Jamese Kwele
VP, Community Resource Mobilization
Jamese Kwele is an ecosystem builder, constellation weaver, and a mama of two with over 20 years of experience facilitating impact in communities. As Ecotrust’s Vice President, Community Resource Mobilization, she provides strategic leadership for programmatic efforts that focus on advancing the wisdom of Black and brown land and water stewards, fostering leadership pathways in green economies, and building collective power to promote justice with and for frontline communities. Jamese is a founding member of the Black Ag Ecosystem (BAE); a board member for the Black Oregon Land Trust, the Black Food Sovereignty Coalition, and the National Farm to School Network; and a co-founder of the Black Food Fund, which redistributes financial capital to Black farmers and land stewards across the Pacific Northwest. She is also an alumna of the Just Economy Institute, a network of 200+ financial activists working to shift capital and power in service of a more just economy. She finds inspiration in the liberatory power of Black people healing through cultural somatic praxis, ecological land stewardship, and rest. Jamese holds deep gratitude for the love, wisdom, and fortitude of ancestors, comrades, and communities who make her work both joyful and possible. She is fueled by authentic connection, subversive humor, radical candor, and expansive joy.
Ecotrust Teams:
- Food Systems, Leadership Team
Links
On June 18, Jamese Kwele participated in the USDA Regional Equity Convening for the Pacific Northwest, held at Tamástslikt Cultural Institute. She shared insights from Ecotrust’s work developing equitable regional food economies in a conversation with Toni Stanger-McLaughlin, CEO of Native American Agricultural Fund and USDA Equity Commission member.
A $1.5M cooperative agreement will support utilization of USDA programs among farmers historically underserved or discriminated against by the agency. Ecotrust is among the organizations who will be leading this work in the Portland Metro region.
On June 30, 2020, the House Select Committee on the Climate Crisis released its final report to Congress, titled “Solving the Climate Crisis: The Congressional Action Plan for a Clean Energy Economy and a Healthy and Just America”. The report is the result of an inclusive process led by the Committee, which engaged BIPOC leadership, community-based organizations, and climate advocates, including Ecotrust.
Featured Projects
A cohort-based program designed for aspiring and experienced leaders of color working to build equitable, climate-resilient food systems
A $1.5M cooperative agreement is supporting utilization of USDA programs among farmers historically underserved or discriminated against by the agency
Farm to Early Care and Education (ECE) connects early childhood professionals to local food producers and community partners with the goals of serving culturally relevant, locally-produced foods to young children, providing hands-on experiences with food and gardening, and improving child nutrition.