Workshop 'Socio-Bioeconomies and Conservation Finance in the Amazon'

The Power of Connections Project: Harvesting Lessons and Strengthening Coalitions for Amazonian Conservation

Organizers, Collaborator and Partner

The workshop

  • Created space for key conservation actors to exchange experiences and lessons-learned;
  • Took place at IPÊ (Ecological Research Institute), from May 28 to 31, 2025;
  • Led by the Tropical Conservation and Development Program and suppoterd by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation;
  • Cláudio Pádua (IPÊ), Trent Blare (International Potato Center), and Pilar Useche (UF/IFAS) were key intellectual leaders.
     

Overall goals were:

  1. To share practical experiences and lessons from innovative socio-bioeconomy and conservation finance initiatives;
  2. To strengthen and spark networks — including cross-generational — to transform socio-bioeconomy and conservation finance in the Amazon;
  3. To create space for participants to bring ideas, gain knowledge, and connect around an innovative idea.
Agenda themes

Day 1 – Grounding & Connecting: “Shared Understanding of the Amazonian Socio-Bioeconomy and Conservation Finance”

Day 2 – Exploring Experiences & Challenges: “Identifying Tensions and Leverage Points”

Day 3 – Identifying Strategies: “Scalable, Ethical, and Inclusive Approaches”

Day 4 – Moving from Insighs to Actions: “Harvesting Lessons and Workshop Wrap-up”

This is the first in a series of events focused on Amazonian experiences exploring innovative conservation and sustainable development strategies in the region."

Dr. Pilar Useche, professor of Food and Resource Economics and Latin American Studies at the University of Florida, and one of the Project ‘Power of Connections’ coordinators.

We aimed to encourage the creation of a new economy within local communities, so that people can earn income honestly and sustainably without destroying biodiversity.”

Cláudio Pádua, co-founder of IPÊ, ESCAS dean, and one of the workshop’s thematic coordinators

This was a diverse group of creative leaders from five Amazonian countries sharing their hard-won wisdom and demonstrating their unwavering commitment to catalyze enduring socio-bioeconomies."

Karen Kainer, professor at the University of Florida, and one of the Project ‘Power of Connections’ coordinator

This was a diverse group of creative leaders from five Amazonian countries sharing their hard-won wisdom and demonstrating their unwavering commitment to catalyze enduring socio-bioeconomies."

Karen Kainer, professor at the University of Florida, and one of the Project ‘Power of Connections’ coordinator

Participants insights

Together, participants have reflected on the following key take messages:

  • The Amazon’s cultural and knowledge diversity drives the shift from a linear economy to models that value socio-biodiversity. This transition fosters lasting positive impacts for both people and the planet.
  • Promote financing that values nature and local communities, enabling responsible and resilient economic pathways. This requires addressing social inclusion gaps through stronger dialogue among communities, investors, researchers, and governments.
  • Socio-bioeconomies must be environmentally responsible, socially and financially fair, and inclusive across genders and generations. At the same time, they should generate returns comparable to or greater than the conventional economy.

The workshop is part of the Project Power of Connections, that are promoting a series of regional events taking place throughout 2025 in various countries of the Amazon Basin.

The Project Power of Connections aims are to:
  • Establish full-circle learning through iterative events for conservationists;
  • Analyze key themes, with focus on challenges, successes, and opportunities;
  • Highlight people-focused conservation approaches often missed in leadership training;
  • Foster cross-generational learning and coalition-building for stronger impact.
About the project

The Power of Connections Project is led by the Tropical Conservation and Development Program (TCD) within the Center for Latin American Studies at the University of Florida (UF). TCD is proud to partner with the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, who have funded this project and website.

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