Like graffiti, wheatpasting is a direct action technique that is a simple, visual means for communicating messages to a large audience created by mixing, water, flour and sugar. Wheatpasting has been used as antiquities
The Practice of Bioregionalism: An Interview with Richard Evenoff
The Department of Bioregion is proud to share an interview between Evan O’Neil and Richard Evanoff, a professor of envrionmental ethics at Aoyama Gakuin University in Japan, who recently wrote the book Bioregionalism and Global Ethics as part of our archive of bioregionalism articles and resources. The interview originally appeared on Carnegie Council on August 3rd 2012.
Cascadia's Human Terrain: Shifting our perspective through Bioregional Mapping
Case Study: British Deportation Activists Hack Bus Advertisements
Department of Bioregion responds to United States Federal Government Shutdown
Why the Cascadia Movement Matters Now More Than Ever
Cascadia Explained: What if Cascadia Was a Country?
Said the Whale feature New Album 'Cascadia'
The Department of Bioregion is excited to share that the award winning Cascadian ambassadors Tyler Bancroft, Ben Worcester, and Jaycelyn Brownmusic, the trio band Said the Whale released a first glimpse of their new feature length album ‘Cascadia’.
Case Study: Independent Diplomat
How to create a leaderless revolution and win lasting political change | Carne Ross
New 'Cascadia Playbook' Documents Oregon Response to Megaquake
The State of Oregon Office of Emergency Management has released a new ‘Cascadia Playbook’ helping outline the first two weeks of government response in the face of a 9.0 Cascadia Megaquake. The playbook provides a two-week blueprint for the state’s response and expectations for prioritizing Oregon's recovery from what would be the deadliest natural disaster in the U.S.
Cascadia - For the Wild
This Place - by Cascadia Matters
This essay is from Casey, Devin & Mel from Cascadia Matters, released in 2012, and the creators of the Occupied Cascadia documentary. Cascadia Matters was a film and educational collective in Bend, Oregon dedicated to a radical and real decolonization of the Cascadia bioregion by those living here, and a true solidarity with First Nations and indigenous cultures and ways of living.
Ecotopia Today: Learning from Cascadia
The Department of Bioregion is excited to reproduce an excerpt by Brian Holmes from Ecotopia Today, a collection of original research, cartography, and essays at a crossroads of cartography, politics, art, and social issues.
Cascadia Wildlands Celebrates 20 Years
Cascadia Wildlands, a grassroots conservation organization, celebrates their 20th year of action protecting Cascadian forests and working to restore vast old-growth forests, rivers full of wild salmon, wolves howling in the backcountry, and vibrant communities sustained by the unique landscapes of the Cascadia bioregion.












