Introduction. Perspective. Lenses Make a Difference. ENVIR 202: Lesson No. 2. Lesson 2: Lenses Make a Difference January 6, 2006

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ENVIR 202: Lesson No. 2 Lenses Make a Difference January 6, 2006 Chuck Treser University of Washington Department of Environmental & Occupational Health Sciences ENVIR 202: Lesson 2 1 Introduction Course Syllabus / On-line Schedule Lecture Slides & Resources Course website: courses.washington.edu/envir202 Course Listserv: envir202a_wi06@u.washington.edu ENVIR 202: Lesson 2 2 Perspective ENVIR 202: Lesson 2 3 ENVIR 202: Population & Health 1

Making Sense of the World At least since recorded history, humans have striven to make sense of the world by ordering it; creating categories and relationships ENVIR 202: Lesson 2 4 How do we order things? Example from ancient Chinese encyclopedia 1. Belonging to the emperor 2. Embalmed 3. Tame 4. Sucking pigs 5. Sirens 6. Fabulous 7. Stray dogs... 8. Frenzied 9. Innumerable 10. Drawn with a very fine camelhair brush 11.That from a long way off look like flies (from Borges in Foucault, M. 1971. The Order of Things. p. xv) ENVIR 202: Lesson 2 5 Another Example Psychology Art Political Science Sociology Economics Biology University of Washington History Anthropology Linguistics Ecology Public Health ENVIR 202: Lesson 2 6 ENVIR 202: Population & Health 2

Explaining Things Once we have found a framework to order the world, we can then attempt to understand the way things are and identify the forces of change or stability. ENVIR 202: Lesson 2 7 Lenses We use different lenses to help us make sense of things Lenses can: Sharpen our view Help us see detail But they can also: Color the way we see things ENVIR 202: Lesson 2 8 Environmental Studies Ecology Politics Economics ENVIR 202: Lesson 2 9 ENVIR 202: Population & Health 3

How are These Fields Related? Etymology for ecology and economics: Eco = Greek oikos = house Greek oikonomos = household manager Politics comes from: Greek Polis = city-state or the perfect community ENVIR 202: Lesson 2 10 Academic Disciplines Ecology is branch of science dealing with the relation of organisms with each other and their environments Economics is a branch of knowledge dealing with the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services Politics is the art or science of governing a community ( polis ) ENVIR 202: Lesson 2 11 Limits to Disciplinary Boundaries Human societies are very complex systems Interactions between social, economic, political, cultural, psychological and biological processes Explanations for changes in population and health vary depending on the way you look at the issues ENVIR 202: Lesson 2 12 ENVIR 202: Population & Health 4

Interdisciplinary Heuristic Ecology Politics Economics ENVIR 202: Lesson 2 13 Interdisciplinary Alternatives Political ecology Ecology Politics Ecological economics Economics Political economics ENVIR 202: Lesson 2 14 Political Economists Generally explore: who/what institutions have the power in political and economic domains; assume the environment is a resource ENVIR 202: Lesson 2 15 ENVIR 202: Population & Health 5

Types of Political Economists Liberal political economists: how individual consumption preferences are translated into production Adam Smith (1723-1790) ENVIR 202: Lesson 2 16 Types of Political Economists Socialist political economists: how social organization of production produces inequality Karl Marx (1818-1883) ENVIR 202: Lesson 2 17 Political Ecology Political economy in an ecological context The environment is where political and economic systems function Shares views with cultural ecology, ecological anthropology, environmental history, human ecology, and ecological economics Politics is about socially negotiated rules of conduct and thus power ENVIR 202: Lesson 2 18 ENVIR 202: Population & Health 6

Ecological Economics Humanity s increasing impact on the earth s environment requires synthesis of ecology and economics to create a sustainable society Sustainable development is ecological economics in practice ENVIR 202: Lesson 2 19 Environmental History Considers the environment as an active force in human history Deciphers changing environmental consequences of human activities Examines human attitudes toward and definitions of nature ENVIR 202: Lesson 2 20 3 Lenses of Environmental History Ecology: humans as organisms within an ecosystem Political Economy: laws; economy; the distribution of environmental consequences and realities Culture: Values, beliefs, religion, prejudices, norms, etc. ENVIR 202: Lesson 2 21 ENVIR 202: Population & Health 7

Human/Environment Interactions Growing critique that political economists haven t paid sufficient attention to ecosystems; the natural world Call for field of political ecology ENVIR 202: Lesson 2 22 Frankenfoods Ecology: pollution of normal crops by GMOs; nutrient needs of different strains; the science of creating new foods Political Economy: how European bans on American GMOs shape markets; rise of organic food industry; who can afford what kinds of food Culture: attitudes about what constitutes natural ; the culture of fear ENVIR 202: Lesson 2 23 Norovirus and Cruise Ships Ecology: physiological effects of norovirus; transmission vectors; effects of industry on regional waters (e.g. sewage, oil) Political Economy: importance of industry to regional economy; intense dependence on tourism; vulnerability of certain groups to disease Culture: Inside Passage mythology ( the last frontier ); appeal of cruises; cultural resitance to/resentment of cruise industry ENVIR 202: Lesson 2 24 ENVIR 202: Population & Health 8

Urban Sprawl Ecology: water quality; heat islands; habitat loss; obesity Political Economy: policies and economies that encourage or limit sprawl; who can afford to sprawl Culture: the rhetoric of property rights; ideas about race and cities; car culture ENVIR 202: Lesson 2 25 Theoretical Issues Sustainability Intra- and inter-species distribution of wealth Intergenerational justice Dealing with non-monetized values, imprecision and uncertainty ENVIR 202: Lesson 2 26 Environmental Problems Affecting Populations and Health In your lifetimes: human population growth food and water resources global climate change deforestation soil degradation pollution, ozone depletion losses of biodiversity ENVIR 202: Lesson 2 27 ENVIR 202: Population & Health 9

Examining Population and Health Political ecology Ecology Politics Ecological economics Economics Political economics ENVIR 202: Lesson 2 28 Questions ENVIR 202: Lesson 2 29 Next Lesson Human History: Part I ENVIR 202: Lesson 2 30 ENVIR 202: Population & Health 10

Using the Frameworks: Salmon Ecology: disease in salmon farms; comparative biologies of wild and farmed fish; salmon as indicator/keystone species Political Economy: the commercial fishing industry; tribal subsistence fishing; supermarkets and green consumerism Culture: salmon as Native religious sacrament; salmon as icon of regional identity ENVIR 202: Lesson 2 31 ENVIR 202: Population & Health 11