Founding Archive

Proceedings

The proceedings page preserves the early record of the codification project: the founding brochure, pre-retreat article, full proceedings report, and the visual memory of the retreat that helped launch this larger Academy effort.

founding

Preserve the original vision and language that called the project into being.

record

Document the meetings, people, and ideas that shaped the codification effort.

continuity

Carry the archive forward so new generations can understand where this work began.

Project Framing

An international, intergenerational codification effort

The Academy emerged as an international, intergenerational effort to codify the philosophy, principles, and theory of naturopathic medicine in dialogue with modern science, clinical practice, and public policy.

It also foregrounds the editorial leadership behind the project, with Pamela Snider, Jared Zeff, Joseph Pizzorno, Stephen Myers, James Sensenig, Roger Newman Turner, Don Warren, Thom Kruzel, Kelsang Tenpa, and Amy Neil among those named.

Proceedings Library

Founding documents, reports, and related materials

Founding documents, related reports, and supporting materials are gathered here as a clear public archive.

A Founding Statement

A profession must codify its unique knowledge to grow

That line serves as the emotional and intellectual center of the proceedings archive.

It is not just about minutes, files, or memorabilia. It is about the moment a profession took seriously the work of transferring its knowledge to future generations.

Remembered Later

“The Skamania Breakthrough Convocation”

James Sensenig, ND, said in the closing plenary on April 5, 2007: “In years to come, this landmark event will likely be cited as the Skamania Breakthrough Convocation.”

That sense of occasion is part of what makes this archive matter.

Continue the Story

From the archive into the teaching and textbook work

The proceedings show how the project began. The textbook pages and teaching tools show how that early vision continued to take shape.