Although I can appreciate your discussion on 'cause and effect' relationships among social/cultural factors and environmental degradation, I would like to point out that there are other factors at work in the world, particularly in Haiti, that in my opinion have enormous influence on the effect in question, and should not be overlooked (just like as someone pointed out the First World's ~ exportation ~ of environmental degradation should not be overlooked - Environmental Footprints anyone?). And I believe addressing these influences should have the greatest significant positive effect upon reducing, eliminating, or reversing environmental degradation. There's more than one way to skin a cat...
As Wirt noted, Haiti is the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere. You can argue all you like about the direct causes of environmental degradation in Haiti and what role poverty plays in fostering (or requiring) it. But the root cause of their poverty is not 'lack of development' - the root cause of Haiti's poverty is France. Haiti was Saint-Domingue, a French colony, which holds the distinction of being the only 'successful' slave revolt. To learn more about the war between France and Haiti (one that I question if it ever ended) see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haitian_revolution Or other sources of you're choosing. The result of France's compensation demands (for lost 'property' - the slaves themselves) amounts to tens of billions of US dollars (2005). The impact of this capital drain (among other related issues, such as political instability) upon Haiti seems obvious to me; just as the impact of reparations to Haiti from France could have on their future environmental toll. I would like to point out that France's Second Republic abolished slavery on 27 April 1848, yet continued to take compensation from Haiti well into the 20th Century. That may seem like too much politics for Ecolog-L, but in order to understand phenomenon such as environmental degradation we must include these data in or analyses. David Thomson M.S. Restoration Ecologist/Wetlands Scientist Schaaf & Wheeler 100 N. Winchester Blvd., Suite 200 Santa Clara, CA 95050-6566 (408) 246-4848 x119 (408) 246-5624 (fax) [EMAIL PROTECTED] -----Original Message----- From: Ecological Society of America: grants, jobs, news [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Wirt Atmar Sent: Sunday, February 26, 2006 1:02 PM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: What's the best energy source? - wealth and per capita impacts Regarding my contention that very poor human populations have a much greater impact on the environment than do wealthy ones, a friend wrote and suggested I mention the obvious differences that exist between Haiti and the Dominican Republic. It only took a minute's searching to find this NASA photograph: http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a000000/a002600/a002640/haiti_still_web.jpg The political border between Haiti and the Dominican Republic is as clearly marked here as anywhere in the world from space. Haiti, the poorest country in the Hemisphere, lies to the left of the river in the photograph. While the Dominican Republic is not wealthy, neither is it so poor that its people have been forced to not merely deforest its landscape, but to denude it, further greatly impovishering the population through soil erosion and leaving them subject to disasterous flooding. Let me go not very far out on a limb and paint a different world, however. Let me suggest that if the average Haitian were as wealthy and as well-educated as the average San Franciscan, this image from space would be very different. The human population on Haiti would be heavily urbanized into a few coastal cities and these forest areas would not only be verdant but would have become highly protected areas. There are certain populational forces that seem inevitable to me. When disease and early childhood deaths are minimized, the pressure to have very large families dissipates. Similarly, if some semblance of lifetime economic security can be established, the pressure to have very large families is even further dissipated. And most importantly, when young women are provided significant economic and educational opportunities, populations begin to fall even below replacement rate. Simultaneous with all of these events, as human populations become more healthy and wealthy, they begin to concentrate themselves into much lower-impact urban areas. And as they become more educated, they begin to demand protection of the natural world. This pattern is not relegated to the United States alone. It is being repeated in every developed nation in the world no matter its size: in Europe, in Japan or in Singapore. And I am sure that it will be repeated in China and India too as they too become increasingly more wealthy. As to the inevitability of the pattern, I've enclosed an article below from the New York Times from a few weeks ago. While this one article could be dismissed only as ancedotal evidence, I take it rather to be one data point in a relatively obvious trend, one that says even when substantial economic protectionism is attempted, the trend can't be stopped. As I wrote earlier, the knee-jerk reaction among ecology graduate students is to often see a future dominated by dark clouds, of increasing pollution, of limited resources, of burgeoning populations, starvation and massive losses of biodiversity. That all could well come to pass, but I am enormously more optimistic than that. I believe that a far more accurate portrait of the current situation is one of the world becoming increasingly more healthy, wealthy and wise. These are not situations we should bemoan. If we truly want to protect the biodiversity of our planet, our primary enemies should be ignorance, poverty and disease -- as evident in the NASA photograph above. Wirt Atmar ======================================= ["The Urbanization of Nebraska"] HOME ECONOMICS: Personal Accounts; Nebraska's Nostalgia Trap By RICHARD DOOLING (NYT) 730 words Published: February 5, 2006 Omaha - ON average, Nebraska's economy is doing just fine. But a man whose head is in the oven and whose feet are in the freezer takes no comfort in knowing that his average body temperature is perfectly normal. In the same vein, a casual glance at a graph of Nebraska's population growth shows slow, steady increases, going all the way back to 1900, and conceals the fact that 74 of Nebraska's 93 counties are in extremis, with lower populations today than they had in 1920. Over a third of the state's 1.7 million residents live in greater Omaha, which is booming by many measures, including population growth. According to Ernie Goss, an economist at Creighton University here, Omaha is growing faster than Des Moines, Kansas City and St. Louis. What about the rest of Nebraska? Well, it's big: over 77,000 square miles (about 10 percent bigger than the six New England states combined) and 450 miles wide, roughly the distance from Boston to the District of Columbia. Most of the economic growth occurs along the thoroughfares that form what local economists call ''the fishhook'': Highway 275 from Omaha to Norfolk being the hook, and Interstate 80 from Omaha to Colorado being the stem. Outside of Omaha and the fishhook, large parts of Nebraska are arguably in trouble. The dismal statistic that trends lower, year after year, for many of these struggling counties, is population. Farms double in size with a regularity that rivals the seasons, while, almost in tandem, the number of farming families falls by half. The costs for schools, roads and police and fire departments remain relatively constant, but the bodies paying taxes, buying goods and developing land keep disappearing. County officials call it rural flight, brain drain or even mass migration, but despite the alarums, nobody has found a way to stop the excursions. States like Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, North Dakota, Oklahoma and Wisconsin have tried to fight the trend by restricting the corporate consolidation of farms: Keep the farmers on their land by stopping vast corporations from buying 10 farms and consolidating them into one, which is basically what keeps happening. In 1982, Nebraska went even farther and embedded a ban on corporations owning and operating farms -- Initiative 300 -- in its Constitution. Last December, a federal judge in Omaha ruled that the ban violates the Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution and the Americans with Disabilities Act (because the ban also requires that the person owning most of the farmland also supply most of the daily labor). Some Nebraskans hope the ruling will be overturned, but that seems unlikely. Opponents of these laws, which purport to protect family farmers, view them as economic nostalgia -- like trying to protect the local paper by banning Internet news sites and mandating that the newspaper be delivered by a towheaded kid on a bicycle. If rank protectionism is not the solution, then what is? Doug German, executive director of Legal Aid of Nebraska, who lives in the central part of the state, just off the fishhook, in Eustis (pop. 425), and provides legal services to the casualties of the state's poorer counties, agrees that rural Nebraska is at a ''tipping point.'' The antidote to its economic depopulation, he believes, does not lie in bringing Intel or Toyota factories to the heartland, but in Nebraskans resolutely blooming where they are planted and developing micro industries capable of flourishing anywhere, with the help of computer and Internet technologies. I hope Mr. German is right, but I wonder what kind of micro industry will save the likes of Arthur County (half the size of Rhode Island), where the population peaked at 1,412 in 1920, was 442 in 2000, and 402 in 2004? In these parts, during election season, the signs along the road say ''Vote for Helen, County Assessor,'' because there's only one Helen, and she's running unopposed. Instead of micro industries, a cynical futurist might see mega-farms, owned by global corporations, and farmed by armies of robot combines, controlled by global positioning satellite technology from offices in Omaha. =======================================
