Panel Discussion: Cultivating Hope in the Season of Creation

Location: Annenberg Auditorium, Snite Research Center (View on map )

In a world where hope is often in short supply, Notre Dame continues to be committed to creating a more sustainable and prosperous future for all of us. Join students, faculty, and staff for an engaging panel discussion to learn about the operational and academic projects happening on and around campus that will cultivate hope for our future and inspire action in each of us to care for our common home.

Are you teaching a course related to sustainability? We can offer extra credit sign-in sheets for your students to join the discussion. Email green@nd.edu to request a sign-in sheet today.

Registration is not required, but is requested for planning purposes.

Meet the panelists:

Headshot of a young woman with long, curly red hair, a cream-colored blazer, and gold hoop earrings. She is smiling at the camera in a blurred hallway setting.

Elsa Barron, PhD student in Peace Studies & Political Science at the Kroc Institute. Elsa is an environmental peacebuilding and climate justice researcher, writer, poet, and activist. Through her research, she is interested in understanding political processes of truth and reconciliation and the political influence of liberation theology movements. She is exploring opportunities to apply these concepts and processes to international climate diplomacy and climate justice movements. Elsa collaborates on related topics as a program associate with the Institute for Climate and Peace, a climate justice organization based in Hawai’i. She has previously worked at the Center for Climate and Security, Faith in Place, the Payne Institute for Public Policy, the Wilson Center Environmental Change and Security Program, and the NGO Committee on Financing for Development. Her faith and climate advocacy have been featured in CBS News, Rolling Stone, and the Christian Science Monitor, among others. She has attended COP26, 27, and 28 through the Christian Climate Observers Program, and she is now one of three co-directors of that initiative, which is a partnership of twelve faith-based environmental NGOs.

 

Woman with shoulder-length, wavy blonde hair, wearing a turquoise v-neck shirt, smiles in front of flowering bushes.

Theri Niemier, adjunct faculty in the College of Science and Farm Director & Regenerative Farming Education Specialist at Good Shepherd Montessori School. Theri's history includes over 25 years of regenerative farming design and education. Theri has partnered with the University of Notre Dame for many years and serves as an adjunct in the minor of Sustainability. Her Notre Dame students work on the urban farm while learning about the ecological benefits of sustainable farming. Theri founded Bertrand Farm Inc., an educational farm in Niles, Michigan, in 1996, and in 2020 moved to the city in partnership with Good Shepherd Montessori School to create an urban agriculture learning center for GSMS and the greater community. Theri is a certified permaculture designer, a master canner, and the recipient of the 2019 Conservation Educator of the Year in St. Joseph County, Indiana.

 

 

 

 

 

 

A smiling man with curly blond hair, wearing a black fleece jacket, stands in front of the ND-LEEF wooden structure.

Brett Peters, Assistant Director of the Linked Experimental Ecosystem Facility (ND-LEEF), a program of the Environmental Change Initiative (ECI). Brett manages the day-to-day operations at ND-LEEF including the coordination of research, maintenance and construction activities. Additionally, Brett develops and administers much of the outreach programming at ND-LEEF, which includes educational programs for k-12 students and presentations and tours for internal and external partners and organizations. Brett Received his M.S. in Biology from the University of Notre Dame and a B.S. in Fisheries and Wildlife Management from Michigan State. University.

 

 

 

Headshot of Karim Tinoco

Karim Tinoco, Sustainable Foods & Kitchen Program Manager at the University of Notre Dame. With over 10 years of experience in the food & beverage industry and a Master of Science in Sustainable Food Systems, Karim combines industry expertise with academic insight to develop innovative, resilient, and environmentally responsible food programs.He leads initiatives in strategic collaborations, sustainable procurement, food waste reduction, and community engagement through Notre Dame’s operations and purchasing. Karim is passionate about leveraging data and research to provide economically viable solutions to environmental and social challenges. Through his work, Notre Dame has strengthened its commitment to sustainability by reducing waste, celebrating supplier partnerships, and advancing initiatives that balance environmental stewardship, social responsibility, and operational excellence.

 

 

 

 

 

Close-up of a person with shoulder-length brown hair, light eyes, and a slight smile, wearing a red sweater, in front of a light-colored window with a wooden frame.

Danielle Wood (moderator), Danielle Wood serves as the Director of the Global Adaptation Initiative and an associate professor of the practice at the Environmental Change Initiative. She has concurrent faculty appointments with the Keough School of Public Affairs, Civil and Environmental Engineering and Earth Sciences in the College of Engineering, and is a faculty affiliate with the Lucy Family Institute for Data and Society. Wood received her Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in Urban and Regional Planning with an additional focus in evaluation from the LaFollette School of Public Affairs. Prior to her doctoral studies, she held consulting, nonprofit, and government positions in the U.S. and abroad focused on land use, environmental impact assessment, and conservation and sustainability planning. As a transdisciplinary, mixed-methods researcher, Wood has research interests in climate resilience and adaptation decision-support and planning, research translation processes, asset-based and sustainable development, community engagement and collective impact strategies, and evaluation in complex environments.

 

 

 

 

Originally published at green.nd.edu.

Originally published at environmentalchange.nd.edu.