Archive for 2009
There is no ‘Last Word’
December 20th, 2009
I begin with a caveat, one given by Wendell Berry this past October to a crowd of 2000 gathered to hear him read some of his writing in Madison, Wisconsin. “There is no Last Word,” Berry said. In that spirit, I offer these thoughts.
As I write this, it is almost Christmas. Perhaps more than 2 billion people worldwide are liturgically anticipating the life of an unborn child, a child who comes so “that they may have life, and that they may have it more abundantly” (John 10:10)
What is life? And what about it’s abundance?
I recall a blustery winter night when I was invited to give a lecture at the Lutheran School of Theology in the midst of the University of Chicago campus. After a journey through heavily falling snow, I was met by several dozen divinity students, gathered to learn about ecology and evolution.
One of the things I wanted to share that night was my understanding of the interconnectedness among living things. The science on the relatedness between humans and chimpanzees, for example, has become widely accessible. What amazes me about these studies is not just the percentage of relatedness between humans and various living things (which is remarkable), but that there is relatedness at all. We share the stuff of life, not just with chimpanzees, but with daffodils and yeast. While we sometimes do not easily recognize other living creatures as kin, we are all intimately related.
There is relatedness, and then there is relationship. Our interconnection with the rest of life goes beyond genetics – family ties, so to speak. To me, this is one of the deeply beautiful revelations of evolutionary history. We are not only related to the rest of life, but also we are in relationship with it. Over time and across space, organisms shape one another and the world around them, just as they themselves are shaped by these interactions. The upshot of this is not necessarily “survival of the fittest” as most people assume. In fact, as evolutionary biologist Stephen Jay Gould has noted, the process of evolution shifts between forgiving periods where there is only “elimination of the worst” and more bleak periods of “survival of the fittest.”
What may come as a surprise is that we humans are shifting the evolutionary trajectory away from the more forgiving path, putting life on the harsh road of survival of the fittest. And with that comes abundant suffering of life. Viewing the history of humanity within the evolutionary context does not free humans from moral considerations, but on the contrary forces us to face our responsibilities to the rest of life and the relationships we are shaping within it.
We humans have a moral obligation to address the critical changes to the system of life we are affecting with respect to climate change, stratospheric ozone, land use change, freshwater use, biological diversity, ocean acidification, nitrogen and phosphorus inputs to the biosphere and oceans, aerosol loading and chemical pollution. These are the nine “tipping points” recently outlined by the Stockholm Resilience Centre that are shifting life as we know it. (For a review of these issues, see “Tipping Towards the Unknown” http://www.stockholmresilience.org/planetary-boundaries) We humans are responsible for creating these tipping points and the accompanying negative relationships they create within the web of life.
When I finished my lecture, one of the students asked, “What do you want us to do with this information?” It was a great question; I didn’t have an answer. So, I stumbled on with a few sentences and then responded to several more questions. Suddenly, it came to me how I wanted to answer. I told the students I would share some of my core beliefs about Jesus. I could see their curiosity piqued.
Jesus broke down barriers in ways that were unthinkable to the spiritual elite of his day. St. Paul distilled the radicalism of Jesus’ teaching in the following way: “There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free, there is neither male nor female; for you are all one in Christ Jesus” (Galatians 3:28). What did I want the students to do with what I shared about ecology and evolution? Jesus broke down barriers among different kinds of people, including all people in God’s love. In the same way, I hoped these emerging faith leaders would break down barriers to love within the greater web of life. I hoped for a time when our care for the poor, tired, and hungry would be extended to the entire family of life. The Good Samaritan came to mind, and I told them I hoped we would begin to be neighbors to the plants and animals with whom we share this life journey, with whom we share both relatedness and relationship.
In this season, as we anticipate the birth of a child who comes to bring abundant life, let us expand our definition of “life” and how we will protect it.
Let us redefine ourselves as well – more humbly, not lording ourselves over the landscape but recognizing our place within it, as kin and neighbor to life.
— Brooke Hecht, Ph.D.
President, Center for Humans and Nature
CHN—South Carolina Continues Work on The ACE Basin: Common Ground
Regional Cultures of Conservation, ACE Basin History Documentary: Taking the Show on the RoadDecember 16th, 2009
As summer gave way to fall in the South Carolina Lowcountry, CHN in South Carolina took advantage of mild days and the mellow light of autumn to continue filming the flora and fauna of the ACE Basin and to garner additional interviews with state conservationists and private landowners. William Bailey, Senior Program Associate and executive producer, traveled with a veteran three-man film crew from the University of South Carolina’s media center documenting the beauty of a healthy ecosystem and the work of the people whose love of the land has maintained this health. (more…)
CHN Co-Hosts Meeting on the Ethics of Wolf Recovery in the Upper Great Lakes
Regional Cultures of Conservation,December 11th, 2009
The recovery of the grey wolf population in the Upper Great Lakes over the last several decades has been an important conservation success story — one that, at the same time, raises new and challenging issues for conservationists, resource managers, policy-makers, scientists, landowners, and citizens. To explore the emerging ethical issues involved in living with the recovered wolf population, CHN and the Aldo Leopold Foundation teamed up to organize a discussion among some of the region’s leading wolf biologists, environmental ethicists, and wildlife researchers, representing agencies, conservation organizations, universities, and Native American tribes from throughtout the region. The meeting, developed in partnership with The Conservation Ethics Group, was held on Dec. 5-6, 2009, at the Aldo Leopold Legacy Center, headquarters of the Aldo Leopold Foundation outside Baraboo, Wisconsin. In the weeks ahead, CHN and ALF will provide a summary and synthesis of the discussion, which organizers hope will lead to continued exchanges among all who share an interest in this vital conservation issue.
CHN Studies Conflict Resolution and Land-Use Planning
November 18th, 2009
Conflict resolution and mediation in land use planning was the topic of a conference sponsored by the New York State Bar Association attended by CHN Director of Bioethics Bruce Jennings on November 17, 2009 in New York City. Jennings is leading a project on the philosophy and ethics of planning in the New York and Hudson River region as a part of CHN’s local communities of conservation program.
Reflections on Humans and Nature
November 15th, 2009
When I first heard of the Center for Humans and Nature, I wondered about the name “Humans and Nature.” My first thought was, is this an organization that works on both pressing social justice and conservation issues? I remember thinking: That sounds like a lot to take on….
Moreover, as an ecosystem ecologist, my interest lies in the multifaceted feedback loops that circulate between and among human actions and ecosystem function. Therefore, the name “Humans and Nature” seemed paradoxical, suggesting the possibility of two distinct categories (like apples and oranges) while, to my mind, humans and nature are not separate. I raised my questions with the Center’s founder, philosopher and visionary, Strachan Donnelley. His response was classic Strachan, the philosopher, “It makes you think, doesn’t it?”
The irony of the paradoxical “and” between “Humans and Nature” is that it reflects one of the Center’s central goals. The Center works to explore worldviews that reflect the integrated, interdependent, complex, intimate relationships between and among humans and nature and to identify human pathways that make sense within that context. Thus, we are working toward a state of the world where the “and” does not represent a state of separation, but instead connotes relationship.
To that end, our programs seek to define and communicate renewed frameworks for humans and nature relationships that recognize ecological realities and the implications of evolutionary science. We do this work at multiple scales. At the local and regional levels, the Center seeks to build “cultures of conservation,” woven of biological and cultural diversity, human and ecosystem health, and resilient human and natural communities. We also seek to explore and promote new and renewed frameworks of ethical responsibility and ecological citizenship that cross local, regional, national, and global scales.
In this way, the Center does take on both pressing social justice and conservation issues. And it is a lot to take on…. But, as Strachan Donnelley wrote, “Is there really any other moral and civic alternative?”
—Brooke Hecht, Ph.D.
President, Center for Humans and Nature
Anja Claus to present at the 2010 AAG Conference
November 7th, 2009
CHN colleague Anja Claus will present at the 2010 annual meeting of the Association of American Geographers, April 16-18 in Washington DC. Ms. Claus will present a paper entitled “Protecting Values of Place: Efforts to Develop Democratic Ecological Citizenship in Two North American Communities.” The paper is part of her Masters Degree in Geography and Environmental Studies research which focuses on the following central questions: What kinds of methods inform and empower citizens in their efforts to maintain the health of ‘place’? Are these tools reproducible in other communities? What are the prospects for such democratic ecological citizenship in the face of an overarching belief in free markets and unfettered individualism? For the full AAG abstract, please click here.
CHN Welcomes New Board Member
October 30th, 2009
The Center for Humans and Nature welcomes it’s newest member to the Board of Directors, Ceara Donnelley, daughter of the Center’s Founding President, Strachan Donnelley. Ms. Donnelley was elected at the October 2009 meeting of the Board.
Ceara is a recent graduate of Yale Law School, where she served as an editor on the Yale Journal of Law and Humanities. She also received her BA summa cum laude from Yale, where she was elected to Phi Beta Kappa and awarded the John Addison Porter Prize for her senior thesis in the History major. Ms. Donnelley has worked at Simpson, Thacher & Bartlett LLP, the Brennan Center for Justice, the Clinton Foundation and the World Policy Institute. She currently sits on the board of the Gaylord and Dorothy Donnelley Foundation.
5th Annual Keeping Nature Alive Symposium announced: “Implementing the Biosphere Ethics Initiative in the Indiana Dunes Region”
Global Program, City Creatures: Rediscovering Human-Animal Relationships in Chicago’s Urban WildernessOctober 29th, 2009
The CHN North American Global Responsibilities Program will work closely with its regional partners to develop a local Biosphere Ethic for the Indiana Dunes Region, leading to the 5th Annual Symposium in September 2010. The purpose of the local ethic will be to influence local governance structures and organizations to take biodiversity conservation ethics into consideration when planning. It will be the first local implementation of the global Biosphere Ethics Initiative, a soft law programme based in the social movement theory that pragmatic, justicial change occurs “from below.” Planning meetings have begun with the Save the Dunes Council and the Lake Michigan Coastal Program of the Indiana Department of Natural Resources. For 10,000 years, water, wind and sand have worked to make the Indiana Dunes a place like no other on Earth, and for more than a century, civil society organizations and government leaders have been struggling to keep the humans and nature of the Indiana Dunes region alive. The Indiana Dunes are located on the banks of Lake Michigan, and with the other Great Lakes (found between the United States and Canada), they make up 20% of the world’s freshwater resources. International oil and steel companies have already found a home here, and there are new global threats daily, such as mining and pipelining. If you would like more information on this project, please contact the CHN lead staff for the initiative, Kathryn Kintzele.
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Honoring Landscape in Decision Making
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May 02, 2012 - Soundwalk in the Indiana Dunes
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April 16, 2012 - Curt Meine Speaks to the Relevancy of Leopold’s Land Ethic on Wisconsin Public Radio to Contemporary Environmental Issues
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