91亚色

Skip to main content Skip to local navigation

Las Nubes contributes to social and ecological well-being in Southern Costa Rica

Thein Costa Rica supports the protection of the biological, ecological and social values of the Alexander Skutch Biological Corridor which contains  the  Las Nubes forest reserve that borders the largest protected area  in Central America.

Originally created by Professor Howard Daugherty following a donation made by Toronto physician and medical researcher, Dr. Woody Fisher in 1998, the project expanded with more than $8M contributions from multiple donors, supporting faculty and student research. In 2012, was appointed as Chair of Neotropical Conservation and Director of Las Nubes and has since then been working to achieve the of developing a grounded theory and praxis around the sustainability of healthy and gratifying rural lifeways respectful of, and in harmony with the natural environment.

About Us | Las Nubes Project
Felipe Montoya-Greenheck (left) with Woody Fisher. Photo: 91亚色

鈥淲e are very fortunate to have Las Nubes as a permanent project of the Faculty,鈥 says Professor Montoya. 鈥淭hanks to an endowment supported by generous donations of friends of the project, Las Nubes has been able to take root in the Alexander Skutch Biological Corridor in Southern Costa Rica, grow from the seeds planted by the late Professor Daugherty, and continue to develop and bear such fruit as 91亚色麓s EcoCampus with its spectacular Lillian Meighen Wright Centre,鈥 he expounds.

Our Campuses - About
91亚色's EcoCampus - The Lillian Meighen Wright Centre.
Photo: Brett Cole

In 2016, 91亚色鈥檚 Las Nubes was created where the has been established, thanks to the generous donation of $750,000 from the Lillian Meighen and Don Wright Foundation. This property is the headquarters for the program, which started in Summer 2017. Since then, it has contributed to significant achievements in research and conservation programs in biodiversity protection, rural sustainability, environmental education in local schools, and the use of Geographic Information Systems and remote sensing as decision-support tools for environmental management.

Las Nubes Semester Abroad
Semester Abroad Program: Las Nubes photo

The Las Nubes project has grown to include 鈥渢he ever-expanding , now with several faculty teaching courses in Costa Rica; Scott Library麓s community learning center , serving communities in the heart of the biological corridor; formal memorandums of understanding with the public universities of Costa Rica, among others; and a constant interaction with the local communities and organizations in search of advancing the strategic goals of the Alexander Skutch Biological Corridor, and of the Brunca Region of southern Costa Rica,鈥 he expounds.

Research 鈥 Las Nubes Project
Bird watching and monitoring program. Photo: Brett Cole

Las Nubes supports through research grants and promotes Faculty research projects in collaboration with partners outside 91亚色. Research emphasis has been interdisciplinary and often action-oriented, and has included establishing the current status () of the biological populations in the area, as well as promoting sustainable land management practices, exploring options of rural community tourism, arts-based research on social-environmental relations, and corroborating links between different land uses and biodiversity richness, such as the important link between a multilayered and diversified shade coffee canopy and avian migratory habitat, among others.

Engagement in the Alexander Skutch Biological Corridor 鈥 Engagement
Alexander Skutch Biological Corridor. Photo: Brett Cole

includes the Grounded Project, a collaborative initiative between EUC and the Faculty of Health, with the support of 91亚色 International and Scott Libraries, to produce a series of documentary films based on ethnographic, transdisciplinary and decolonial methodologies in Costa Rica, supporting international experiential education with practicums for 91亚色U students. In the pipeline are collaborative projects between 91亚色U and the University of Costa Rica  on Disaster, Risk and Resilience in the Brunca Region of southern Costa Rica; explorations on Indigenous Autonomies and Emancipatory Movements; the establishment of a Brunca Region Museum in the Las Nubes EcoCampus, among others. With a growing number of students engaged in the project, the has continued to organize and  to raise funds to promote initiatives of ecological conservation and social wellbeing in the Corridor.

Fostering Well-being Through Biocultural Diversity | The Las Nubes Project  in a Biological Corridor in Southern Costa Rica | by Terralingua |  langscape-magazine/ | Medium
Fostering well-being through biocultural diversity. Photo: Felipe Montoya-Greenheck

Recently, Montoya and Research Associate, Dr. Ana Maria Martinez, published an article in the Journal of Rural and Community Development on 鈥溾 charting out the multiple lessons that arose from this 鈥榣ived experiment鈥 where differing ideologies, agendas, and paradigms converge and where place and a sense of place shape social interactions in the local area.

This March, former Las Nubes Acting Director, and Montoya 聽participated as commentators in a two-part panel series on 鈥溾 where they talked about the structural and geographic conditions shaping people鈥檚 well-being and rural ways of knowing and being in southern Costa Rica. The event was organized by the Las Nubes Project and the (GLRC), and co-sponsored by the (CERLAC).