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Regenerative Agriculture: A Strategy for Decolonizing Science, Management, Ownership, Governance

Nov 2, 2022 - 3:20 PM
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regenerative agriculture

The Graduate Program and Sustainable Agriculture, Departments of Horticulture and Agronomy, The Leopold Center for Sustainable Agriculture, and the CALS Office of Diversity and Inclusion Programs invite you to join us for:

"Regenerative Agriculture: A Strategy for Decolonizing Science, Management, Ownership, Governance"

with 

Reginaldo Haslett-Marroquin

Come mentally prepared to be introduced to a whole new way of thinking, of knowing, of learning, of being that defines the ancestral indigenous systems that have been regenerating whole ecosystems and protecting them so that we may have a blueprint for how to move forward as we have come to a scientifically verifiable point where in the name of food and feeding the world, we have successfully achieved to build systems that effectively destroy the ecological, economic, and social infrastructure on which we actually depend to feed the world. Utilizing a Regenerative Poultry System design, Regi will walk you through this process as the system deploys in real time across the tri-state region of MN-WI and IA.

 

Reginaldo (Regi) Haslett-Marroquin is an owner-founder of Regeneration Farms LLC, and Founder of the Regenerative Agriculture Alliance. He served as a consultant for the United Nations Development Program's Bureau for Latin America, as an advisor to the World Council of Indigenous Peoples, and was a founding member of the Fair-Trade Federation in 1994.  At the Regenerative Agriculture Alliance, Regi works on system-level strategies designed for global application, currently, his work covers communities in the US (Bordering region of MN, IA and WI, Omaha, Mead and Winnebago NE, Pine Ridge SD), Hazelton British Columbia, Mexico, and Guatemala. Regi currently lives and farms at Salvatierra Farms, a 75-acre family farm home to Tree-Range chickens in Northfield Minnesota.  

regenerative agriculture