The 2021 theme, ‘REIMAGINE. RECREATE. RESTORE’ calls for collective action and reiterates that a clean and healthy environment is central to addressing the greatest and most complex challenges of our times. Only by fueling innovative solutions for water-food-energy security, reimagining production-consumption patterns, greening urban planning, protecting water bodies and addressing socioeconomic and sociopolitical complexities within the management of natural resources like land and water, would we be able to truly become #GenerationRestoration. This ambitious, 10-year vision for the future beckons investments in science and information, cross-cutting collaborations, multidimensional discourses, diplomacy backed by evidence, and innovative environmental governance aimed at achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
Against this background, join us as we welcome domain experts across diverse geographical contexts and leading organisations on environmental/sustainability research and development to discuss the cross-cutting approaches and implications operating within the greatest environmental challenges of our times. In doing so, the session will navigate through the interconnectedness between land, water, communities, conflicts, resilience and environmental governance while also decoding the geopolitical and socioeconomic links within natural resource management.
The key questions this webinar aims to answer include:
Opening Remarks and Programme Overview
Sustainable Futures: UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration – a compelling call!
Panel Discussion
Redistributing Resilience – Transformation and Political Capabilities in Post-Disaster Settings
Reimagining Green Cities, Restored Landscapes, and Recreated Job Market for Vulnerable Communities in Latin American and Caribbean
Desalination and Cross-Border Complexities: Negotiating Solutions for Regional Environmental Governance
Turkey’s Water Diplomacy Framework and Environmental Governance: Challenges and Prospects
Youth Voice: Innovative Engagement Tools for Environmental Governance
Q & A
Closing Remarks