Dear Nadine,

I am one of the 50-some ESA members proposing that ESA take a position 
on economic growth similar to the one being circulated on this list.  I 
am encouraged to hear that some progress is being made, but I am also 
concerned about what has happened to our initiative.  My concern stems 
from experience.

I am a member of The Wildlife Society, which published a technical 
review on economic growth in 2003 that found a "fundamental conflict 
between economic growth and wildlife conservation."  In 2004 TWS 
developed a position on economic growth.  Early drafts of the position 
described that conflict in clear terms, like the technical review, but 
then a very small group, the TWS policy director and four Council 
members (the Policy Statements Subcommittee), took the draft position 
into their own hands and kept their work secret.  Without any input from 
the experts that had originally drafted the position, they published a 
different version in /The Wildlifer/ and asked for comments on it.  That 
version was weak and also showed a lack of familiarity with the language 
and principles of ecological economics, and even of conventional 
economics, but eventually it was adopted by TWS. 

Many TWS members were incredulous over the outcome of this process and 
felt betrayed by TWS staff.  In 2006, my co-authors and I published 
"Perspectives on The Wildlife Society's Economic Growth Policy Statement 
and the Development Process" in the /Wildlife Society Bulletin/ (Volume 
34, No. 2) to describe the shortcomings of the position and the process 
used to develop it. 

To prevent a similar outcome in ESA, I propose that some of the original 
group be included from the beginning and throughout the process, working 
with the Public Affairs Committee, in developing the ESA position.  
Clearly the proposers are very concerned about this issue, and concern 
brings about familiarity and expertise.  Several of the proposers have 
published papers on this topic and teach courses or portions of courses 
on ecological economics.  The core group who drafted the position would 
be a good place to start.  They are especially experienced with this 
subject and would be helpful not only with the technical issues but also 
with identifying political red flags.

Along these lines, although I would not classify myself as the foremost 
expert on this topic, I have had a long-running interest in economic 
growth and teach about the effects of growth on the environment at my 
institution.  I am also editing a book on peak oil, economic growth, and 
wildlife conservation, stemming from a symposium I helped organize on 
the same topic.  I would be willing to serve on the ESA group that is 
developing the position.

Sincerely yours,
Ed

J. Edward Gates
University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science
Appalachian Laboratory
301 Braddock Road
Frostburg, Maryland 21532, USA

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