Discussion: Culture & Climate
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735 Jefferson St, Lafayette, LA 70501 |
đź“Ť Location Lafayette International Center / Part of the Rassemblement de la Jeunesse Louisianaise
🎟 Free & Open to the Public but registration required
🗣️ In English and French
Where Land Meets Language: The Intersections of Environment and Identity
Louisiana’s coast is disappearing—and with it, pieces of its history, language, and way of life. This vital discussion brings together climate experts, Indigenous leaders, and cultural advocates to explore the deep connections between environmental change and cultural survival.Topics Include:
- Coastal erosion and its impact on communities, languages, and traditions
- Indigenous perspectives on land, water, and sustainability
- Cultural erosion: what happens when language and geography disappear together
- The role of youth in defending environmental and cultural futures
Why You Should Attend
As the land recedes, so does the cultural fabric woven into it. This session invites participants to reflect, learn, and take part in shaping solutions that respect both ecology and heritage.
About the presenters

Scierra LeGarde
Bayou Lacombe Choctaw tribe

Alex Kolker
Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium
I am deeply interested in the ways that coastal systems function. At the coast, human and natural processes interact to produce a myriad of landforms and hydrodynamic conditions that are fascinating, beautiful, and both beneficial and dangerous to people. In my research group we seek to understand the dynamics that govern four major components of coastal change, climate change and sea-level dynamics, pathways of sediment and water transport, subsidence, and how human dynamics govern, and are governed by a changing coastal environment. The researchers in my laboratory investigate these themes using tools from a range of disciplines including sedimentology, radioisotope geochemistry, climatology, oceanography, hydrology, and data science. During the 2019-2020 academic year, I am serving as a Fulbright Scholar in Morocco, Here I am examining sea level dynamics across North Africa and the Maritime Maghreb, and their impacts on Morocco’s coastal systems.
CURRENT AND RECENT PROJECTS
- The impacts of the Mississippi River and its delta on the oceanography, ecology and economy of the Gulf of Mexico
- Groundwater dynamics in the Mississippi River Delta
- Spatial and temporal trends in subsidence in Louisiana
- Impacts of climate change on coastal wetlands
- Sedimentation rates in river-dominated coastal wetlands
- Framework Development Team: Louisiana’s Comprehensive Master Plan for a Sustainable Coast- 2017
- Changing Course Design Competition, Team Studio Mizi-Ziibi
- Sea level dynamics in North Africa and the maritime Maghreb
- Response of wetlands in the Bouregreg River estuary to sea level change
- LUMCON’s Growth and Planning Panel
- Climate Dynamics of the Mississippi River plume

Baley Marie Champagne
Reconnaissance du territoire
United Houma Nation Tribal Citizen
Baley Marie Champagne est une citoyenne tribale de la nation unie Houma, journaliste, spécialiste du marketing, épouse et mère. Elle a été élevée par sa grand-mère maternelle, Celina Gregoire Martinez, dans un foyer francophone amérindien du Bayou Grand Caillou, dans la paroisse de Terrebonne. Depuis 2015, Baley milite ardemment pour la sauvegarde de sa langue maternelle et de son héritage français. Septième arrière-petite-fille de la première famille créole, Senegal, Chitimacha et Ishak du sud-ouest de la Louisiane, les Grégoire, préserver cette culture est impossible. Baley s'est activement impliquée en tant que parent d'un élève en immersion française, a participé à des organisations francophones louisianaises comme l'Assemblée de la Louisiane pour le financement de l'éducation française et des programmes de médias francophones, et a été membre consultative du groupe de travail sur la langue française deBayou Culture Collaborative French Language Working Group pour défendre les communautés qui ont été méconnues et dont le besoin de programmes plus nombreux en français et en créole dans les communautés et les écoles a été accru. Depuis 2022, elle étudie le français louisianais. Baley soutient les efforts d'organisations comme l'Alliance Française Nouvelle-Orléans, l'Alliance Française de Lafayette, KRVS, CREOLE Inc. et Télé Louisiane, et est un allié de la tribu indienne de Pointe-au-Chien depuis ses débuts dans le cadre de l'École Pointe-au-Chien, la seule école autochtone d'immersion française en Louisiane. Baley est convaincu que la sauvegarde du français et du créole en Louisiane dépendra de nous tous, et que ces langues ne pourront être sauvées sans ses habitants.

Bayou Cultural Collaborative
The Louisiana Division of the Arts Folklife Program is a partner in the Bayou Culture Collaborative initiated by Louisiana Folklore Society. See their website for more information about the collaborative and its other partners.
The Folklife Program participates by offering strategies to help ensure traditions are passed on to future generations by producing workshops in addition to offering funds to organizations and individuals to sustain the traditional cultures of coastal Louisiana. Currently we support two types of workshops.
Sense of Place—and Loss workshops bring together artists, tradition bearers, folklorists, and scientists to explore the connections between art, tradition, and science and to inspire advocacy and creativity in the face of land loss and cultural shifts. We partner with other non-profits and university centers to produce these workshops.
Passing It On workshops are taught by a tradition bearer to pass on a tradition. We provide funds to an organization or tradition bearer for workshops or mini-apprenticeships.
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