The Future of Water


Join us April 22 2022 for our virtual unconference where we explore the future of water at human scale.



Attend

Manifesto


Water is at the intersection of many forces in our world. When we choose to inspect the future through water, we're really inspecting many systems -- not just human access to agriculture but our machines use of water, our fundamental concepts of rights and reponsibilities, land use law and policy, wildlife, and who speaks for wildlife, indigenous communities, public health and climate.

We’re bringing together content creators, artists, programmers, designers, cryptographers and thinkers for a one day virtual unconference about the future of water. Visit us at Future Of for more details on our series.


Sponsors


This event has been fully funded by the Future Of DAO through DAOUP.

Sponsorships at this point will go to the DAO treasury and then through a voting process by members for donations to worthy projects.



Schedule


PST

10:00a Water Opening
Tiana
10:11a Introductions
Intro By Amber Case & Anselm Hook
10:14a Warm Springs - Solar To Water
Jim Souers
10:30a Waterside Chat with Sonaar Luthra
Sonaar Luthra and Amber Case
10:53a Social Networking
11:37a AI, Transparency, and Environmental Justice
Bogdana Rakova
12:00p Water - Glo Torch
Clamber
12:10p Breakout Rooms: Infrastructure, Water Policy, AI
12:45p Technosocial Interfaces of Water, Rivers and Mountains
Jill Burrows
1:15p Architecture of Water
Dr. Ibrahim Mohamed, Margaret Ikeda & Evan Jones
2:00p Breakout Sessions
3:00p Wrap Up and move to post-event Hangout
Mozilla Hubs (See Hubs Tutorial)



Please feel free to contact us at @caseorganic or @anselm on Twitter.



We have an ongoing Discord Channel. Also please see our Code of Conduct.

Land Acknowledgement


We acknowledge the land on which we sit and which we occupy. "The Portland Metro area rests on traditional village sites of the Multnomah, Wasco, Cowlitz, Kathlamet, Clackamas, Bands of Chinook, Tualatin, Kalapuya, Molalla, and many other tribes who made their homes along the Columbia River creating communities and summer encampments to harvest and use the plentiful natural resources of the area" (Portland Indian Leaders Roundtable, 2018). We take this opportunity to thank the original caretakers of this land.