Millennium Ecosystem Assessment, except that MAHB will incorporate mechanisms for people from around the world to “discuss what humanity is and should be all about.”
Whether Ehrlich and his MAHB will in fact succeed in effecting a worldwide revolution to combat population growth and decide “what people are for” remains to be seen. If it does, the sustainability movement will shift from eco-morality peer pressure to actual behavior modification.
UK Re-Education
The second recent development is the UK-based publication of a Handbook of Sustainability Literacy. The handbook’s editor is Arran Stibbe of the University of Gloucestershire. According to a press release, the project was funded by the Higher Education Academy Education for Sustainable Development Project (HEAESDP?) and has a whole family of helpers. It is conducted by the Environmental Association for Universities and Colleges in partnership with the University of Gloucestershire, the University of Brighton and the United Nations University Regional Centres of Expertise. The Handbook is available in a paperback version and can be viewed online for free.
In the introduction, Stibbe, along with Heather Luna of the HEAESDP, writes that the 224-page handbook presents ideas that can be used by parents, professors, and other educators, “but not as a rigid guide to the ‘one right way.’” It’s nice to be reminded that sustainability has not yet settled on the one right way. But the editors’ tolerance extends only so far. They request that readers not get hung up on any false or purely speculative arguments in the book:
There may well be parts that are contentious or refutable, but given the conditions of the world this was considered preferable to something that was so blandly abstract that it was beyond debate. To borrow words from Rachel Carson (1962:16), ‘I would ask those who find parts of this book not to their taste or consider that they can refute some of the arguments to see the picture as a whole. We are dealing with dangerous things and it may be too late to wait for positive evidence of danger.’
It is springtime for sustainability and it is, unlike Rachel’s, anything but silent.
The Handbook contains over forty chapters covering Skills for a Changing World and Transforming Education for Sustainability Literacy. Such richness is hard to summarize but we especially recommend the skills of:
Ecocriticism: “the ability to investigate cultural artefacts from an ecological perspective,”
Effortless Action: “the ability to fulfil human needs effortlessly through working with nature,”
Gaia Awareness: “awareness of the animate qualities of the Earth,” and
Social Conscience: “the ability to reflect on deeply-held opinions about social justice and sustainability.”
The education section hones in on “Citizen Engagement” and “Re-Educating the Person.” We take some satisfaction that this is a British book and that the American sustainabullies have not yet taken the plan for coerced re-education beyond the dorms at the University of Delaware. Or have they?
We remain keenly interested in what it means to be “re-educated” in the ways of sustainability. The Handbook tells us it is a pleasant experience:
As people gain sustainability literacy skills, they become empowered to read self and society critically, to discover insights into the trajectory of society and to envisage where it is heading. They gain skills in re-writing self and society both in an effort to meet needs under increasingly difficult conditions and also to work towards new paths that lead to a more sustainable world.
But we’re not so sure.
How many of the people pushing "sustainability" are scientists? E.G. biologists, geologists, etc.? At my university, the Environmental Studies program has no requirements even for biology, not to speak of other sciences. The students learn to engage in politics - based on ignorance.
I suggest a project of going through the curriculum requirements for all "environmental studies" programs.
by Athena Posted on 09/23/2009