date: 2021-10-12T04:40:16Z pdf:unmappedUnicodeCharsPerPage: 17 pdf:PDFVersion: 1.7 pdf:docinfo:title: Project Earthrise: Proceedings of the Ninth Annual Conference of inVIVO Planetary Health xmp:CreatorTool: LaTeX with hyperref Keywords: planetary health; grand challenges; Anthropocene; Symbiocene; collaboration; interdependence; social and economic justice; interdisciplinary research; resilience thinking; the great transition; biodiversity losses; climate change; environmental degradation; public health; ecology; anthropology; political/social/environmental sciences; philosophy; geography; spirituality; human culture; history and tradition; architecture and design; arts; ethics; wisdom; and Indigenous governance access_permission:modify_annotations: true access_permission:can_print_degraded: true subject: The ?Earthrise? photograph, taken on the 1968 Apollo 8 mission, became one of the most significant images of the 20th Century. It triggered a profound shift in environmental awareness and the potential for human unity?inspiring the first Earth Day in 1970. Taking inspiration from these events 50 years later, we initiated Project Earthrise at our 2020 annual conference of inVIVO Planetary Health. This builds on the emergent concept of planetary health, which provides a shared narrative to integrate rich and diverse approaches from all aspects of society towards shared solutions to global challenges. The acute catastrophe of the COVID-19 pandemic has drawn greater attention to many other interconnected global health, environmental, social, spiritual, and economic problems that have been underappreciated or neglected for decades. This is accelerating opportunities for greater collaborative action, as many groups now focus on the necessity of a ?Great Transition?. While ambitious integrative efforts have never been more important, it is imperative to apply these with mutualistic value systems as a compass, as we seek to make wiser choices. Project Earthrise is our contribution to this important process. This underscores the imperative for creative ecological solutions to challenges in all systems, on all scales with advancing global urbanization in the digital age?for personal, environmental, economic and societal health alike. At the same time, our agenda seeks to equally consider our social and spiritual ecology as it does natural ecology. Revisiting the inspiration of ?Earthrise?, we welcome diverse perspectives from across all dimensions of the arts and the sciences, to explore novel solutions and new normative values. Building on academic rigor, we seek to place greater value on imagination, kindness and mutualism as we address our greatest challenges, for the health of people, places and planet. dc:creator: Susan L. Prescott, Ganesa Wegienka, Remco Kort, David H. Nelson, Sabine Gabrysch, Trevor Hancock, Anita Kozyrskyj, Christopher A. Lowry, Nicole Redvers, Blake Poland, Jake Robinson, Jean-Claude Moubarac, Sara Warber, Janet Jansson, Aki Sinkkonen, John Penders, Susan Erdman, Ralph Nanan, Matilda van den Bosch, Kirk Schneider, Nicholas J. Schroeck, Tanja Sobko, Jamie Harvie, George A. Kaplan, Rob Moodie, Laura Lengnick, Isaac Prilleltensky, Yuria Celidwen, Susan H. Berman, Alan C. Logan and Brian Berman dcterms:created: 2021-10-12T04:15:40Z Last-Modified: 2021-10-12T04:40:16Z dcterms:modified: 2021-10-12T04:40:16Z dc:format: application/pdf; version=1.7 title: Project Earthrise: Proceedings of the Ninth Annual Conference of inVIVO Planetary Health Last-Save-Date: 2021-10-12T04:40:16Z pdf:docinfo:creator_tool: LaTeX with hyperref access_permission:fill_in_form: true pdf:docinfo:keywords: planetary health; grand challenges; Anthropocene; Symbiocene; collaboration; interdependence; social and economic justice; interdisciplinary research; resilience thinking; the great transition; biodiversity losses; climate change; environmental degradation; public health; ecology; anthropology; political/social/environmental sciences; philosophy; geography; spirituality; human culture; history and tradition; architecture and design; arts; ethics; wisdom; and Indigenous governance pdf:docinfo:modified: 2021-10-12T04:40:16Z meta:save-date: 2021-10-12T04:40:16Z pdf:encrypted: false dc:title: Project Earthrise: Proceedings of the Ninth Annual Conference of inVIVO Planetary Health modified: 2021-10-12T04:40:16Z cp:subject: The ?Earthrise? photograph, taken on the 1968 Apollo 8 mission, became one of the most significant images of the 20th Century. It triggered a profound shift in environmental awareness and the potential for human unity?inspiring the first Earth Day in 1970. Taking inspiration from these events 50 years later, we initiated Project Earthrise at our 2020 annual conference of inVIVO Planetary Health. This builds on the emergent concept of planetary health, which provides a shared narrative to integrate rich and diverse approaches from all aspects of society towards shared solutions to global challenges. The acute catastrophe of the COVID-19 pandemic has drawn greater attention to many other interconnected global health, environmental, social, spiritual, and economic problems that have been underappreciated or neglected for decades. This is accelerating opportunities for greater collaborative action, as many groups now focus on the necessity of a ?Great Transition?. While ambitious integrative efforts have never been more important, it is imperative to apply these with mutualistic value systems as a compass, as we seek to make wiser choices. Project Earthrise is our contribution to this important process. This underscores the imperative for creative ecological solutions to challenges in all systems, on all scales with advancing global urbanization in the digital age?for personal, environmental, economic and societal health alike. At the same time, our agenda seeks to equally consider our social and spiritual ecology as it does natural ecology. Revisiting the inspiration of ?Earthrise?, we welcome diverse perspectives from across all dimensions of the arts and the sciences, to explore novel solutions and new normative values. Building on academic rigor, we seek to place greater value on imagination, kindness and mutualism as we address our greatest challenges, for the health of people, places and planet. pdf:docinfo:subject: The ?Earthrise? photograph, taken on the 1968 Apollo 8 mission, became one of the most significant images of the 20th Century. It triggered a profound shift in environmental awareness and the potential for human unity?inspiring the first Earth Day in 1970. Taking inspiration from these events 50 years later, we initiated Project Earthrise at our 2020 annual conference of inVIVO Planetary Health. This builds on the emergent concept of planetary health, which provides a shared narrative to integrate rich and diverse approaches from all aspects of society towards shared solutions to global challenges. The acute catastrophe of the COVID-19 pandemic has drawn greater attention to many other interconnected global health, environmental, social, spiritual, and economic problems that have been underappreciated or neglected for decades. This is accelerating opportunities for greater collaborative action, as many groups now focus on the necessity of a ?Great Transition?. While ambitious integrative efforts have never been more important, it is imperative to apply these with mutualistic value systems as a compass, as we seek to make wiser choices. Project Earthrise is our contribution to this important process. This underscores the imperative for creative ecological solutions to challenges in all systems, on all scales with advancing global urbanization in the digital age?for personal, environmental, economic and societal health alike. At the same time, our agenda seeks to equally consider our social and spiritual ecology as it does natural ecology. Revisiting the inspiration of ?Earthrise?, we welcome diverse perspectives from across all dimensions of the arts and the sciences, to explore novel solutions and new normative values. Building on academic rigor, we seek to place greater value on imagination, kindness and mutualism as we address our greatest challenges, for the health of people, places and planet. Content-Type: application/pdf pdf:docinfo:creator: Susan L. Prescott, Ganesa Wegienka, Remco Kort, David H. Nelson, Sabine Gabrysch, Trevor Hancock, Anita Kozyrskyj, Christopher A. Lowry, Nicole Redvers, Blake Poland, Jake Robinson, Jean-Claude Moubarac, Sara Warber, Janet Jansson, Aki Sinkkonen, John Penders, Susan Erdman, Ralph Nanan, Matilda van den Bosch, Kirk Schneider, Nicholas J. Schroeck, Tanja Sobko, Jamie Harvie, George A. Kaplan, Rob Moodie, Laura Lengnick, Isaac Prilleltensky, Yuria Celidwen, Susan H. Berman, Alan C. Logan and Brian Berman X-Parsed-By: org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser creator: Susan L. Prescott, Ganesa Wegienka, Remco Kort, David H. Nelson, Sabine Gabrysch, Trevor Hancock, Anita Kozyrskyj, Christopher A. Lowry, Nicole Redvers, Blake Poland, Jake Robinson, Jean-Claude Moubarac, Sara Warber, Janet Jansson, Aki Sinkkonen, John Penders, Susan Erdman, Ralph Nanan, Matilda van den Bosch, Kirk Schneider, Nicholas J. Schroeck, Tanja Sobko, Jamie Harvie, George A. Kaplan, Rob Moodie, Laura Lengnick, Isaac Prilleltensky, Yuria Celidwen, Susan H. Berman, Alan C. Logan and Brian Berman meta:author: Susan L. Prescott, Ganesa Wegienka, Remco Kort, David H. Nelson, Sabine Gabrysch, Trevor Hancock, Anita Kozyrskyj, Christopher A. Lowry, Nicole Redvers, Blake Poland, Jake Robinson, Jean-Claude Moubarac, Sara Warber, Janet Jansson, Aki Sinkkonen, John Penders, Susan Erdman, Ralph Nanan, Matilda van den Bosch, Kirk Schneider, Nicholas J. Schroeck, Tanja Sobko, Jamie Harvie, George A. Kaplan, Rob Moodie, Laura Lengnick, Isaac Prilleltensky, Yuria Celidwen, Susan H. Berman, Alan C. Logan and Brian Berman dc:subject: planetary health; grand challenges; Anthropocene; Symbiocene; collaboration; interdependence; social and economic justice; interdisciplinary research; resilience thinking; the great transition; biodiversity losses; climate change; environmental degradation; public health; ecology; anthropology; political/social/environmental sciences; philosophy; geography; spirituality; human culture; history and tradition; architecture and design; arts; ethics; wisdom; and Indigenous governance meta:creation-date: 2021-10-12T04:15:40Z created: 2021-10-12T04:15:40Z access_permission:extract_for_accessibility: true access_permission:assemble_document: true xmpTPg:NPages: 101 Creation-Date: 2021-10-12T04:15:40Z pdf:charsPerPage: 4495 access_permission:extract_content: true access_permission:can_print: true meta:keyword: planetary health; grand challenges; Anthropocene; Symbiocene; collaboration; interdependence; social and economic justice; interdisciplinary research; resilience thinking; the great transition; biodiversity losses; climate change; environmental degradation; public health; ecology; anthropology; political/social/environmental sciences; philosophy; geography; spirituality; human culture; history and tradition; architecture and design; arts; ethics; wisdom; and Indigenous governance Author: Susan L. Prescott, Ganesa Wegienka, Remco Kort, David H. Nelson, Sabine Gabrysch, Trevor Hancock, Anita Kozyrskyj, Christopher A. Lowry, Nicole Redvers, Blake Poland, Jake Robinson, Jean-Claude Moubarac, Sara Warber, Janet Jansson, Aki Sinkkonen, John Penders, Susan Erdman, Ralph Nanan, Matilda van den Bosch, Kirk Schneider, Nicholas J. Schroeck, Tanja Sobko, Jamie Harvie, George A. Kaplan, Rob Moodie, Laura Lengnick, Isaac Prilleltensky, Yuria Celidwen, Susan H. Berman, Alan C. Logan and Brian Berman producer: pdfTeX-1.40.21 access_permission:can_modify: true pdf:docinfo:producer: pdfTeX-1.40.21 pdf:docinfo:created: 2021-10-12T04:15:40Z