A New Era for Psychedelics at CIIS – In-Person
Friday, Nov 1, 2024
7:00pm – 9:00pm
These tickets are for the in-person version of this event. Get tickets for the livestream event.
Entering a new era of psychedelics with the launch of the nation’s first-ever undergraduate Bachelor of Science in Psychedelic Studies and the opening of our newest community mental health clinic offering ketamine-assisted treatments for patients struggling with mental health, California Institute of Integral Studies is pleased to invite you to “A New Era for Psychedelics at CIIS”.
This community event will feature The New York Times Correspondent Ernesto Londoño, author of Trippy: The Promise and Perils of Medicinal Psychedelic, and includes panelists Dr. Janis Phelps, Center for Psychedelic Therapies and Research, Dr. Jason Butler, Professor of Integral Counseling Psychology specializing in depth-oriented ketamine-assisted psychotherapy, and Dr. Nick Walker, Professor of Psychology in the School of Undergraduate Studies and the School of Professional Psychology and Health who will help lead the B.S. in Psychedelic Studies.
This event will include a reading from Ernesto Londoño’s new book and will feature a candid conversation about the future of psychedelics in American society.
About the Speakers
Ernesto Londoño
Ernesto Londoño is a correspondent on the National desk of The New York Times, where he has worked since 2014. He is the author of Trippy: The Promise and Perils of Medicinal Psychedelics, a book that blends memoir and reportage to take readers inside a wondrous field that straddles spirituality and health care.
Londoño joined The Times as an editorial writer, where he focused on foreign policy. He later served as the newspaper’s Brazil bureau chief in Rio de Janeiro, where an episode of depression became the catalyst of his personal and professional interest in psychedelics. Earlier in his career, Londoño worked at The Washington Post, where his assignments included covering the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Arab Spring, and The Pentagon.
Londoño was born and raised in Bogotá, Colombia, during a period of armed conflict and political turbulence fueled by the war on drugs. He moved to the United States for college in 1999 and moved around a lot over the years, having called Miami, Dallas, Washington D.C., Baghdad, Cairo, New York and Rio de Janeiro home.
In early 2022, he moved to Saint Paul, MN, where he lives in a quiet neighborhood near the Mississippi River with his husband, Steven, a veterinarian, and their dog, Hugo, a Brazilian rescue who is not a fan of Minnesota winters.
Janis Phelps, Ph.D.
Dr. Janis Phelps is the founder and director of the psychedelic therapy education program at the California Institute for Integral Studies (CIIS) in San Francisco since 2014. Dr. Phelps developed and launched the first university accredited, post-graduate training program for psychedelic therapy and research. She has held the position of the Dean of Faculty of the six doctoral departments in the CIIS School of Humanities and Social Sciences.
Her 2017 journal publication, Developing Guidelines and Competencies for the Training of Psychedelic Therapists, describes best practices in the academic training of medical and mental health professionals in this field. In addition to multiple other journal publications on training, these ideas are further developed in a 2020 chapter with J. Henry on “Foundations for Training Psychedelic Therapists” in Disruptive Psychopharmacology, edited by Preller and Barrett.
Dr. Phelps is a board member of the Heffter Research Institute, which has conducted highly influential psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy research since the 1990’s. A licensed clinical psychologist, she is a leader in developing methods of scaling effective training programs to meet the burgeoning need for well-trained mental health and medical professionals in the field of psychedelic medicine. Dr. Phelps maintains a private clinical practice in Mill Valley, CA.
Jason Butler, Ph.D.
Dr. Jason Butler is a professor of Integral Counseling Psychology at CIIS. He is a licensed clinical psychologist, a psychotherapist and supervisor at Sage Integrative Health, specializing in depth-oriented ketamine-assisted psychotherapy.
His therapeutic approach is an integration of archetypal, relational, somatic, and liberation frameworks, with a lifelong interest in the study of dreams and the engagement of imagination in healing practices. He is deeply committed to broadening diversity, accessibility, and theoretical rigor in the field of psychedelic psychotherapy.
He has written several articles and book chapters focused on the intersection of depth psychology and social justice as well as a book entitled Archetypal Psychotherapy: The Clinical Legacy of James Hillman. He co-authored an article entitled “Blinded by the White: Addressing Power and Privilege in Psychedelic Medicine,” which highlights the lack of representation of people of color in psychedelic medicine and articulates several key considerations to advance the field in a more equitable direction. He is also a co-editor and contributing author of an edited volume entitled Integral Psychedelic Therapy: The Non-Ordinary Art of Psychospiritual Healing.
Event Location
First Unitarian Universalist Church & Center1187 Franklin Street
San Francisco,, CA , 94109