Our First Cascadia Cohort Call Is This Friday
The 2026 Cascadia Cohort of the Regenerating the Earth Through Collapse learning journey kicks off this Friday, April 10, with our first regional cohort call.
The 2026 Cascadia Cohort of the Regenerating the Earth Through Collapse learning journey kicks off this Friday, April 10, with our first regional cohort call.
The 2026 Cascadia Cohort with the Design School for Regenerating Earth begins March 17. A six-month learning journey exploring bioregionalism, regenerative practice, and place-based organizing. Registration is open on a sliding scale with full scholarships available.
Regenerate Cascadia is hiring a part-time Community Steward to support the Landscape Hub Cultivator and the growing network of bioregional groups across Cascadia. Applications are now open.
Landscape Hubs are an essential bioregional organizing structure.
TWIST (Together We Invest for Systems Transformation) is a collective of investors, practitioners, and facilitators from around the world who are actively deploying capital and/or facilitating processes for positive systems change.
We’re grateful that the vision of the BioRegen program of Regenerate Cascadia and the LHC resonated with the Localism Fund reviewers.
“At the core of the BioFi concept are bioregional finance facilities (BFFs). In essence, these are grassroots financial institutions emerging from bioregional organizing to make a community’s projects and priorities legible to larger financial systems and sources of investment.” (Doug Bierend, 2025)
Flow Funding from Kinship Earth helped Regenerate Cascadia empower local communities and landscape stewards.
This region encompasses fertile food-
growing lands, wetlands, coastal ecosystems, and a complex urban–rural mosaic. It is one of the most productive agricultural areas in Canada and a crucial migratory corridor for salmon and other species.
The Phase One Landscape Groups are bringing together diverse landscapes, and are learning from one another with the objective of sustainable and co-created place-based strategies for ecological and culturally regenerative spaces in the Cascadia bioregion.