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Early Bird Registration - 2021 Hawaiʻi Conservation Conference

  • 01 Jun 2021

Register for the 2021 Hawaiʻi Conservation Conference!

 

The 2021 Hawaiʻi Conservation Conference - Kūlia i ka huliau - Striving for change will be a virtual Conference held on Tuesday July 27th - Thursday July 29th of 2021 hosted by the Hawaiʻi Conservation Alliance. The Conference is an opportunity that allows a diverse group of scientists, policymakers, conservation practitioners, educators, students and community members from Hawaiʻi and the Pacific to converge and discuss conservation. It’s a time to connect, share and inspire, all with the common goal of caring for our natural resources.

 


 

Register Today!!

We are pleased to announce that registration is open for the 2021 Hawaiʻi Conservation Conference! Your registration will give you access to all 3 days of Conference and networking opportunities. We are offering an Early Bird Rate of $165 through June 1st. In addition, there are several other registration discounts available. Click the button below to learn more about pricing and how to register.

 

Register Here!

 


 

Kūlia i ka huliau - Striving for Change!

Transforming the future of biodiversity

 

Transforming the way we do conservation

 

Transforming the way we live and interact with our environment

Kūlia i ka Huliau (loosely translating to strive at the turning point) speaks to the demand of our current times that we work collaboratively to forge a new Hawaiʻi. The pandemic has marked a turning point, forcing a rethink of how we should live and work in our special place. And we have already been facing swift and dramatic changes to our ecosystems with profound impacts on biodiversity and human wellbeing. Now is the time to strive to affect changes that could be forged lest we revert to a comfortable “business as usual” that has proven unsustainable and prone to disruption. It clearly showed us how tenuous and vulnerable our externally-facing visitor economy is. It also showed us the benefits of a lighter human footprint on our living resources, and how we should consciously rework to minimize our impacts as well as take action to protect and strengthen the resilience of our life-sustaining lands and waters.

 


 

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