(April 22, 2009)
Holidays
Genevieve Maricle,
Consortium for Science, Policy & Outcomes
Earth Day 2009: A Voice for the Voiceless
The environmental movement has made great strides since this day 39 years
ago, when Earth Day was first declared a holiday. Amidst the ebbs and flows
of public attentiveness for environmental concerns, legislation has been
passed and regulations implemented in cities, states, and the federal government
to protect our water, air, ecosystems, species, roadless areas, ocean health,
etc, etc.
And meanwhile, the public has come to care. One need only turn on the
television or walk down the aisle of a Safeway to see products greening
right before their eyes, and industries forming to respond - organic foods,
energy efficiency, recycled products, even the fuel companies that power
our energy use have taken to appealing to our heightened environmental consciousness.
The environment has become trendy.
But neither our laws nor our alert consciousness is without blindspots.
In 2005, we all had a chance to see up close the uneven distribution of
environmental degradation here in the US. The coverage of Hurricane Katrina
took us for a brief moment into the realities of Cancer Alley, into the
lower income - often minority - communities who must live next to petrochemical
plants, incinerators, and municipal landfills, and the waste - and illness
- that they produce. Katrina flooded that waste and showed us the toxicity
that while everpresent, we seldom otherwise see. It showed us, for a fleeting
moment, the voiceless: those who have time and again been overlooked by
both our environmental movements and our environmental science.
Despite the efforts of those in the environmental justice community, neither
the research questions we deem “most pressing” within the environmental
sciences nor the issues we deem central to the environmental advocacy agenda
address the uneven distribution of environmental impacts, health threats,
or infrastructure weaknesses. In fact, in setting these agendas – both research
and advocacy – the most vulnerable communities have been largely voiceless.
And as I say this, let me be clear, I am not referring to the agendas
set in the board rooms of oil companies or the chemical industry. I am referring
to the agendas set by ecologists, climatologists, and natural resource managers,
by Environmental Defense, the Natural Resources Defense Council, and Greenpeace,
by groups who care, who value environmental justice. Yet these questions
still have not risen to the top in these past 39 years. Why?
Because the voices of the affected remain too quiet and too few. In the
environmental sciences, habit and curiosity promote research into the climate
system or the structure of ecosystems before they promote research on conditions
and solutions for reducing vulnerability. Our research priorities are determined
largely by the scientists who will research them and not by the communities
they might affect. And as a result, they are not well aligned with the most
acute needs and problems of vulnerable communities.
We are at a critical juncture however, as we, as a nation, ramp up our
desire to involve stakeholders in our discussions and decisions about the
environmental science research we will pursue. We have begun to engage the
communities who are most affected by environmental concerns. We have begun
to assess their needs and challenges. Yet our attempts thus far have had
little impact on our research priorities. We do not know what to do with
the stakeholder input that we get back.
This is our challenge. This will take work. It is not the model science
prioritization has relied on for the past 50 years, and it requires a reworking
of assumptions and habits – a reworking that our institutions are not wont
to do. But if we do not assume this challenge, if we do not struggle with
how to rework our assumptions and habits, 39 years from now, we are unlikely
to be in a different spot. We are unlikely to have a more just environmental
science agenda. We are unlikely to have removed this gaping blindspot.
Both the environment and stakeholder involvement are trendy at this moment.
The choice is ours. Will we use this opportunity to give voice to the voiceless?
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