theeconomic issues, especially those affecting local governments; UO alum.

Moderator: Peter DeFazio, Congressman, D-Oregon

!!!!!!First Conference Event to be Broadcast!!!!!!!!(EDNET, OPB)

*************'I!:*************************************************************************

FRIDAY MARCH5,19932:45-4:15 P.M.CULTURAL RESOURCES AND REPATRIATIONMary Anne Kenworthy, attorney, Alaska Legal Services Corporation,working primarily on Alaska Native land issues; UO alum.Kris Olson Rogers, Associate Dean for Academic Affairs and Professor,Lewis & Clark, Northwestern Schoql of Law; Commissioner, ColumbiaRiver Gorge Commission.Mike Davis, Apache Survival Coalition.EASTERN EUROPEAN CLEANUP: WHERE DO WE BEGIN?Margaret Bowman, Director, Environmental Law Institute's Environmen-tal Program for Central and Eastern Europe.DavidHunter, SeniorStaffAttorney,Centerfor InternationalEnvironmen-tal Law and Director of the Central and Eastern Europe Program;Co-Director, Joint Research Program in International and ComparativeEnvironmental Law, American Univ.Tomas Ruzicka, Co-Founder, student environmental NGO "Green Tele-phone,"CharlesUniv., Prague;Member,CentralEuropeanEnvironmentalSeminar Steering Committee, 1990; Environmental Program Manager,U.S. Peace Corps, Czechoslovakia, 1991-92.SHORELINE PROTECTION: ERODINGTHE PUBLIC TRUSTJim Good, Specialist, Oregon State Univ./SEA Grant Program.Katherine Stone, attorney, Myers,Widders & Gibson, Ventura, Califor-nia, specializing in coastal issues; represented local governments asamicus in Nollan v. California Coastal Commission and Lucas v. SouthCarolina Coastal Council.Peg Reagan, Commissioner, Curry County; Member, Coastal NaturalHazards Policy Working Group, Oregon Coastal Zone ManagementAssociation, Oregon Seismic Safety Policy Advisory Commission, andseveral Oregon Counties comrpittees.ALASKAN STAT'" ~OVERNMENT'S ENVIRONMENTALDECEPTIONS .Carl Reller, environ~al researcher/scientist, The Alaska Health Project;past head environmental enforcer of Alaska; Director of SALT (Science

--'-'-and bawc-AgainstToxics). ~... ~ ~Dan O'Neill, Professor, Univ. of Alaska at Fairbanks; author of new booi<on Native Alaskans' fight to protect their land on Poi"t Hope fromgovernment destru' "DaleySambo, DirVntemational Union of Circumpolar Health basedin Alaska.

SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT: STRIKING A BALANCEJim Hester, Chief of Environment, Energy and Science Division of Bureaufor Latin America and the Caribbean, U.S. Agency for InternationalDevelopment, Washington, D.C.Alan Thein Durning, Senior Researcher, Worldwatch Institute, Washing-ton, D.C.; specializes in issues of the relationship between economicinequality and environmental degradation.

NATIVE CANADIANS AND THE LAWRupert Ross, Federal Department of Justice, Kenoia, Ontario, Canada.TBA

ASIAN ENVIRONMENTAL LAWMaria Paz Luna, attorney, E-LAW Philippines, and Tanggol Kalikasan,the legal arm of Haribon Foundation; Member, Free Legal AssistanceGroup; V.P., Women Lawyer's Circle.Lalanath'DeSilva, E-LAW Sri Lanka, Founder, Environmental Founda-tion Limited.Meena Raman, Co-founder, Consumers Association of Penang, the firstpublicinterestenvironmentalfirminsoutheastAsia. ,

Anand Grover, Lawyers Collective of Bombay, India (invited).

FRIDAY MARCH5,1993 4:30-6:00 P.M.OZONE, PLUGGING THE HOLEPenny Buell, attorney, Aquatic Resources Conservation Group,Salt Lake City, Utah; UO alum.Doug Park, student, Univ. of Oregon School of Law.TBA

ENVIRONMENTAL WRITERS/ARTISTS: TRANSLATINGFOR NATURETerry Tempest Williams, naturalist-in-residence; Utah Museumof Natu-ral History; Member. Governing Council of the Wilderness Society andrecipientof theNational WildlifeFederation's 1992ConservationAchieve-ment Award: author. "Pieces of White Shell," "Coyote's Canyon," and "Refuge,David Rothenberg, co-author, "Wisdom in the Open Air" ph D 'r"ph, .osoph' Bosto Uni\. spe t several years c01laborati"g ... ith Ame.,aess a: un v 0' Oslo

Sa1>dra Lopez 0Ca Oregor> boo, art'st

Page 7: 1993 - PIELC · role at the Earth Summit in Rio and has courageously pursued his activism,. '" ..d,2pite poJ!tJp~Jepres.§.ig1)., - "' '"~ -" "" ~ DR. GEORGE SCHALLER, Director, Wildlife

YEW TREES: SAViNG THEM AND SAVING USRoy Keene, Founder and Director, Public Forestry Foundation, Eugene,Oregon.James Love, Citizen Taxpayer Group (Ralph Nader), (invited).Sally Campbell, U.S. Forest Service, (invited).Diane Defuria, Bristol Myers Squibb, (invited).INDIAN RELIGIOUS ISSUES IIJohnny Flyn, Ph.D., Religious Studies, Univ. of California at SantaBarbara, 1991; Professor, Religious Studies, Univ. of Arizona.June Lorenzo, Senate Select Committee on Indian Affairs.

RIO: WHAT HAPPENED? WHAT NEXT?Randall Hayes, Founder and Director of Rainforest Action Network;producer,award-winningfilm,"The FourComers,A NationalSacrificeArea?"Sara James, see Keynote bios.Ann Patrick Hawkins, Assistant Professor, International StudiesProgram, Univ. of Oregon.HYDROELECTRIC DEVELOPMENT IN INDIA: SOCIAL ANDENVIRONMENTAL CONSEQUENCES .Hugh Brody, past Senior Advisor, resettlement and rehabilitation,lnde- '

pend!?nt Review of World Bank participation in the Narmada Dam Project.Lori Udal}, Envt'l De.fense Fund, Denver, International Program.TBA, representative from the Narmada Bachao Andolan Indian NGO oflocal indigenous. peoples.TBA, representative from World Bank.

CHILEAN ENVIRONMENTAL AND INDIGENOUS LAWEdUardo Astorga, Attorney/Director, Legal Program, National Commit-tee for the Defense of the Environment (CODEFF), Santiago, Chile.Jose Aylwin, Chilean Commission for Human Rights (specializing inindigenous issues), ChjJe.

SATURDAY MARCH 6,1993 8:15-9:45 A.M.INDIGENOUS PERSONS' PORTRAYAL TI1ROUGH THEEDUCATIONAL SYSTEMWilliam Wilson, graduate student, Educational Foundations Univ OfSaskatchewan; specializes in Environmental Edljpation; Co-Editor OfTalking Leaves Journal, Eugene, Oregon.Doreen Baptiste, CreeNation,CowessessRese~uth Saskatchewan,Canada; teacher for many years in BAND controlled schools, I.e. nativecontrolled schools.MarHyMlameS}withGanadian-Riv6fS'. I!'Jean-Marie Aurnague-DeSpain, educator for 20 yrs;Education Directorwith Maude KernsArt Center, incorporating multi-culturalismandenviron-mentalism.

NAFTA: CANADIAN PERSPECTIVES ~TBA'

MINING: RICHES OR RUINS?Susan Brandt-Hawley, private public-interest attorney.Larry Tuttle, Regional Director, The Wilderness Society; former DeschutesCounty Commissioner.Pat McGinley, Professor, Univ. West Virginia School of Law; privatepublic interest attorney; Co-Founder, Eastern Mineral Law Institute.

WHO DEFINES "SACRED"?: THE MOUNT GRAHAMCONTROVERSYOla Cassadore Davis, San Carlos Apache; Daughter of Late Clan ChiefCassadore; Blood Relative of Geronimo and Apache Kid; Chairperson,Apache Survival Coalition.Patricia Cummings, public interest attorney; has represented and ad-vised traditional elders and spiritual leaders.Robin Silver, M.D., Board Member, Apache Survival Coalition; Director,Southwest Center for Biodiversity; Conservation Committee, MaricopaAudubon Society.

OCEAN LAW RESOURCES: ISSUES FOR THE 90'SJon Jacobson, Professor of Law, Univ. of Oregon School of Law; Co-Director, Ocean and Coastal Law Center; expert, Law of the Sea.Paul Watson, Captain Sea Shepherd's Conservation Society.Garol Alexander, Independent Consultant of oil and gas issues; formeroffshore oil campaigner and policy analyst for Greenpeace. '

Ed Huber,SanctuaryManager,Gulfof the FarralonesNationalMarineSanctuary.REDEFININGTHE CORPORATION: NEW STRATEGIES FORENVIRONMENTAL AND ECONOMICJUSTICERichard Grossman, author, organizer; former Director of Environmental-ists for Full Employment and Greenpeace, USA,TBA

WORKSHOPMARCH 6,19938:15-11:15 A.M."WISE USE" MOVEMENT: CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIESFelice Pace, Director, Program Coordinator, Klamath Forest Alliance,promoting sustainable ecosystems and sustainable communities .in thE3Klamath Mountains of S.W. Oregon and N.W. California.TBA

SATURDAY MARCH 6, 199310:0Q.11 :30 A.M.nil ANn Fn~~11 FIIFI~' A VI~r,lml~ r,yr,1 F

NATIVE SOVEREIGNTY

Mililani Trask, see Keynote bios.Bill Caldwell, Statewide Litigation Attome~ Alaska ~ega, Se''. ces CO'Pspecializing in litigation asserting Alaska Native hunti'>g and "5"'; '1Q,.;g"15and self-government claims of Alaska Native tribes.Raymond Yowell (invited), Chief, Western Shoshone Natio"lal Cou"C

PUBLIC TRUST DOCTRINEGreg Cook, see Siberian Forest Issues.Richard Hildreth, Professor, Univ. of Oregon Law School; Co-DirectorUniv. of Oregon Ocean & Coastal Law Center; Member, Pacific IslandStudies Group and Australian Studies Committee.Casey Jarman, Professor, Univ. of Hawaii; founding member and steer-ing committee member ,of the Ocean Governance Study Group.Katherine Stone, see Shoreline Protection.

GRAZING: MOOING THE WESTJoseph Feller, Professor of Law, Arizona State Univ; specializes il'management of livestock grazing on federal public lands.Alice Eishoff, Vice-President of Oregon Natural Desert Association; 'ong-time desert activist and admitted "desert-rat."Stu Sugarman, President, Oregon Wildlife Federation; private pub 'Cinterest environmental attorney.A. Joy Belsky, Visiting Scientist; Ecosystem Research Center, ColumbaUniv,

DAMNED DAMS: FOUR COUNTRIES, FOUR PROJECTSGlen Cooper,. Administrative Assistant, Embassy of the Cree -..at.C>r'

member, Waswanipi First Nations; concentrates on *'e IigI1t aga"'1sThydro-electric projects on Cree territory.Eduardo Astorga,see Chileon Environmenta, aN! ndigenQus La'.Adam Berger, see Salmon: Habitat and Hydroelectric ssuesHugh Brody, past Senior Advisor resettl6fT1ef\' a~ re/'1a!) '.a:~ 'Ofindependent review of Narmada [)a,m

SATURDAY MAR.cH6. 1993 4:30-6:00 P.M.

CANADIAN INDIGENOUS PEOPLES ISSUESGlen Cooper. see Da""'1ed Da.'"1SMarilyn James, ~':r Ca."Iadia"~: e R .6fS ......Doreen Baptiste. see ndlgenous Persons Po'1ra. rough 'he

Education System. ----OVERPOPULATION AND THE ENVIRONMENT: LIFE IN BALANCEDayld[)urham, attorney, Founder and Chair, Carrying Capacity Network,W1:fshiiigtOh, D:C.Dr. Albert Bartlett, Educator, Physicist, Department of Physics, Astro-physics, Univ. Of Colorado.

NAFTA ROUND TABLE SYMPOSIUMTBA

WETLANDS MITIGATION

Jim McElfish, Senior Attorney, Environmental Law Institute; lead role atELI in wetland's mitigation banking study for Army Corp. of Engineers and EPA.Ken Bierly, Manager, Wetlands Unit, Oregon Division of State Lands; recipi-ent, 1992 National Wetlands Protection Award; played key role in developmentof comprehensive wetlands legislation. enacted in Oregon in 1989.Tom Goldtooth, Environmental Coordinator, Red Lake Band of ChippewaIndians, Minnesota nad National Council Officer of the IndigenousEnvironmental Network.

AUSTRALIAN ABORIGINES AND THE LANDViv Sinnamon, graduate of James.Cook Univ, Australia; organizer, LandDegradation Conference and workshops in Kowanyama; developing linkbetween Kowanyama and Native American Fisheries Management.A~en Ridgeway, Member, Gumbaingerri tribe; steering committeemem-ber working on an Australian conference on Aboriginal Culture andHeritage; former Aboriginal Assessor for the New South Wales Land andEnvironmental Court.Henrietta Fourmile, Coordinator for the Center for Aboriginal and Torres StraitIslander Participation; Research and Development, James Cook Univ. Australia.Noel Pearson, Co-Director, Cape York Land Council, Far NorthQueensland, Australia; active force in reclaiming aboriginal land titles.HEMP FOR VICTORY!Diane Albino,local hemp activist; traveled extensively in Central America.Dennis'Perron, President, American Medical Marijuana Movement.Paul Loney, attorney, American Anti-Prohibition League; Board of Direc-tors, Oregon Wildlife Federation.Jack Herer, H.E.M.P., author, "The Emperor Wears No Clothes," whichuncovered U.S. Government complicity with industry and media to distrib-ute disinformation in order to prohibit production of hemp.William Conde, C&S Specialty Builders' Supply; Conde's Redwood Lumber;uses no old growth wood products; activist for industrial hemp fiber use.

OLD HEALING ARTS AND CONTEMPORARY CULTURELuata Lawrence, Medicine Woman; author, "Another Child's Journey."Alexia, retired occupational therapist now teaching ancient Egyptianhealing traditions.Diana Stone, practicing astrologer in Portland, OR; background In a widevildety of t;t;ealingarts and networking.

SUNDAY MARCH7, 19938:45-10:15 A.M.WOMEN AND LAND

Page 8: 1993 - PIELC · role at the Earth Summit in Rio and has courageously pursued his activism,. '" ..d,2pite poJ!tJp~Jepres.§.ig1)., - "' '"~ -" "" ~ DR. GEORGE SCHALLER, Director, Wildlife

if "'''"Y '-'lUll"",UI "fJ..dl,;.., DVdlU VI UJI..I,;IVr::;, VVe::;leffi ;:'li:He::; LegalFoundation, linkingglobaldisarmament,peace andenvironmental issues.Dorothy Smlti1,GlobalWarming Campaign, Greenpeace, Anchorage,Alaska; organizer and. lobbyist on issues related to offshore oil & gasdevelopment.Carol Alexander, see Ocean Law and Resources: Issues for the 90s.Warren Matumeak, Special Assistant, Arctic Slope Regional Corpora-tion; elder from Barrow, Alaska; lifetime subsistence hunter.

NATIVE RELIGION,CHRISTIANITYANDFEDERALINDIANPOLICYAI Smith, defendant in case in which the U.S. Supreme Court held thatSmith's First Amendment religious freedom rightswere not violated whenhe was fired for having participated in a Native American Church cer-emony in which peyote was used.Steve Newcomb, Shawnee-Delaware Native American; Co-Founder ofthe Indigenous Law Institute; author, "The Evidence of Christian Nation-ali~ in Federal Indian Law."NAFTA: U.S. PERSPECTIVESNaomi Roht-Arriaza, Assistant Professor,HastingsCollege of Law;workincludes environment and trade issues with Greenpeace International;Board Member, Greenpeace, USA.Michael Gregory, Director, Arizona Toxics Information, Inc., focusing onenvironmental,health,humanrightsandother issuessurroundingNAFTA.Dan Goldrich, Professor, Political Science, Univ. of Oregon; concentrat-ing on sustainable growth and the economic integration of the Americas;grassroots NAFTA politicalorganizerwith the OregonFairTrade Coalition.Dick Kamp, Director,BorderEcology Project,Bisbee,Arizona, a nonprofitnongovernmental organization along the U.S.-Mexico border.ANIMAL DAMAGE CONTROL: PREYING UPON PREDATORSDick Randall, Ex-ADC Hunter; Humane Society Field Agent, RockSprings, Wyoming.Susan Haygood, Wildlife Issues Specialist in the Wildlife and HabitatProtection Section of the Humane Society, Washington, D.C.SteveKoteff, see Cow-Free Wilderness.Nancy Zierenberg, Co-Founder, Wildlife Damage Review, which iscommitted to the end of the federal ADC program.DEEI' ECOLOGY: DELIBERATE LIVINGLou Gold, Pied Piper of Ecologicalldealism;former Professor of Ameri-can Government and Urban Politics.KuizLopez KalliKalkoatl, see'Environmental Artists: Ecovisions.Joanne Rand, musician, activist, and spiritualist.NATURAL RESOURCE DAMAGE ASSESSMENTRandall B.Luthi, Senior Counselor! Environment?.!.!3.egulationsOffice ofNOAA, Washington D.C.; Project Manager forU lution and NaturalResource Damage Assessment Regulations.,Craig O'Connor, Special Counsel, NaturalResources, NOAA,Washing-ton, D.C.; oversees damage assessment and restoration program.l{dtl.6j ine A.Pease, Senior Counsel, NaturalResources.NOAA,WaS'1-ington, D.C.; responsiblefor legal issues related to damage assessmentsto natural resources from hazardous substance release.MollyHolt,staff attorney, NOAA; formerly, Calif.' -. . Attorney General;UO alum. ~Mike'Wenig, Director, Trustees for Alaska.SIBERIAN FOREST ISSUESGary Cook, Executive Director, Baikal Watch Project, Earth Island Insti-tute; UO alum.TatYtna Kolchugina, visiting Research Associate, civil engineering,Oregon State Univ; Russian Carbon Program.Vera Mishchenko,visiting lawyer,E-LAW; Russianenvironmental advo-cate, Co-Founder of Eco Juris, 1O-womanenvironmentallaw firm.Michael Goldstein, Professor, Univ.of Oregon School of Law; specialistin Russian Law; former lecturer in Irkutsk, Siberia.Dave Gordon, Director, Siberian Forest Protection Project.

SATURDAY MARCH 6, 1993 2:30-4:00 P.M.DESTRUCTION BY SALVAGE: OREGON'S BLUE MOUNTAINSKaren Coulter and Asante R/verwind, Blue Mountains BiodiversityProject, Fossil, Oregon; monitors salvage logging in eastern Oregon.ENVIRONMENTAL PARACHUTING: AN ECOCENTRICASSAULT?Kit Armstrong, Counsel for Environment Health and Safety, ChevronOverseas Petroleum, Inc.; formerly with the U.S.EPA.Byron Real, attorney, E-LAW"Ecuador; President of CORDAVI

, (CorporaciondeDefensadelaVida),Quito,Ecuador;CORDAVI'scaseinvolving Amazon Basin oil contaminations was chosen for a hearingbefore the International Water Tribunal at the Hague.Chip Barber, Associate, PrograminBiological Resourcesand Institutionsof the World Resources Institute; formerly an environmental anddevelop-ment consultant in Indonesia.Cinnamon Dornsifes, Program Director, Asian 'Affairs, U.S.~AsiaEnvironmental Partnership.NAFTA: MEXICAN PERSPECTIVESEnrique Gonzales Ruiz, Professor of Law and Economics, Institute ofEconomic Investigations, Univ. of Mexico; human rights lawyer.Mari ClaireAcosta, President,Autonomous Human RightsCommission,Mexico.

Johnny Flyn, see Indian Religious Issues IIPROSECUTION OF FELONY ENVIRONMENTAL CRIMESSteveBurtnett, trial lawyer heading the Environmental Crime Unit, SanBernadino County, California, District Attorney's Office.Jj§ff KentfAssistant U.S. Attorney; recipient of two Departmentof Justicespecial awards; headed up Operation Grey Lord, the sting operation ofunethical federal judges in the Chicago area.Lisa Brown,Deputy DistrictAttorney incharge ofenvironmental prosecu-tion, San Joaquin County, California.EXPONENTIALPOPULATIONGROWTH: ENOUGHALREADY!Kenneth Townsend, President, Virginia Association of Economists; Chair,Department of Economics, Hampden-Sydney College, Virginia; special-izing in sustainable environmental policy in the former East Block countries.Kelpie Wilson, network coordinator for Lou Gold's national network ofAncient Forest activists; Redwood Summer organizer.

PRESERVATION OF INDIGENOUS SACRED SITES IN OREGON.Calvin Hecocta, see Worker's: Common Ground.Carol Logan, Co-Founder, Willamette Valley Sacred Sites PreservationCommittee; descendent, Yon calla, Clackmas and Wasco tribes.TBA, two speakers to be elected by elders of various Oregon tribes March3 and 4, 1993, for the purpose of addressing this issue on this panel to theConference.

AUSTRALIAN ENVIRONMENTAL LAWMatthew Baird, Solicitor and Elected Alderman; Founder/Dir., AustraliaPublic Interest Environmental Law Conference; E-LAW Australia.David Mossop, attorney, E-LAW Australia and Environmental Defender's'Office, Sydney.Robert Fowler, Professor of Environmental Law, University of Adelaide,Australia.

SOUTH AMERICAN ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUESDr. Alberto Kattan, Argentina's foremost environmental litigator; createdcitizen suit standing from ancient Roman law; won cases banning AgentOrange, tobacco advertising, taking of dolphins.Dr. Susana Castiglione, Professor of Law, Univ. of Buenos Aires; privateenvironmental' lawyer, Argentina,Claudia Mora, attorney, Fundepublico, Bogata, Columbia; working on oilspills, toxic contamination, citizen suits.

SUNDAY MARCH7,199310:30-12:00 A.M.MRSs: THE BURIAL OF SPENT NUCLEAR FUEL RODS ONINDIAN RESERVATIONS '"'

Lance Hughes, Head of Native Americans for a Clean rl -'nment.Mark Maryboy, Commissioner, San Juan County, Utah; ~er, NavajoTribal Council.Grace Thorpe ~.4RSact's' part-tomed S'"c rou.rt ..-dge and '"'€a: hcorn..~g ~ C'-..a.~ .-.sn_'"'Ef"3 ."~ ~ ~ ~ c..:ta.'~0"1Sto return their MRS grants and WIthdraw frorr11he appncahonprocessENVIRONMENTAL TAXES

Nancy Shurtz, Professor, Univ. of Oregon School of Lav J~ializing intax law; currently writing book "Using Tax Incentives 'lSifotect TheEnvironment."Quincy Sugarman, pollution prevention specialist, Oregon StudentPublic Interest Research Group.James M.Whitty, General Counsel, Associated Oregon Industries.

CORAL REEF DEGRADATIONDr. Michael Risk, McMasters Univ. Department of Geology/Oceanography.Jessica Abbe, Director, The Coral Forest; 'currently producing a docu-mentary film on the coral. reef crisis.Howard Latin, Professor of Environmental Law, Rutgers School of Law;author, "The Mirage of International Environmental Law."

POPULATION: TOO MANY PEOPLEGarrett Hardin, Professor Emeritus, Human Ecology, Univ. of CalifO,rniaat Santa Barbara; author, "Tragedy of the Commons."Virginia Abernathy, Ph.D., Professor of Anthropology, Vanderbilt Univ.,Tennessee; Editor, Population and Environment; author, "PopulationPressureand Cultural Adjustment" and"Population Politics: The Choicesthat Shape Our Future."WHY HAVE WHITE MEN DOMINATEDTHE ENVIRONMEN-TAL MOVEMENT?Allen Hancock, Resource Specialist, Oregon Natural Resources Council.Christopher Forrest McDowell, environmental psychologist, historianand philosopher with a special interest in gender issues.Louis Carosio, psychotherapist in private practice; active in the men'smovement for 1"7years.

HUMAN RIGHTSTHREATS TO ENVIRONMENTALLAWYERSA panel is being created with invitees from such groups as Asia Watch,Intemational Human Rights Law Group, Amnesty Intemational, and others,

WORKSHOPS SUNDAY,MARCH7, 1993 8:30-11:30 A.M.tJSING AND PRACTICING LAW AS A HEALING ARTJ. Marc McGinness, Discussion Leader, Legal Ecologist and Er' '0"-mental Lawyer.RESEARCHING CORPORATE CHARTERSRichard Grossman, see Redefining Corpora';ons.