ecology

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Dawn Morrison, coordinator of the B.C. Food Systems Network – Working Group on Indigenous Food Sovereignty and Comprehensive Community Planning Coordinator with the Neskonlith Indian Band in Secwepemc˙l’ecw (land of the Shuswap)

Dawn Morrison, coordinator of the B.C. Food Systems Network – Working Group on Indigenous Food Sovereignty and Comprehensive Community Planning Coordinator with the Neskonlith Indian Band in Secwepemc˙l’ecw (land of the Shuswap)

By Joanne Wadden
Briarpatch Magazine
September/October 2010

Food is political. It may be used as a lens to discuss issues of power and resistance, sustainability and social justice. Since the World Food Summit of 1996, global social movements have grown to use food justice as an organizing principle to challenge global capitalism and its negative effects on food systems. Both food security and food sovereignty are concepts that emerged from the 1996 Food Summit. The concept of indigenous food sovereignty represents a policy approach that extends the concept of food security through honouring the wisdom and values of indigenous knowledge in maintaining responsible relationships with the land.

While the meaning of these concepts continues to evolve, food security, as defined at the 1996 Food Summit, exists “when all people at all times have access to sufficient, safe, nutritious food to maintain a healthy and active life.” While food security emphasizes access to, as well as availability and utilization of food, Vandana Shiva, environmental activist and scholar, emphasizes that food security does not address issues of food production and food distribution, such as who grows the food. Food sovereignty, on the other hand, addresses these omissions because it arose from a global peasants’ organization, La Vía Campesina, that seeks to foster local food security “from below,” through de-linking from a dependency on globalized food networks. Indigenous food sovereignty specifically addresses the protection, conservation and restoration of indigenous food systems. Read the rest of this entry »

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Illustration by Ben Clarkson

Illustration by Ben Clarkson

By Robin Tennant-Wood
Briarpatch Magazine
November/December 2009

For over a century, we’ve thought of work as the use of human labour and technology to transform natural resources into tradeable goods. This economic model has brought us unparalleled prosperity – and exhausted the planet’s capacity to support us. Building a green economy, Robin Tennant-Wood argues, requires nothing less than a fundamental change in how we understand work and a complete overhaul of the global economy.

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Conrad Schmidt helped found the Work Less Party as a way to spark a discussion about the value of work.

Conrad Schmidt helped found the Work Less Party as a way to spark a discussion about the value of work.

By Anna Kirkpatrick
Briarpatch Magazine
November/December 2009

Work is a blessing and a curse. At its best, work gives our lives meaning and purpose. Many of us derive our self-identity from our work. More than just a means to an income, work can provide an opportunity to contribute, interact and connect with others.

Yet at the same time, work can be demeaning drudgery. Meaningless employment can sap us of dignity and creativity, leaving us drained and diminished. British economist E.F Schumacher was well aware of this dual nature of work, advising in his book Good Work that young people “should be taught that work is the joy of life and is needed for our develop­ment, but that meaningless work is an abomination.”

What, then, makes work meaningful? What is good work and how do we find it?

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Editor’s note: This is, of course, an incomplete list. Please feel free to add your own suggestions in the comment section below.

Books

Mark Anielski, The Economics of Happiness: Building Genuine Wealth (2007)

Sharon Astyk, Depletion and Abundance: Life on the New Home Front (2008)

John Bellamy Foster, The Ecological Revolution: Making Peace with the Planet (2009)

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By Dave Oswald Mitchell
Briarpatch Magazine
July/August 2009

And all of the crew they were brave men,
But the Captain he was braver.
He said ‘Never mind the ship me boys
There’s none of us here can save her.

Let her go down. Swim for your lives!
Swim for your children, swim for your wives
But let her go down.’

Knight, sung by Steeleye Span

This ship may not yet be going down, but it’s certainly heading straight for the rocks.

How do we change course? Or failing that, where are the lifeboats that can preserve us and carry us back to shore? In less nautical terms, these are the sorts of questions with which this issue of Briarpatch is concerned.

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Illustration: Nick Craine

Illustration: Nick Craine

By John Bellamy Foster
Briarpatch Magazine
July/August 2009

This essay is excerpted with permission from John Bellamy Foster’s The Ecological Revolution: Making Peace with the Planet, Monthly Review Press, (2009).

Underlying the goal of ecological revolution is the premise that we are in the midst of a global environmental crisis of such enormity that the planet’s entire web of life is threatened and with it the future of civilization.

This is no longer a controversial proposition. To be sure, there are different perceptions about the extent of the challenge that it raises. At one extreme, there are those who believe that since these are human problems arising from human causes they are easily solvable. All we need is ingenuity and the will to act. At the other extreme are those who believe the world ecology is deteriorating on a scale and with a rapidity beyond our means to control it, giving rise to gloomy forebodings.

Although polar opposites, these views nonetheless share a common basis. As Marxist economist Paul Sweezy observed, they each reflect “the belief that if present trends continue to operate, it is only a matter of time until the human species irredeemably fouls its own nest.”

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Finnish summer: Birch trees through a sauna window

Finnish summer: Birch trees through a sauna window

(Click an image to enlarge.)

Words and photos by Chris Benjamin
Briarpatch Magazine
July/August 2009

Conventional wisdom tells us that because Finland is wealthy, its citizens have the necessary resources to take action on environmental issues – that prosperity and a healthier environment go hand in hand. Unfortunately, the world doesn’t work this way.

The mercury hit 99oC. The steam hit my eyes and Uncle Reijo started talking about snow.

The European Union (E.U.), Uncle Reijo explained as we sat and sweated in a Finnish sauna, had recently devised a standardized set of planting guidelines for all 8.6 million of its farms, stretching from Portugal to Finland. Corn, the guidelines stipulated, was to be planted in early spring. A stubborn farmer he knew responded by planting a corn seed in the Finnish snow at the proper date, snapping a photo and sending it to the E.U.

We shared a laugh at the universal depths of bureaucratic myopia. In the silence that followed, I decided to try my one Finnish phrase.

Kylla, luonto on kaunis, I said, looking through the sauna window. Nature sure is beautiful. Uncle Reijo nodded.

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By Jonathan Taggart
Briarpatch Magazine
July/August 2009
Mishka, 2, plays with Fiza, a volunteer with Canada World Youth, on the floor of the communal kitchen while his mother sweeps. Members of Whole Village share community housekeeping responsibilities such as cleaning, cooking and child care. (All photos: Jonathan Taggart)

Mishka, 2, plays with Fiza, a volunteer with Canada World Youth, on the floor of the communal kitchen while his mother sweeps. Members of Whole Village share community housekeeping responsibilities such as cleaning, cooking and child care. (All photos: Jonathan Taggart)

(Click photos to enlarge.)

“I first visited Whole Village in April 2007; over the course of the next 18 months, I lived on the farm in installations, working the land to earn my keep while photographing the community.”

Whole Village is an ecovillage and biodynamic farm founded in response to a perceived loss of genuine community, increased urban­ization of rural areas and impoverishment of farmland. A self-described intentional community, Whole Village is located on a 200-acre tract of land an hour north of Toronto’s city centre. The community is made up of 30 educators, professionals and farmers who live in a 15,000 square-foot co-operative residence and share sustainability as their ultimate goal. I first visited Whole Village in April 2007; over the course of the next 18 months, I lived on the farm in installations, working the land to earn my keep while photographing the community.

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The view from Mount Moresby (Photo: Erik Haensel)

The view from Mount Moresby (Photo: Erik Haensel)

By Erik Haensel and Justine Townsend
Briarpatch Magazine
July/August 2009

In December 2007, the Council of the Haida Nation and the Government of B.C. ratified a Strategic Land Use Agreement for Haida Gwaii, also known as the Queen Charlotte Islands, off the north coast of B.C., following four years of participatory planning in island communities. The agreement is a bold challenge to traditional economic policy, representing a major shift from an export-driven, resource-based economy to an ecologically grounded approach to a sustainable economy on Haida Gwaii.

Yet, for the Haida this paradigm shift is not novel, but rather a belated recognition of the values deeply rooted in their culture and their traditional relationship to the land, and encoded in Haida law.

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