The Colorado Bringing Bison Back Initiative

restoring connection, healing the land, and building economies through bison reintroduction in Colorado 

Across North America, bison are coming home. But today’s restoration models rarely reflect the full potential of cultural, ecological, and economic renewal. How do we grow toward a future of resilient restoration—led by Indigenous ideas and centered on the buffalo? The Colorado Bringing Bison Back Initiative begins on lands once connected to nearly 50 tribes—most of whom were forcibly displaced over the past 200 years. Through bison, whose decimation mirrored that of Indigenous peoples, the initiative seeks restoration and reconciliation, rebuilding networks of cultural and ecological health. 

Mission

Through bison re-introduction, grow connections of the 48 tribes that have ties to the land now known as Colorado, heal the ecology of the land, and build economies that allow for sustainable restoration futures. 

 

Goals

goal 1

Welcome home 48.  Advancing a co-stewardship model to bring back Bison to the land now known as Colorado:  restoring culture, ecology and economies. 

Support current efforts of co-stewardship 

Increase the number and capacity of new projects 

Facilitate Indigenous-led restoration initiatives 

goal 2

Build indigenous capacity. Elevate the agency and sovereignty of indigenous people—from students to community leaders—to engage in eco-cultural restoration of bison and lead future efforts. 

Renew and strengthen ties of the 48 tribal groups to the land now known as Colorado through bison reintroduction 

Facilitate student involvement through collaborations with tribal colleges, indigenous student groups at CU and other Colorado learning institutions.

goal 3

Build a knowledge network for bison eco-cultural restoration involving varied models of cultural engagement, ecological outcomes, and economic development. 

Knowledge sharing across current restoration projects in Colorado 

Re-envisioning and elevating possible solutions, learning from projects across North America 

Evolving ideas to new pathways of restoration futures  

 

goal 4

Celebrate multiple form of knowledge, adopting an ethical space that brings together Western science and Indigenous Knowledge about eco-cultural restoration.

Demonstrate the value of applying Indigenous methods of inquiry to identify complex multi-dimensional solutions 

Elevate the network by collaborative learning across knowledge holders  

 
 
 

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