My current three-point plan on overcoming climate doomism/doomerism:
1. Highlight science.
2. Avoid buzzwordy rhetoric.
3. Act to inspire, inspire for action.
Details are below and discussion would be welcome for improvement.
Ilan
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1. Highlight science
Much (not all) of the doomism/doomerism regarding climate change is not scientifically supportable:
1. Weather, and disasters https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/climate-change-weather-disasters-ilan-kelman
2. Conflict and disasters https://theconversation.com/ipcc-report-how-politics-not-climate-change-is-responsible-for-disasters-and-conflict-178071
3. Islands https://doi.org/10.24043/isj.52 (especially Table 2).
4. Migration https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci8050131 (paper) and https://www.psychologytoday.com/gb/blog/disaster-choice/202007/can-climate-refugees-have-hope (blog).
Some of the possible exceptions are noted in this material.
The terrifying one happening now is heat-humidity and it will get much worse.
Certainly, there is no scenario I have seen in which humanity goes extinct, so calling climate change an existential threat for humanity is not supportable.
2. Avoid buzzwordy rhetoric
Rhetoric and buzzphrases distract from climate change's real causes and responses https://www.psychologytoday.com/gb/blog/disaster-choice/202102/the-causes-climate-change
Key ones to avoid:
Climate breakdown / climate chaos / climate disruption
Climate, by definition, is average weather over decades. It is a statistical construct which does not have a word or meaning in many languages. As such, it cannot breakdown or be disrupted per se. Where the statistical construct of climate is accepted, it always exists, rather than being broken or non-functional.
Given that climate is a statistical construct, we can test for properties of mathematical chaos and the climate has always exhibited them. As such, climate chaos is the norm, not a new, strange, or worrisome observation. With an ever-evolving trajectory displaying significant uncertainties and unknowns, it is unclear what climate could be disrupted from.
Climate crisis
Contemporary climate change is fundamentally due to human values, attitudes, behaviour, and actions. If we stopped human-caused climate change immediately, then the same values, attitudes, behaviour, and actions would still be leading to numerous other societal ills, from human trafficking and slavery to overfishing and forest destruction. Human-caused climate change is one symptom among many, not a specific cause, of the crisis of human values, attitudes, behaviour, and actions. Highlighting a climate crisis or climate change crisis serves to distract from the real crisis.
Climate emergency / Earthquake emergency / Hazard emergencies
Because human actions cause contemporary climate change and cause vulnerabilities, situations where we cannot deal with hazards (e.g. earthquakes) or hazard influencers (e.g. climate change) are people emergencies, societal emergencies, and vulnerability emergencies, not hazard emergencies.
Climate smart / Climate informed / Hazard smart / Hazard informed
By definition, all disaster-related work should be people-smart which means being climate-smart, weather-smart, earthquake-smart, landslide-smart, all-hazard-smart, all-vulnerability-smart, all-resilience smart, and more. By definition, all disaster-related work should factor in all potential hazards, all vulnerabilities, and their possible influencers, including but not limited to climate. The result should be informed by all potential hazards, all vulnerabilities, and their potential influencers, again including but not limited to climate. Being only climate-smart” or only climate-informed is not being disaster-smart, disaster-informed, people-smart, or people-informed.
3. Act to inspire, inspire for action.
Pursue eco-inspiration https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/disaster-choice/202110/how-reduce-eco-anxiety-and-make-positive-change
Support children https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20220315-how-eco-anxiety-affects-childrens-minds
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1. Circular economy (Stahel and Reday-Mulvey, 1977/1981)
2. Deglobalization (Bello 2008)
3. Degrowth (Lefèvre 2004)
4. Doughnut economics (Raworth 2017) despite its mistake of focusing on planetary boundaries.
5. Essential exponential (Bartlett 2004)
6. Overshoot / Homo colossus (Catton, Jr. 1982)
7. Steady state economy (Daly 1977)
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Ashley Colby Fitzgerald
PhD, Environmental Sociology
Executive Director Rizoma Foundation, Loconomy Project
Co-founder Rizoma Field School
My book: Subsistence Agriculture in the US
Twitter @RizomaSchool @RizomaFound @LoconomyNow
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How could that be true, Tom, since you have not changed the energy system so it burns no fossil fuels? --- Rich Rosen
Thus, it is promised in the Talmud that the Messiah will come only if Israel would for once fully protect the Sabbath. The
Talmud simply gives fitting expression here to its conceptions of the Sabbath’s special character of fulfillment: the prophets see in the Messianic Age a state in which the struggle between man and nature has found an end.
On the topic of taking a day/week to rest, this new TED talk about a 4 day work week may be of interest.
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Dear all,
I neglected to indicate that the Julie Schor is the speaker in the TED talk.
~ Reid
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One more time, this time with a link to the TED talk: https://www.ted.com/talks/juliet_schor_the_case_for_a_4_day_work_week
One more time, this time with a link to the TED talk: https://www.ted.com/talks/juliet_schor_the_case_for_a_4_day_work_week
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There is a fundamental difference between statistical correlation and causal association. The statements in this article imply that there is a causal association b between working week and carbon footprint, but these are in fact only indirect statistical correlations. The Europeans not only have much longer vacations but they also live in smaller houses located in greater density areas, generally have much greater access to public transit, waste less food, and own much less stuff. Any study that does not control for these key variables is indefensible.
Halina Brown
From: sco...@googlegroups.com <sco...@googlegroups.com>
On Behalf Of Tom Walker
Sent: Monday, August 8, 2022 12:53 PM
To: Joseph Zammit-Lucia <jo...@me.com>
Cc: SCORAI Group <sco...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: [EXT] Re: [SCORAI] De-growth
In the same vein,
Cheers,
Tom Walker (Sandwichman)
On Mon, Aug 8, 2022 at 8:27 AM 'Joe Zammit-Lucia' via SCORAI <sco...@googlegroups.com> wrote:
This article may be of interest
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My apology, Tom. I did not mean to take on a condescending tone to the sender of the article. My argument is with the article itself. The article quotes some fine scholars. But when I read the article, the factual material presented to support the main hypothesis (shorter work week -> smaller footprint) reads as no more than statistical correlations. That is misleading to a reader who does not know the difference between correlation and causality.
I would be very interested to know if this correlation has been explained through further research. As you are intimately familiar with this literature, it would be great if you shed some light on it. It is an important topic.
Again, my apology to you personally.
Halina
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Dr Joe Zammit-Lucia
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Increasing use of services for instance will result in less environmental damage than increased consumption of goods. Don’t know what literature there is on that. Quite a bit I suspect.
Unilever has selectively gone to a 4 day work week without a loss in productivity.
Thank you, Tom Walker, for providing the link to the literature on the relationship between WT and carbon footprint, especially the meta analysis by Antal et al. The authors’ conclusion that the relationship is inconclusive is at this point in time the most sensible one: we do not know, and finding the answer through empirical studies will be very hard, if at all. So it seems to me that any public statements on this subject, with all the caveats you cite in the Washington Post article – may, could – is going to be misinterpreted by the general public, which is not attuned to these nuanced caveats. I therefore stick to my criticism of the article and the fine scholars cited in it who let their names to be associated with that misinterpretation.
On the other hand, if we stay in the realm of hypotheses, I can think of many reasons why worktime reduction is likely to increase the carbon footprint if it is not associated with reduction in wages. I can also think of reasons why WTR could decrease carbon footprint, but not as many.
I acknowledge though that working time reduction has various other important social benefits, which should be stressed.
Halina
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On Aug 9, 2022, at 6:31 PM, Tom Abeles <tab...@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi JoeI strongly recommend looking at the extensive materials published by the Good Foods Institute, GFI.orgThe gov't of Singapore is the first to certified cellular production of chicken which shows the global commitment of governments to Precision Fermentation/Cellular Ag PF/CA. The presence of JBS, the world's largest processor of meat now has alt protein products in the global market just as an example. Burger King in Belgium (I believe) has a full vegan menu. One can buy ice cream which has a matching non-dairy and dairy versions.....There are a number of newsletter and other materials that track the entire industry from manufacturing to venture financing to the growth of products in the marketplace. GFI is the best entry point. This is not a fringe industry.tom
On Tue, Aug 9, 2022 at 3:36 PM Joe Zammit-Lucia <jo...@me.com> wrote:
Maybe there are a couple of things worth discussing.Not all economic growth is equal in terms of environmental harms. Increasing use of services for instance will result in less environmental damage than increased consumption of goods. Don’t know what literature there is on that. Quite a bit I suspect.If people start spending a significant amount of time and money in the various metaverses - for instance buying virtual real estate rather than physical real estate - that will also make a difference.It also highlights the problem with pure empiricism which, by definition, has to be backward looking (we have no ‘data’ about the future - and especially about a sort of future we can’t even begin to imagine).Finally, to Tom’s point, developments such as alt-protein and convincing people to switch depends on two things - technological development and industrial investment in that, in production, and in advertising to persuade people to switch. The abhorrence by some of industry and advertising is counter-productive as we cannot achieve change without them.Unless of course one prefers the authoritarian route of regulating every aspect of everyone’s lives.Best
Joe
Dr Joe Zammit-Lucia
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Of course, such a paradigm shift is probably harder than asking people
to change their belief in a supreme God, if not one and the same.
Ashley Colby Fitzgerald
PhD, Environmental Sociology
Executive Director Rizoma Foundation, Loconomy Project
Co-founder Rizoma Field School
My book: Subsistence Agriculture in the US
Twitter @RizomaSchool @RizomaFound @LoconomyNow
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Here's the problem as I see it:
1) Robeyns' actions, while potentially helpful, are all addressed at climate change but climate change is not the real problem. Ecological overshoot is the major environmental existential treat facing humanity. (There are too many people consuming and polluting too much.)
2) Climate change is an excessive waste problem and just one symptom of overshoot.
3) Politically acceptable 'solutions' to climate change will not fix the climate and tend to exacerbate overshoot. (Education about climate change -- her first point -- would reveal this to critical observers.)
4) The only effective way to reduce overshoot and address its major symptoms (climate change, plunging biodiversity, ocean acidification, tropical deforestation, land/soil degradation, pollution of everything, etc., etc.) is through significant reductions in energy and material throughput (consumption and waste discharge) and human population.
5) One could argue that society's simplistic focus on climate change is a distraction from the real issue of overshoot and as such is a form of denial.
6) In short, Robeyns' solutions do not go nearly far enough.
Bill
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Hi Tom, Joe et al. --
First, to Tom's point: For a book-full of reasons, I'm inclined to be skeptical of 'alternative protein', cultivated meat and many of the other potential techno-miracles advocated by the RethinkX folks. Many of their ideas have yet to meet the test of 'scaling up' and will be challenged by energy and materials bottlenecks among other things. Even if the RethinkX revolution were possible, it would serve mainly to enable "business-as-usual-by-alternative-means", i.e., it would not address (indeed, it would worsen) overshoot and the depletion of the planet.
The URL below is a detailed account of the technical and material roadblocks on the path to lab-grown animal protein. On such grounds, my advice to local food producers is not to sell off your broiler hens and feeder steers just yet. We are a long way away from seeing commercial cultivated meat production on a scale sufficient to significantly challenge conventional meat at competitive prices. Check out:
https://thecounter.org/lab-grown-cultivated-meat-cost-at-scale/
|
Lab-grown meat is supposed to be inevitable. The science tells a different story. Headlines have overshadowed inconvenient truths about biology and cost. Now, new research suggests the industry may be on a crash course with reality. |
Joe asks how society might achieve significantly reduced production/consumption and population. I.e., what should we be doing to reduce overshoot and stave off extreme climate change. Here is a just small sample of policies that should be familiar to SCORAI followers.
More specific policies would require that governments/society:
In short, there is little doubt that we know many of the things that should be done to engineer “significant reductions in energy and material throughput (consumption and waste discharge) and human population”. However, the problem is not what should be done but rather how to convince the world to take the kinds of decisive action necessary. Global society's continued worshipping at the alter technology-abetted perpetual growth is a cognitive barrier that is only beginning to be challenged in the mainstream. The dominant growth-based cultural narrative is obsolete and If it does not evolve rapidly then some sort of chaotic implosion is inevitable.
On the upside, societal beliefs, values and assumptions (narrative or paradigm) are subject to erosion if the flood of evidence continues to surge. At some point we reach a social tipping point when acceptance of the need for rapid change goes mainstream. The barrier comes down.
Cheers,
Bill
Dear All,
may I come back to Ingrid Robeyns' piece on what citizens can do
about climate change? We may have to add overshoot (as Bill
pointed out). For sure, a "precise awareness of the present
moment" would be good (as Tom stated).
The problem I have with this thread is that it lost the focus on
what an ordinary citizen can do. The proposals by Ingrid Robeyns
may not go far enough, but they are not thought of or presented as
"solutions", but rather as a starting point. The aim is to get
into action.
Reading all your inputs makes me feel helpless and makes me
refrain from action. The ideas you bring up are not ideas on the
level of what ordinary people can do, but rather address
governments or "the society".
Could you refocus on what all this means in your view for
ordinary citizens?
Best
Ortrud
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Ruben,
thanks for this! Local food, walkable communities and insulated
homes address ordinary citizens. However, I wonder if you propose
not to do all the (other) things on Robeyns' list?
Best
Ortrud
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Hi Ilan,
focusing on climate change may be simplistic, negelecting a lot
of context, but do you really think it is a distraction from the
real issue however that is named?
I completely agree that we should not focus solely on climate
change and that politically all the efforts on SDGs, climate
change and disaster-related action have to be connected. Yet, I
can't see much benefit in blaming approaches such as Robeyns'
citizens' action plan as simplistic.
What guidance can you give ordinary citizens? Ruben (Anderson)
has narrowed it down to walkable communities, local food and
insulated homes. This may be another simplification, but a helpful
rule of thumb.
Best
Ortrud
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Joe
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Hi Ilan, Bill, Jean and Zoe,
thanks for clarifying your position! I'm glad to hear that the
main point is to broaden the context and dig deeper into the
causes of climate change and environmental problems. Still, it
seems to me that you are speaking to the SCORAI-community of
experts and researchers and do not directly address ordinary
citizens in your "starting agendas for achieving sustainability".
But I see that you argue for inter- and transdisciplinary
research, including not only other researchers but practitioners,
too.
Concerning my questions: I don't see the focus on climate change
as a distraction as long as there are so many people who deny
climate change. It's a valid starting point. And it's important to
keep things simple in order to be able to act. This is not to stop
you and others informing the broader public on climate change
misinformation and in your effort to put it in context.
As guidance for ordinary citizens who are not working full-time
on these issues (and I count myself in this group since I mainly
work on social policy, people's well-being and inequality) I like
Robeyns list. (@ Jean: thanks for giving insights into how you are
combining work and activism!) I think Robeyns is right in
highlighting that individual consumption is important, but that
political measures are more important. Concerning what measures
should be prioritized, Bill's key points may help assessing
policies and politicians. Thanks to all of you who have pointed
out that Bill's list may looked at in this way as well. Not as
something citizens can do by themselves but try to support and
keep in mind in elections.
Robeyns' list is not a solution, it is not enough, but it gives
guidance to those who say: "We can't do anything." She sets a
positive example. Her list is easy to remember. And if you are
already doing all those things, you can dig deeper. But I would
ask you to be careful with stating that the focus on climate
change is a distraction. That may well be an excuse not to start
at all.
Best
Ortrud
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Ashley Colby Fitzgerald
PhD, Environmental Sociology
Executive Director Rizoma Foundation, Loconomy Project
Co-founder Rizoma Field School
My book: Subsistence Agriculture in the US
Twitter @RizomaSchool @RizomaFound @LoconomyNow
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I sympathize with your anxiety about what ordinary citizens can do. I suspect the answer is that they can do very little that directly affects overshoot or climate change. Overshoot is a collective problem that demands collective solutions. Ordinary citizens cannot implement the necessary tax and incentive regimes, ration FF supplies, implement public transit, etc. In fact, many of these things are required to support people in taking personal action such as using transit.
In this light, perhaps the most important action for ordinary citizens is to organize in special interest groups and mass protest activities to push politicians into doing the right thing.
There is still a problem, of course. I wonder if the majority of people would be willing to participate/protest/revolt if they realized that significant action at the top would mean economic disruption, reduced energy supplies/consistency, job losses, possible relocation, etc., before things re-stabilize, if they ever do.
Bill
In this light, perhaps the most important action for ordinary citizens is to organize in special interest groups and mass protest activities to push politicians into doing the right thing.
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- the vast majority of citizens don't give a damn about climate change.
We seem tempted to keep believing that everyone cares about climate as much as the people on this list -
That is why climate action is such a delicate subject. If citizens en masse were fired up enough about it, we wouldn't need protests and other disruptions. It would already have made it to the top of the political agenda as the only way to get elected.
And, I suggest, we need to switch from the long term apocalypse to a narrative that says "your life is going to be better today if you take these actions because....".
Cutting to the chase, what the model shows is that people can have an "equivalent" standard of living with moderately less material consumption, MUCH less work and MUCH more leisure.
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i think this is a statement by Joe, pulled out by Tom W. (Caveat...I am in a place where I cannot follow this discussion closely, so this is a comment on a single--likely side-bar--point. Forgive me.)
the vast majority of citizens don't give a damn about climate change
I have a hunch. Just a hunch. That this is likely not strictly
true. At least,
I am confident that the reason many people shrug at climate
action is because it is simply too overwhelming to think about in
any instrumental way. People can't see what can be done BY THEM
to change this sorry state of things entire, and so think,
if there is nothing that can be done to change the outcome, my own life is good enough so I don't really have to fret about this.
--
Ashwani
Vasishth vasi...@ramapo.edu (201) 684-6616 (Jabber-enabled)
http://phobos.ramapo.edu/~vasishth
--------------------------------------------------------
Professor of Sustainability
Convener, Sustainability Program (BA)
Convenor, Environmental Studies Program (BA)
Director, Center for Sustainability
http://ramapo.edu/ramapo-green
http://ramapo.edu/sustainability
You can ALWAYS set up an Appointment with me, without negotiation, seven days a week,
at: https://calendly.com/vasishth/webex-meeting
Ramapo College of New Jersey
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--------------------------------------------------------
I respectfully acknowledge that Ramapo College is located on the ancestral and traditional Indigenous territory of the Ramapough Lenape Nation.To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/scorai/CANz%2BBQxyNXxEN%2BKGMcpV7qVNPnf6FOQD%2BHfi97DPvZOX%2Bf8fqw%40mail.gmail.com.
On 13 Aug 2022, at 5:51 am, Ruben Anderson <anderso...@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi Ortud—yes, I largely propose to not do the other things on Robeyn’s list.
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Thanks for this, Ashley!
Dear Tom, Joe, Kate and Jean,
thanks for turning the attention to more positive narratives what
might be actually done in one's own life. I like the circles of
change in Kate's handout.
I also think that the crises of today: the pandemic, the war in
Ukraine with its impact on food supply, the drought in Europe, ...
make much more people realize that our way of life is not the best
and has to be changed. We may be far away from a general strike,
but I see a change in awareness and attitude.
I completely agree that individual action is not enough and I see
the difficulties in organizing collective answers. Yet, I think
that usually all members of a collective need to agree on their
collective aim - hence the individual level must not be neglected.
But being part of a collective can be rewarding in itself -
althoug it is also exhausting as Jean told us.
Best
Ortrud
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Hi Ashwani,
thanks for this. This is the reason why I haven't found it
helpful to start the discussion with: the points on Robeyns' list
are not enough. Highlighting the shortcoming of traditional
political action strengthens the feeling that on the individual
level you can't do anything anyway. Looking at what sustainability
takes IS overwhelming.
I'm glad the thread turned to other narratives.
Best
Ortrud
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Hi Ruben,
thanks for clarifying your position further. I'm a bit torn how
to react. Your position is thought-provoking!
Yet, I also see some incongruence in your blaming education and political involvement as a waste of time and engergy while taking so much time to educate us about this ...
Best
Ortrud
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Hi Ashwani,
thanks for this. This is the reason why I haven't found it helpful to start the discussion with: the points on Robeyns' list are not enough. Highlighting the shortcoming of traditional political action strengthens the feeling that on the individual level you can't do anything anyway. Looking at what sustainability takes IS overwhelming.
I'm glad the thread turned to other narratives.
Best
Ortrud
Am 12.08.2022 um 23:35 schrieb Ashwani Vasishth:
i think this is a statement by Joe, pulled out by Tom W. (Caveat...I am in a place where I cannot follow this discussion closely, so this is a comment on a single--likely side-bar--point. Forgive me.)
the vast majority of citizens don't give a damn about climate change
I have a hunch. Just a hunch. That this is likely not strictly true. At least,
- I am confident that most undergraduate students ARE completely disengaged with climate action
- I am confident that the MAIN OBSTACLE is simply not ignorance or the lack of caring.
I am confident that the reason many people shrug at climate action is because it is simply too overwhelming to think about in any instrumental way. People can't see what can be done BY THEM to change this sorry state of things entire, and so think,
if there is nothing that can be done to change the outcome, my own life is good enough so I don't really have to fret about this.
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Thank you, Debbie--that's "rich depiction" as it ought to be. And appreciated as such.
VERY trivially, you say (perhaps with different intent?):
--
Ashwani
Vasishth vasi...@ramapo.edu (201) 684-6616 (Jabber-enabled)
http://phobos.ramapo.edu/~vasishth
--------------------------------------------------------
Professor of Sustainability
Convener, Sustainability Program (BA)
Convenor, Environmental Studies Program (BA)
Director, Center for Sustainability
http://ramapo.edu/ramapo-green
http://ramapo.edu/sustainability
You can ALWAYS set up an Appointment with me, without negotiation, seven days a week,
at: https://calendly.com/vasishth/webex-meeting
Ramapo College of New Jersey
505 Ramapo Valley Road, SSHS, Mahwah, NJ 07430
--------------------------------------------------------
I respectfully acknowledge that Ramapo College is located on the ancestral and traditional Indigenous territory of the Ramapough Lenape Nation.
Our insistence on feeling good
Well, its just that the obverse can clearly be shown to be
counter-productive, don't you think? Honey and vinegar sort of
thing?
Unless you mean making people feel good meaninglessly and in
principle, like insisting every kindergartner gets a gold star to
avoid hurting feelings?
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Thank you, Debbie--that's "rich depiction" as it ought to be. And appreciated as such.
VERY trivially, you say (perhaps with different intent?):
Our insistence on feeling good
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Public figures cannot expect the public to sacrifice convenience or comfort if they, themselves, do not “walk the walk.” Our prior work indicated that communicators’ carbon footprints massively affect their credibility and the likelihood that their audience will conserve energy. Our new research showed that the carbon footprints of those communicating the science not only affects their credibility, but also affects audience support for the public policies for which the communicators advocated. < https://acee.princeton.edu/acee-news/andlinger-center-speaks-why-the-messenger-matters-in-climate-action/>I know from personal experience that I can live a 2 ton CO@e per capita annual emission budget and today buy two tons of permanent verified emission reduction which would not have occurred otherwise for under $100/year. Achieving true sustainability can take decades of slow incremental change or radically dramatic full course-correction. I know that I will also work on political campaigns of policymakers willing to take the most meaningful policy actions, and contribute to the NGO's similarly committed to rapid and dramatic reversal of planetary degradation. Both are not only feasible but necessary
Hi Ortrud,
Thank you and these are the important questions! How good are the answers? This is why we are on this email list. For me,
1. Yes, I see human-caused climate change (a major and worrying symptom) distracting from the causes. See the links provided in my previous message for specific examples. As another story along these lines, see https://www.radixonline.org/blog/neyijvw2iwg7pjr38wbxhm0fr5vr0x
2. In terms of Robeyns and guidance, see Bill's message which had excellent summaries of specifics, as well as the other discussion on this thread--both before and after Bill's message below--which answers aspects of these key points from many perspectives. Part of this is not blaming Robeyns nor obviating these approaches for being simplistic. Instead, it is seeking wider and deeper contexts; not tossing away everything from Robeyns or others, instead trying to expand, deepen, and focus as much as possible on the fundaments.
To add, two starting agendas for achieving sustainability:
Hope this helps a bit? What are your thoughts? How would you answer your questions? Thank you and looking forward to critiques of the material I provide,
Ilan
1. Twitter @ILANKELMAN https://twitter.com/ilankelman
2. Instagram @ILANKELMAN https://www.instagram.com/ilankelman
3. ResearchGate https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Ilan_Kelman
Hi Ilan,
focusing on climate change may be simplistic, negelecting a lot of context, but do you really think it is a distraction from the real issue however that is named?
I completely agree that we should not focus solely on climate change and that politically all the efforts on SDGs, climate change and disaster-related action have to be connected. Yet, I can't see much benefit in blaming approaches such as Robeyns' citizens' action plan as simplistic.
What guidance can you give ordinary citizens? Ruben (Anderson) has narrowed it down to walkable communities, local food and insulated homes. This may be another simplification, but a helpful rule of thumb.
Best
Ortrud
Am 12.08.2022 um 09:16 schrieb 'Ilan Kelman' via SCORAI:
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Subject: Re: [SCORAI] Ingrid Robeyns' citizens' action plan on climate change
[CAUTION: Non-UBC Email]
Hi JoeIn response to your question to William, I have posted references to the transformational work in the area of alternative protein or alt. protein, noting the studies of RethinkingX and the extensive materials housed on the Good Foods Institute. The rise of the alt. protein efforts, globally appear to be tracking projections that RethinkX has forecast for developed countries, specifically the US and elsewhere which supports McAfee's claims of "More from Less" with significant reduction in land, water and other inputs and not considering the claimed health benefits from a vegan diet. These do not consider the other reductions of equipment manufacturing along the value chain from mine to fork so to speak.
While one hates to default to technology, including ideas around microgrids, nuclear, etc, thinking along these lines tends to dissolve the "hair shirt" which has been donned by the green movement to add pain to the guilt of the consumption driven humans. Perhaps a more logical approach is to deal with the problems created by a financialized economy which couples capital growth with material growth. There are solutions here which can be done if government would break its relationship with the 99% and get its fist out of the financial cookie jar.
tom A
On Thu, Aug 11, 2022 at 12:19 PM 'Joe Zammit-Lucia' via SCORAI <sco...@googlegroups.com> wrote:
Dear William,
The only effective way to reduce overshoot and address its major symptoms… is through significant reductions in energy and material throughput (consumption and waste discharge) and human population.
Might you share with us how, in your view, this might be achieved?
Best
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Debbie, thanks a lot for this analysis of how the exchange
evolved. And thanks for suggesting to point out how the various
acitivities of people from this group fit together, how they fit
into the broader picture. This is also a way to acknoledge that we
all have limited knowledge and cannot on our own think up THE
solution for sustainability and even less implement it.
I think Ingrid Robeyns' list contributes to encourage those who
are aware of climate change and environmental pollution to start
doing something rather than resigning. She also answers their
concern - or excuse - that changing individual consumption has
only a marginal effect by highlighting that apart from sustainable
consumption in the narrow sense there is a lot of environmental
friendly behavior and political activism that helps to overcome
the limits of individual action by moving into the direction of
collective action. As Tom Bowerman has written we need both.
Best
Ortrud
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Dear Debbie, Ortrud, and all,
Thank you very much for this fascinating discussion; and especially to Ortrud, who started it with Ingrid Robeyn’s “list of actions’, and Debbie, for her deep and thoughtful analysis of this discussion. I would like to make two points.
What kind of education do we need? For starters, we/citizens desperately need to learn how to see and understand reality more clearly (i.e., how to zoom out to see the bigger picture, identify the roots of problems, understand the likely outcomes of a given scenario, zoom back in to discern what all that means for us in our particular contexts) and ultimately how to face and live more gracefully in reality as it is. In Norbert Elias' terms, we need to shift the current balance of involvement and detachment--the proportional influences on our reactions/responses of immediate concerns and emotional involvements versus the capacity for a more dispassionate view of the larger situation.
I think there is a lot of wisdom here. I guess my question to Debbie is: how do you operationalize this? I imagine learning environments (schools, courses, retreats) where teachers like you are working with activists like me to help us reflect on the bigger picture (zooming out); and then zooming in into daily practices of activism and experimentation to work with a deeper understanding of the interconnectedness of it all: the long and short term; the local and the global, the individual and the larger scale of humanity. Have these courses been developed? Is there an opportunity for SCORAI members like you and many others to explore this?
I guess my two points are basically the same.
It would be great to know if educational and activist activities like this are already going on in SCORAI circles; and to know more about it.
We are now thinking of developing a series of webinars on this issue, or maybe a series of podcasts.
If you have an idea but do not want to write to the entire listserv, just write to me personally pver...@outlook.com
Best regards,
Philip
From: sco...@googlegroups.com <sco...@googlegroups.com>
On Behalf Of Ortrud Leßmann
Sent: Monday, August 15, 2022 9:23 AM
To: sco...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [SCORAI] Ingrid Robeyns' citizens' action plan on climate change
Debbie, thanks a lot for this analysis of how the exchange evolved. And thanks for suggesting to point out how the various acitivities of people from this group fit together, how they fit into the broader picture. This is also a way to acknoledge that we all have limited knowledge and cannot on our own think up THE solution for sustainability and even less implement it.
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Good point, Joe. I am sure there is a lot of research in political sciences that are doing just that.
What I meant however is not so much research but learning.
Thanks,
Philip
*This should not be equated with conscious rational thought. It refers rather to the values, beliefs, assumptions, mental models (aka the paradigms) at the basis of our cultural narratives, social systems, ways of being in the world, and the nature of the activities and material surroundings that emerge from all that and together generate "normal."
Good point, Joe. I am sure there is a lot of research in political sciences that are doing just that.
What I meant however is not so much research but learning.
Thanks,
Philip
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Dear Debbie,
I want to share a small anecdote from a recent experience, so show you the challenge before you.
Recently, I participated in a zoom call about reducing GHG emissions from residential homes. The main speaker leads a program on that issue, withing a larger environment organization. The call took place last week, during the heat wave, with temperatures approaching 100 degrees in Washington D.C, where the speaker was located. When we all appeared on the screen, it was noticeable that the speaker was wearing a heavy sweater buttoned up to her neck. One participant asked her about this apparent incongruity between the weather and her clothing. The answer: “this is how I deal with a heatwave. I set the thermostat on a very low temperature and put on warm clothes. It helps me deal with the heatwave.” The, she proceeded with her presentation on reducing emissions from residential homes.
Do you need a better example of the disconnect between the larger picture, the individual values, and lifestyles?
Halina
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On Behalf Of dvskasper
Sent: Tuesday, August 16, 2022 8:46 AM
To: Philip Vergragt <pver...@outlook.com>
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“this is how I deal with a heatwave. I set the thermostat on a very low temperature and put on warm clothes. It helps me deal with the heatwave.”

we need to shift...the proportional influences on our reactions/responses of immediate concerns and emotional involvements versus the capacity for a more dispassionate view of the larger situation.
achieving better understanding is never a wasted effort.
It would take a book to fully answer, but for now, suffice it to say that, as I see it, how we think and see the world* is at the root of the socio-environmental (and many other) ills that concern us here. There are so many other good places to work, as you all remind us, but my main interest lies at this root.*This should not be equated with conscious rational thought. It refers rather to the values, beliefs, assumptions, mental models (aka the paradigms) at the basis of our cultural narratives, social systems, ways of being in the world, and the nature of the activities and material surroundings that emerge from all that and together generate "normal."
What kind of education do we need? For starters, we/citizens desperately need to learn how to see and understand reality more clearly (i.e., how to zoom out to see the bigger picture, identify the roots of problems, understand the likely outcomes of a given scenario, zoom back in to discern what all that means for us in our particular contexts) and ultimately how to face and live more gracefully in reality as it is.
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So, if this is just a comfortable thought that needs to be challenged, that is a much bigger conversation."Confronting [ecological overshoot] demands at least a conscious transformational paradigm shift …replacement with a framework that better reflects biophysical reality” (Rees 2021, "Growth Through Contraction" pp. 109-110, emphasis mine).

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On Aug 17, 2022, at 5:36 AM, dvskasper <dvsk...@gmail.com> wrote:
Dear Ruben A,First, I want to let you know how much I appreciate your perspective and admire your work. I am with you on the limited attention/time argument (which is one reason I rarely get involved in these discussions) and on the importance of changing the default as the fastest way to get certain desired results. As I've said, there are many ways to accomplish that (e.g., policy, planning, design, technology, etc.) and I fully support using whatever makes sense.The thing is, I see paradigms as the ultimate default. I'm with Meadows in seeing paradigm change as "a leverage point that totally transforms systems."There are countless historical examples of this in politics, science, medicine, industries, and more, The ones I'm most interested in have to do with fundamental ways of perceiving--especially moving away from the dualistic unhelpful sense of individual vs society and humans vs nature. Being an "environmentalist" certainly does not exempt one from this erroneous modern worldview. Just look at the still dominant visual representation of the "human-environment" relationship. Two separate sides with a few arrows thrown in to "connect" them (see Chapter 4 of Beyond the Knowledge Crisis for elaboration). These mental pictures are a problem.And I'm not alone in thinking so. I could list endless quotes from reputable scholars (many of whom are on this list) arguing basically that:So, if this is just a comfortable thought that needs to be challenged, that is a much bigger conversation."Confronting [ecological overshoot] demands at least a conscious transformational paradigm shift …replacement with a framework that better reflects biophysical reality” (Rees 2021, "Growth Through Contraction" pp. 109-110, emphasis mine).As many of us have experienced for ourselves, such shifts can happen very quickly for a person. Broader societal-level changes tend to take much looonger, if they happen at all, given the massive resistance they usually provoke. Therein lies the challenge, and the great question and test for those of us interested.Fortunately, as Meadows points out, there's an even higher leverage point: our ability to change/transcend existing paradigms (I think of this more as the fulcrum, but that's a different essay). This capacity goes hand in hand with the concept of "detachment," both of which are products of evolution, so not contrary to it at all. Forgive me if I was unclear in explaining it, probably best to go straight to Elias (either his 1956 paper, attached, or his posthumously published book of the same title--brilliant).The concept of "involvement and detachment" refers to a fluctuating balance in the degrees to which immediate emotional reactions vs a more clear-headed, self-aware, far-sighted view govern our actions and responses. To advocate for an increased capacity for detachment is not to shame anyone. It's merely to recognize the dangers of actions and interactions strongly based in near-term self-serving wishes and fears and to see the benefits of developing and exercising our (evolved) ability for self-reflexive awareness and to think about consequences farther down the road. This capacity was instrumental in past societies who were able to sustain themselves over long periods of time and in the development of science, for example. It can be encouraged or suppressed within a culture, develops unevenly both in time and across populations, and is never total. I stand by the argument that we need more of it.I'll end with someone else's words, far more eloquent than my own:Jonas Salk, Anatomy of RealityI hope this answers at least some of your quibbles and questions. (?) Thanks for the good conversation,Debbie
y brain.2.
"how we think and see the world* is at the root of the socio-environmental (and many other) ills”There is an implicit theory of change here—if we could see the world more clearly, we could dig up the root of socio-environmental ills.I am not so sure that is true.Have you heard the apocryphal story about how the International Space Station was constrained by the space shuttle booster rocket size, which was constrained by railroad capacity, which matched the wheelbase of Roman chariots? So a highly technical and modern spacecraft was limited by the width of horses’ asses in the Roman Empire.We could change a lot of paradigms and still be stuck with the same inefficient and dirty energy infrastructure, the same poorly built and barely insulated homes, and the same sprawling urban arrangements—these wasteful systems are major drivers of climate change and even if we did change our paradigms they would endure for decades or centuries more.So, I agree our Enlightenment paradigm of separation from nature and rational analysis is a strong root of our ills.But there are so many environmentalists that fly off for vacation, or as Halina described, crank up the AC.These are people that are educated, aware, invested—and probably think they are part of a new paradigm. But they are citizens of this social group, living in countries with this infrastructure. We are locked in, in very meaningful ways.So I would love to hear your further thoughts on paradigms.Is the power of changing paradigms just another comfortable thought we have not challenged?Warmly,Ruben (not Nelson)
<1956 Elias I and D.pdf>
As it often happens with our listserv, this very interesting exchange trends toward generalizations, i.e. “government”, “human beings”, “society”, “activists”, “low hanging fruit”, and so on. I have two points to make it more specific and more useful for policy makers:
National government can help facilitate this change through targeted taxation and incentives (and disincentives). But the engine of change must be on the local level: policies regarding land use, zoning, housing, local taxes, etc. And this is the level at which political action may actually make a difference because people know each other or of each other, accountability is high, trust is greater, fora for debate among all parties are easier to create, and persuasion is a viable option.
I have been working at that level, and we are making meaningful progress. I only wish that more academics would get involved in this type of activism: they understand the big picture, they have theoretical framework for understanding human and institutional behaviors, they have tools for technical analysis. Alas, I meet very few academics who choose that path.
Halina
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On Aug 17, 2022, at 3:16 PM, 'Joe Zammit-Lucia' via SCORAI <sco...@googlegroups.com> wrote:
Dear HalinaA great story indeed which I shall use in the future if I may.One suggestion is that there is a tension in how to present dealing with environmental issues.By and large, the main narrative is that this is a collective issue that needs to be dealt with through government policy and through global coordination at the government level. All of which is true.Of course, one side-effect of that is that people believe that individual action is largely irrelevant or, at best, marginal because the number of people willing to modify their lifestyles significantly is vanishingly small and we can all find reasons why what we do is perfectly justifiable in our own individual circumstances. And, of course, there is truth to that - which is what makes it an appealing narrative for us all to avoid the inconvenience of changing what we do.From an activist perspective, it begs the question of where best to put limited resources - influencing policy or trying to influence the lifestyles of billions of people. My personal bias is the former because, in spite of the frustrations, one is likely to get more (much more) bang for the buck and is less likely to alienate people from the environmental cause by making them feel guilty about their lifestyles (would it have really helped the environment meaningfully by taking the person in your Zoom call to task about the contradictions?).The standard riposte to that is that we need to do both. The reality is that time and resources are always limited and trying to do everything usually results in achieving little - and especially so if different approaches are perceived to be giving somewhat different messages.Best
Joe
Dr Joe Zammit-Lucia
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Dear Joe,
It is hard to generalize about “academia”. Universities are institutions and institutions have a certain inertia, are guiding by existing rules and procedures, which perpetuate the disciplinary approach. It is true that new approaches to teaching and learning are tried out in many places, but we all have experiences in how difficult it is to establish interdisciplinary, action-oriented, wicked problem-solving programs at universities (at least I have quite some).
Quality control is an issue with this type of research.
Philip
From: Joe Zammit-Lucia <jo...@me.com>
Sent: Tuesday, August 16, 2022 4:02 PM
To: Philip Vergragt <pver...@outlook.com>