RESCHEDULED Before They Vanish - Gerardo Ceballos

Start: 2025-10-21 12:00:00 UTC Pacific Daylight Time (US & Canada) (GMT-07:00)

End: 2025-10-21 13:00:00 UTC Pacific Daylight Time (US & Canada) (GMT-07:00)

A link to attend this virtual event will be emailed upon RSVP

photo of Gerardo Ceballos

Our September 2025 Buen Vivir Speaker, Gerardo Ceballos, had to be rescheduled to October 21.

Dr. Gerardo Ceballos is an award-winning global environmental scientist with a specialty in animal conservation and extinction and professor at the Institute of Ecology at Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM). His efforts toward preservation of Mexico’s biodiversity have contributed to the creation of protected area equivalent to 2 percent of the country’s landmass, as well as the creation of the first Mexican endangered species act. The author or co-author of 52 books, Dr. Ceballos works through his organization Stop Extinction to increase the ecological literacy of the general public.

The Buen Vivir campaign includes a monthly series of talks on global social and climate justice. “Buen Vivir” is the most common translation for the indigenous Quechua concept of Sumak Kawsay, life lived in harmony with nature and community. While it is sometimes translated into English as A Good Life, Buen Vivir relates to a deeper understanding of how humankind, and the impacts of our lives, affect the planet and each other.

The monthly talk series will feature expert speakers in facilitated discussion addressing Buen Vivir issues affecting the world’s working populations. Speakers will alternate from global south and global north regions bringing together the voices of the most affected and those who benefit, connecting the dots of our impact. By illuminating and linking the effects of continuing unjust extractivism on the lives, livelihoods and resource-rich physical lands of global south peoples, and discussing the many opportunities to address the impacts, we hope to position the social justice issue clearly at the center of the climate justice conversation in Turtle Island and beyond.