Monday, December 11, 2006

Ethics

“The advancement of civilization does not necessarily imply the evolution of more sophisticated ethics” Carolyn Merchant, Radical Ecology

The basis of every dilemma being individual, social or environmental underlies specific ethics. Ethics is not a system of abstract, rather it gives context “to what imperfect human beings living in particular historical, socioeconomic contexts can and should do.” Earlier ethics from the 17th century were associated with a combination of political, religious trends.

The most recent re formulated ethics propose the connection between people and the environment to enhance the quality of life. This section of ethics will provide a brief over view of ethics that have been used throughout our existence.
The purpose is to demonstrate how these ethics have evolved and how the most recent ethics, environmental ethics links the idea of theorist with movements, translating ideas into behaviors and action through activism.

Problems

Dominant Western Worldview (DWW)
“People of plenty” Guided American development and stated that people were different from all other organisms and in charge of their own destiny. This followed Columbus’ discovery of the New World and continued as the age of abundance, progress and industrialization.

Human Exemptionalism Paradigm
Proposed that human societies were exempt from the consequences of ecological principles and environmental constraints.

Ethics

Ego centric ethic (grounded in the self)

• Influenced main stream industrialism of today.
• Rose to dominate in the 17th century in Western cultures.
• Historically associated with the rise of laissez faire capitalism and mechanistic worldviews. Maximize profits through the development of natural resources.
• Claims what is good for the individual benefits society
• Based on philosophy that treats individuals (private or corporate) as separate, but equal.

“Industry is unfettered and unrestrained, because each person works for himself”. J. Hector St John de Crevecoeur


Homocentric Ethics (grounded in social good)

• Extension from the 19th century-scientist to include the fields of thermodynamics, hydrology, electricity and magnetism.
• Underlies social interest, model of politics and the approach of environmental regulatory agencies that protect human health.
• Reflects religious formulations
• Guides choices concerning which research projects to fund, which technologies to implement, and which processes to use for decision making.
• Gives full consideration for non- human nature but its priority is human need. • Underlies politics for social ecologist.

Utilitarian ethic: Jermey Bentham (1789) and John Stuart Mill (1861)
• Origins in human sentience.

“Because people have capacity for suffering, society has an obligation to reduce suffering through policies that maximize social justice for all”. Jeremy Bentham 1789

Ecocentric ethics
(grounded in whole environment/ecosystem or cosmos)

• Brought about in 20th century.
• First formulated by Aldo Leopold in the 1930’s and 40’s and published as “The land ethic”
• Looks at the science of ecology for guidelines on how to resolve existing ethical dilemmas.
• Rooted in a holistic view and approach
• Includes that inanimate elements, rocks, and minerals along with animate plants and animals have moral considerbitlity.
• Places homo sapiens a citizen and equal with the rest of its ecosystem instead of conqueror of the land.

Main goals:
1) Maintenance of balance in nature and unity, stability, diversity, and harmony of ecosystem. 2) Survival of all living and non living things as components for a healthy ecosystem.

Examples of cultures that follow this view are: Native Americans, Zen Buddhists, and Shintos.

“Ecocentric ethics makes each individual- whether a mosquito or person, male or female, white or black- equally subordinate to the overarching whole.” Karen J. Warren 1988


Multicultural environmental ethics

• Beyond ecocentric ethics to include environmental justice and cultural diversity and respond to globalization.
• Rooted in partnership
• Built on the connections of biological diversity and cultural diversity
• Addresses issues of race and racism and its connection with problems of globalization, sexism, and naturism.
• Relates environmental ethics to social justice promoting the wealth of nature, human and non human.
• Inhabits many cultural worlds

"All humans are part of a local, bioregional culture and an international global culture; Inhabiting one ecologically seamless biosphere, one planet, washed by one ocean, enveloped in one atmosphere.” Braird Callicott

“The flourishing of human communities is intrinsically tied to the well –being of nature.”
The ethic of flourishing by Chris Cuomo.


Partnership Ethics (grounded in the idea of relation)

• A new approach for resolving environmental and cultural problems.
• Relationship between human community and non human community and its connections with economics and ecological exchange.
• Promotes moral grounds for both environmental and social justice
• Enhance quality of life without degrading the local or global environment
• Based on male-female linking (rather than male dominance)
• Promotes an egalitarian political and economic society.
• Has religious dimensions based on humanity’s spiritual relations with nature.

Philosophies such as:
1) Brazilian theologian Ivone Gebara “views the universe as a trinity comprising cosmos, earth, and all peoples interrelated- transforming and adapting to each other as creative forces in which the diversity of earth’s people are immersed.”

2) In Zimbabwe the world views of the Shona is rooted in the relation that all existing and manageable practices follow particular rules.

3) The Kalinga of the Phillippines beliefs are based on interdependence, which means a give and take between people and nature: “we take care of the land and the earth also takes care of us” Rosemary Radford Ruether

Movements

Deep ecology
“Falling in love outward” Robinson Jeffers (poet) Presented by Norwegian philosopher Arne Naess in 1972 through a paper he wrote and was published in 1973 titled “The shallow and deep, Long-Range Ecology Movement”.

Socially produced and constructed, deep ecology thinking emerged form the reality of our present ecological crisis. It focuses on a transformation of consciousness and worldviews in relation to the environment and supports the new social and economic direction that is geared toward sustainability.

Principles:
1. Principle of biospheric equality, places humans in nature not above it.
2. Self –realization; “As one’s own self-realization increases, one incrsilngly identifies with other beings and one’s own self expands outward into the great Self.” Arne Naess refers to this to be the ultimate principle.
3. Respected the land as dwellers in it. Parallels the bioregional movement. “Future primitive: withdrawing from developed land and allowing it to reestablish itself as wilderness
4. The duty of maintaining our environments, not conquering it or making it more efficient. Human’s survival depends on the ecosphere. “Land Ethic” Aldo Leopold 1949.
5. Humans place within and part of nature. Biological and cultural diversity; reached through soft energy and appropriate technology.

Fritjof Capra (writer of The Tao of Physics) calls for a revolution in thought pattern that embraces deep ecology as the best term for the emerging worldviews; not abandoning one for the other but to strive towards a balance between them.

Ecological Design Intelligence
“Ecological design intelligence is the effective adaptation to and integration with nature's processes-can be applied at all levels of scale, creating revolutionary forms of buildings, landscapes, cities, and technologies”. -Sim Van der Ryn and Stuart Cow

Ecological Literacy
“Being ecologically literate means understanding [the] basic principles of organization of ecological communities and being able to embody them in the daily life of human communities.

Teaching this ecological knowledge - which may be called 'principles of ecology,' 'principles of sustainability,' 'principles of community,' or even the 'basic facts of life' - will be the most important role of education in the next century."

Fritjof Capra, Sustainable living, Might best be defined as a lifestyle that could, hypothetically, be sustained unmodified for many generations without exhausting any natural resources.

The term can be applied to individuals or societies. Its adherents most often hold true sustainability as a goal or guide, and make lifestyle tradeoffs favoring sustainability where practical. (Wiki)

Eco psychology
Ecopsychology suggests that there is a synergistic relation between planetary and personal well being; that the needs of the one are relevant to the other.

Environmentalism
A broad, diverse and robust movement. It has provided some of the deepest and most questioning analysis of our ethical relationship to other species of our era. It deploys a wide variety of advocacy paradigms -- policy based interest group analysis is one, but there are also placed-based, values-driven and rights-rooted traditions and models to draw upon.

Environmental justice
The environmental justice movement took root in the 1980s. This "new" movement redefined environmentalism to address issues of equity, disparate impact, and unequal protection.

Environmental Justice is the fair treatment and meaningful involvement of all people regardless of race, color, national origin, or income with respect to the development, implementation, and enforcement of environmental laws, regulations, and policies. Indigenous and poorer communities are exposed to greater environmental hazards in their homes, on their jobs, in their neighborhoods, and on the playgrounds than is the society at large.

Environmental inequities result from a host of industry and government practices such as discriminatory land use; discriminatory facility sighting and clean-up strategies; exclusionary practices that limit participation of governmental agencies charged with protecting public health and the environment, and faulty assumptions in calculating health risks.

Green movement
The Green movement is made up of Green parties of various countries, and relies on the ideals of the larger ecology movement, peace movement, conservation movement, environmental movement and general trend towards environmentalism. A more mainstream term for a member of all of these movements is political ecologist, which is used especially in Europe and academic circles.

New Ecological Paradigm
Expressed from Deep Ecology, a steady state or sustainable society “one that provides for successful human adaptation to a finite ecosystem on a long term basis.”

“Live and let live”

Political ecology
Political ecology is the study of how political, economic, and social factors affect environmental issues. The majority of studies analyze the influence that society, state, corporate, and transnational powers have on creating or exacerbating environmental problems and influencing environmental policy.

Political Ecology can be used to:
• understand the decisions that communities make about the natural environment in the context of their political environment, economic pressure, and societal regulations
• look at how unequal relations among societies affect the natural environment
• look at how unequal relations (especially class) affect the environment

Simple living
Is a lifestyle individuals may pursue for a variety of motivations, such as spirituality, health, or ecology. Others may choose simple living for reasons of social justice or a rejection of consumerism. Some may emphasize an explicit rejection of "westernized values", while others choose to live more simply for reasons of personal taste, a sense of fairness or for personal economy. Simple living as a concept is distinguished from the simple lifestyles of those living in conditions of poverty in that its proponents are consciously choosing to not focus on wealth directly tied to money or restrictive, cash-based http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economics"

Social ecology, Eco-socialism or Green socialism
What literally defines social ecology as "social" is its recognition of the often overlooked fact that nearly all our present ecological problems arise from deep-seated social problems. Conversely, present ecological problems cannot be clearly understood, much less resolved, without resolutely dealing with problems within society.

Social ecology is a interdisciplinary field drawing on philosophy, political and social theory, anthropology, history, economics, the natural sciences, and feminism.

To make this point more concrete: economic, ethnic, cultural, and gender conflicts, among many others, lie at the core of the most serious ecological dislocations we face today--apart, to be sure, from those that are produced by natural catastrophes. -Murray Bookchin

Spiritual ecology
Spiritual ecology focuses on the relationships between religions and environments from the local to the global levels to address environmental crises, problems, and issues.

Whole Systems Thinking
“Whole-systems thinking is a process through which the interconnections between systems are actively considered, and solutions are sought that address multiple problems at the same time. Some refer to this process as the search for "solution multipliers."

Friday, December 08, 2006

News, Media, Activism

News Websites

The Independent Media Center is a network of collectively run media outlets for the creation of radical, accurate, and passionate tellings of the truth. We work out of a love and inspiration for people who continue to work for a better world, despite corporate media's distortions and unwillingness to cover the efforts to free humanity.
http://www.indymedia.org/en/


Center Common Dreams was founded in 1997, we are committed to being on the cutting-edge of using the internet as a political organizing tool - and creating new models for internet activism. http://www.commondreams.org/


Guerrila News Network
is an independent news organization with headquarters in New York City and production facilities in Berkeley, California. Our mission is to expose people to important global issues through cross-platform programming.
www.gnn.tv


Defense Monitor Center for Defense Information (CDI) provides expert analysis on various components of U.S. national security, international security and defense policy. CDI promotes wide-ranging discussion and debate on security issues such as nuclear weapons, space security, missile defense, small arms and military transformation.


Alternative Radio is a weekly one-hour public affairs program offered free to all public radio stations in the U.S., Canada, Europe, South Africa, Australia, and on short-wave on Radio for Peace International. AR provides information, analyses and views that are frequently ignored or distorted in other media.
http://www.alternativeradio.org/index.shtml


Democracy Now! is a national, daily, independent, award-winning news program airing on over 450 stations in North America. Pioneering the largest public media collaboration in the U.S., Democracy Now! is broadcast on Pacifica, NPR, community, and college radio stations; on public access, PBS, satellite television (DISH network: Free Speech TV ch. 9415 and Link TV ch. 9410; DIRECTV: Link TV ch. 375); as a "podcast," and on the internet. http://democracynow.org/index.pl


Aljazeera
English, the 24-hour English-language news and current affairs channel, headquartered in Doha. Al Jazeera English is the world’s first global English language news channel to be headquartered in the Middle East.


Media/Activism

Hip Hop Congress uses hip hop culture to inspire social and civic action, and cultural creativity amongst young people. It does this in a variety of ways.
http://www.hiphopcongress.com/


ActForChange makes it easy for people to become online activists and speak out on behalf of progressive issues. By combining progressive news with opportunities for citizen action, ActForChange is a powerful and far-reaching catalyst for social change.
http://www.actforchange.com/


The Campaign to Label Genetically Engineered Foods
Send letters to Congress, government agencies and grocery stores. Send e-mail to the media. Get updates about where your participation can make the biggest difference now.
http://www.thecampaign.org/


Magazines

Lip Magazine is an all-volunteer, not-for-profit media project, brings a unique, accessible, and well-edited mix of radical politics, culture, sex, and humor, guided by a serious structural critique of power and social change, and a gleeful engagement with pop culture.

UTNE was founded in 1984 by Eric Utne, UTNE READER reprints the best articles from over 2,000 alternative media sources bringing you the latest ideas and trends emerging in our culture... Provocative writing from diverse perspectives... Insightful analysis of art and media... Down-to-earth news and resources you can use... In-depth coverage of compelling people and issues that affect your life.
http://www.utne.com/


Orion Magazine
explores an emerging alternative world view. Informed by a growing ecological awareness and the need for cultural change, it is a forum for thoughtful and creative ideas and practical examples of how we might live justly, wisely, and artfully on Earth.
http://www.orionmagazine.org/index2.html

Adbusters are a global network of artists, activists, writers, pranksters, students, educators and entrepreneurs who want to advance the new social activist movement of the information age. Our aim is to topple existing power structures and forge a major shift in the way we will live in the 21st century.
http://www.adbusters.org/home/


Mother Jones
is an independent nonprofit whose roots lie in a commitment to social justice implemented through first rate investigative reporting.
http://www.motherjones.com/index.html


Yes! Magazine

Positive Futures Network is an independent, nonprofit organization supporting people’s active engagement in creating a just, sustainable, and compassionate world.
http://www.yesmagazine.org/


E Magazine
is a bimonthly “clearinghouse” of information, news and resources for people concerned about the environment who want to know “What can I do?” to make a difference. A 13-time Independent Press Awards winner and nominee, E is chock full of everything environmental -- from recycling to rainforest's, and from the global village to our own backyards.
http://www.emagazine.com/Newspapers


Books

Maude Barlow and Tony Clarke's. Global Showdown. Toronto, Stoddart, 2001.
A clear, comprehensive explanation of the whole alphabet soup of global institutions, what's wrong with them and how people are organizing to fight them, by two of the people doing some of the most important work on the issue. Maude is head of the Council of Canadians, and a formidable thinker and writer. If you can only read one book, this is it!

Naomi Klein. No Logo. NY, Picador USA, 1999. Naomi's book details the corporatization and logoization of public and private space, from high schools with an "official soft drink" to university gyms with the Nike swoosh on the floor. It gave me a much clearer understanding of how the anti-sweatshop movement developed on college campuses, the conditions youth face today and why they're so angry. She also includes damning statistics about the reality of life in the maquiladoras and free trade zones where most of our manufactured goods are now made. Written before Seattle, it outlines the background out of which the current movement came.

Globalize This! The Battle Against the World Trade Organization and Corporate Rule, edited by Kevin Danaher and Roger Burbach, contains some of the key writings about Seattle, including my own letter, Paul Hawken's moving account of his experience, and Bettina Martinez' "Where Was the Color in Seattle?" along with other political thinkers such as Vandana Shiva, Manning Marable, Susan George, Walden Bello, and more.

Resources

Social ecology

-The mission of the Institute for Social Ecology (ISE) is the creation of educational experiences that enhance people's understanding of their relationship to the natural world and each other. By necessity, this involves the ISE in programs that deepen students' awareness of self and others, help them to think critically, and expand their perception of the creative potentialities for human action.
http://www.social-ecology.org/


Ecopycology
-The International Community for Ecopsychology (ICE) is an informal, international, interdisciplinary virtual community devoted to reflecting on the questions which arise from an ecopsychological viewpoint.
http://www.ecopsychology.org/


Political ecology
-Established in 1980 at the University of Delaware, the Center is a leading institution for interdisciplinary graduate education, research, and advocacy in energy and environmental policy. http://ceep.udel.edu/ceep.html


Books

-Ecological Design. Van der Ryn, Sim, and Stuart Cowan. Island, 1996. The essential concepts of ecological design.

Networks, Consortiums, Communities


ASIS Consortium International Website
Be the Dream Network Portal
Biodiversity Conservation Network
Boreal Forest Network - Canada
Built Environment Network
Central American Cultural Ecological Information Network
Citizens Network for Sustainable Development (CitNet) - USA
Community - Eco-Living Resource Database
Edge-Ucation, Right Livelihood, Deep Ecology (HAVEN)
EnviroNetwork The job network for environmental professionals...
Environmental Network - Care2 Environment Supersite
Ethical Business Network - Australia
Eurocities The Network of Major European Cities
European Partners for the Environment (EPE)
5th World - Cultural and Environmental Media Production Network
Findhorn Foundation Global Network
Florida Sustainable Communities Center
Forest Trends Communities Network - USA/International
Global Accords Consortium (MIT)
Global Business Network (GBN)
Global Islands Network (GIN)
Green Alliance - thinking talking acting on the environment - UK
Greening of Industry Network - International
Green Map System - International
Green Net > networking for the environment ... - UK
GreenNet > run by a group of volunteers - Australia
Healthy Building Network
iNS - internetwork for sustainability
International Network for Environmental Management (INEM)
KOREA REGIONAL NETWORK (WBCSD)
Like-minded Networks - NCN Connections
Living Planet Network - Ecocity
London 21 Sustainability Network
Mobility services for urban sustainability (moses) - Europe
Networld-Project - Green Networld - USA
New Civilization Network
NextStep - Minnesota Sustainable Communities Network
River Network - USA
Smart Communities Network - USA
Smart Growth Network - USA
Social Venture Network Europe
Sustainability Web Ring
Sustainable Communities Network
Sustainable Development Networking Programme (UNDP)
Sustainable Development Networking Programme Guayana (UNDP)
Sustainable Energy & Economy Network (SEEN)
The Asia-Pacific Network for Global Change Research (APN)
The Earth Network for Sustainable Development
The Gaia Trust Network
The Global Friends Network
The Natural Step International Network
The Twin Cities Green Guide COMMUNITY Eco-Villages
The Women's Network for a Sustainable Future
Youth for a Sustainable Future - Pacifika!
ZERI Global Network

Foundations, Organisations, Societies, NGOs

African American Environmentalist Association (AAEA)
Aga Khan Foundation - Development Network
Alliance for Sustainability - USA
Air & Waste Management Association ( A&WMA ) - USA
Amnesty International - Working To Protect Human Rights
Anthroposophical Society
Australian Conservation Foundation
AWARE Foundation - Aquatic World Awareness
Banksia Environmental Foundation - Australia
Belize, Caribbean Audubon Society, tropical birds
Bioneers- Visionary and Practical Solutions for Restoring the Earth
Blue Planet Run Foundation
Care International
Center for Alternative Development Initiatives (CADI) - Philippines
Center for Environmental Concerns - Philippines
Centre for Science and Environment (CSE) - India
Choike: Southern Civil Societies (Southern NGO Portal) - USA
City & Shelter - Belgium
Coalition of Environmentally Responsible Economies (CERES)
Community Aid Abroad Programs Around the World
Conservation Technology Information Center (CTIC) - USA
Conservation Volunteers Australia
Cottonwood Foundation - Protecting the Environment
Cousteau Society
CSR Europe - promotes corporate and social responsibility
Cyprus Conservation Foundation
David Suzuki Foundation
Development Alternatives Group - India
Doctors Without Borders-Médecins Sans Frontières
Earth Charter Australia
Earth Charter USA Campaign
Earth Council - General Information
Earth Island Institute Innovative Action for the Environment
EarthRights International
Earth Summit Info
Earthwatch Institute
ECOLOGIA ECOlogists Linked for Organizing Grassroots Initiatives..
ECO-PROS - Ecology Protectors Society
Ecoterra International - survival & freedom for people & nature
EcoVitality - Integrating Conservation & Sus. Dev. in Poor Nations
Environic Foundation International
Environmental Database - India
Environmental Defense - Finding the ways that work
Environmental Defence Society - New Zealand
Environmental Development Action in the Third World (in French)
Environmental Research Foundation
Environment Business Australia
Environment and Conservation Organisations of New Zealand
Environment Victoria - Australia
Environs Australia - Melbourne Victoria
Evergreen: Bringing communities and nature together - Canada
Florida Sustainable Communities Center
Foundation for Business and Society
Foundation for the Future
Foundation for Global Community
Friends of the Earth - Australia
Friends of the Earth International
From Globalization to Sustainability - Global Policy for Social Justice
Global Environment & Technology Foundation
Golden Age Foundation - India
Goongerah Environment Centre - Australia
Green Cross International - Mikhail Gorbachev President
Green Innovations - Australia
Green Ontario - Canada
Greenpeace International
Guide to NGOs in Pakistan
Handpumps and water well drilling training for safe drinking water
Idealist Home Organizations Search
Information Cooperative Partners (CIESIN)
International Alliance of Inhabitants
International Collective in Support of Fishworkers (ICSF)
International Fund for China's Environment
International Institute for Environment and Development
International Institute for Sustainable Development
International Leadership for Environment and Development (LEAD)
International Marinelife Alliance
International Rivers Network
International Society for Ecology and Culture
International Society for Environmental Ethics
International Student Org. for Sustainable Economics and Manag.
International Vegetarian Union
ISO 14000, Environmental Management Systems and Sustainability
ISO World - English Version - Japan
Landcare Australia
Meru Foundation
National Environmental Trust - USA
Nature Conservation Council of NSW - Australia
Nelson Environment Centre - New Zealand
Nepal Forward Foundation
New Millennium Peace Foundation
NGO COMMITTEE ON HUMAN SETTLEMENTS
NGO Steering Committee to the United Nations
Non-Profit Groups Links
Ocean Trust - Save the Oceans
OneWorld - Over 1250 organisations working for Social Justice
Oxfam Community Aid Abroad
Panos Institute - London
Quaker Earthcare Witness
Programa Ambiental A Última Arca de Noé - Brasil
Regional Institute of Environmental Technology (RIET)
Resource Renewal Institute (RRI)
Resources for the Future - USA
RochesterEnvironment.com Global Environmental Resources - USA
Rocky Mountain Institute - USA
Sea Shepherd Conservation Society
Sierra Club - Environmental Organization
Sustainable Development Network Foundation - Philippines
Sustainable Development Online - Europe
Sustainable Ecosystems Institute - USA
Sustainable Living Foundation - Australia
Sustainable Long Island - USA
Sustainable Niagara - Canada
Sustainable Wellington Net - New Zealand
The Earth Charter Initiative
The Earth Network for Sustainable Development
The EarthSeeds Project
The Foundation for the Economics of Sustainability - Ireland
The Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation
The Galapagos Coalition
The Green Institute - USA
The HOPE Foundation - Ireland
The International Centre for Trade and Sustainable Development
The International Solar Energy Society
The Lightstone Foundation and Community Development - USA
The Millennium Foundation of Canada
The Nobel Foundation - Sweden
The Tiger Foundation
The UK Centre for Economic and Environmental Development
The Wilderness Society - Australia
The Wilderness Society - International
The Wildlife Society - Stewardship Through Science & Education
The World Conservation Union (IUCN)
Tides Foundation Website
United Planetary Federation (UPF)
United Nations Association of Australia
Vasundhara Concern for Environmental Rights - India
Whole Systems Foundation
Wild Bird Society of Japan
WITNESS Human Rights Alert
World Conservation Union
World Environmental Organization - World.Org
World Environment Center
World Future Society
World Resources Institute
World Wildlife Fund for a living planet
WWF - Australia
WWF - Global Network
Yasuda Kasai Environment Foundation - Japan