Stories From

Bozeman & Beyond

Julie Kunen, Phd

Director of Sustainability, Oatly North America: on the nexus of food, culture & the environment

Dr. Julie Kunen is Director of Sustainability for Oatly North America. Her passion for sustainability studies began with a PhD in anthropology focused on agricultural practices of the ancient Maya. Dr. Kunen went on to hold roles in academia, government (USAID), non-profit (Wildlife Conservation Society), freelance journalism, and business consulting before joining Oatly at the end of 2020.  She is also a writer on topics at the nexus of food, culture, and the environment for independent food and travel-focused outlets and recently she spent 5 months during the pandemic working as a farmhand on an organic vegetable farm in Montana.

Julie Kunen’s passion for sustainability studies began with her PhD studies in archaeology, where she focused on agricultural practices of the ancient Maya.  Following completion of her degree she went on to hold roles in academia, government, non-profit, freelance journalism, and business consulting before joining Oatly at the end of 2020.

Dr. Kunen served as the forestry and natural resources advisor for Latin America at the US Agency for International Development, and then stepped into dual roles as chief of staff of the policy bureau and senior environmental policy advisor, leading development of USAID’s first climate change and development strategy.

She later moved into executive management of conservation portfolios as Vice President of the Americas for the Wildlife Conservation Society, a major international non-profit, where she led efforts to promote conservation through cuisine, including partnerships with renowned Latin American chefs. After leaving WCS, she founded Passiflora Consulting, a business consultancy working with chefs, restaurants, travel companies, and government agencies to promote sustainable gastronomy.

Before joining Oatly, Dr. Kunen spent 4 months during the COVID-19 pandemic working as a farmhand on an organic vegetable farm in northern Montana. She is also a writer on topics at the nexus of food, culture, and the environment for independent food and travel-focused media outlets. Her most recent articles were about innovations in food studies programs and the indigenous roots of regenerative agriculture.

Resources:
Two Bear Farm (Whitefish, MT)
Getting Dirt Under My Fingernails” by Julie Kunen, Montana Women magazine
World Wide Opportunities on Organic Farms (WWOOF)
Fork and Spoon– pay-as-you-can restaurant in Bozeman, MT
Passion’s fruit – Julie’s website
Timeless Seeds

Julie’s recommended books:
Lentil Underground (Liz Carlisle)
Love, Life, and Elephants (Dame Daphne Sheldrick)
The Wolf Hall Trilogy (Hilary Mantel)

Recent Podcasts

EPISODE #100 - JOHN MCPHEE

on writing, teaching, exploring

John McPhee was born in Princeton, New Jersey, and was educated at Princeton University and Cambridge University. After seven years at Time magazine, he moved to The New Yorker, where he has been a staff writer since 1965. A Fellow of the Geological Society of America and a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, he was awarded in 1999 the Pulitzer Prize for General Nonfiction (Annals of the Former World).