Hi Paul,

Thanks for posting on such an important topic. It's an issue we've
discussed at length in the Environmental Studies Section business meetings
at ISA. We eventually concluded that face-to-face interactions do have
substantial benefits with relatively minor costs (as Wil and Rich
established) and should not be abandoned entirely. However, it is up to
each individual to decide how to balance their concern re: climate change
and their professional travel activities. Personally, I go to far fewer
conferences than I could every year and, aside from ISA, I try to select
conferences that are nearby or to combine conference and research
activities to get more out of the miles traveled. I've also tried virtual
participation on panels, though I think you may be over optimistic there.
I've yet to find a conference or teaching venue where it's possible to
virtually interact with the audience and speaking to a silent screen is an
unnerving experience.

Others in the section make their own choices on conference participation
but I think that most try to maximize the quality of these experiences
while minimizing the quantity of travel. That said, participants in ESS or
the GEP-ED listserve are the proverbial choir on issues like this. Even
APSA and ISA aren't such large venues when compared to meetings like APA
and AGU or those of professional associations outside of the academy.
Convincing the broader public to consider the environmental costs of their
decisions--whether about travel or consumption more generally--is a core
problem studied by many on this listserve and is a tough nut to crack.
Continual self-assessment is critical, so it's great that you raised this
issue, but we should not lose sight of the bigger picture.

best,
dgwebster



On Sat, Dec 6, 2014 at 10:02 PM, HARRIS, Paul <[email protected]> wrote:

> At long last, someone in a position to do something has admitted that
> scholars/teachers jetting around to conferences is morally questionable
> (not least because today's information technologies allow far more
> collaboration than was possible at conferences even quite recently):
>
>
> http://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/06/us/setting-aside-a-scholarly-get-together-for-the-planets-sake.html?ref=earth&_r=0
>
> It will be interesting to see where this goes. Will it overcome the
> willful ignorance of so many scholars -- those who think that THEIR work is
> so vital as to justify conference travel -- that such voluntary behavior is
> contributing, albeit perhaps in individually small ways, to profound human
> suffering and death in the future through climate change? Even a tiny
> contribution to someone else's death seems to call into question conference
> travel (and most other travel, at least by auto or airplane).
>
> I've broached this topic on this list several times over the years, so I
> realize that it's not likely to get any traction, and that there will be
> all sorts of excuses for continuing business as usual (“How dare you deny
> young scholars the right to collaborate” [these are the same young scholars
> who collaborate 24/7 on their iPhones, etc.]; “Collaborating via video
> conferencing [etc.] just isn’t the same as talking in person” [but there’s
> evidence that collaborating remotely can result in more scholarly
> productivity] – that sort of thing).
>
> ISA, APSA and all of the other big academic associations, including those
> devoted to environmental issues, seem to have conferences as their core
> business models. They don’t want to change. And we scholars don’t help. We
> love our conferences, right? And we, like most people, always want to leave
> it to others, probably people in the future, or governments or
> corporations, to change things. Of course we don't think about it
> consciously (so as to avoid guilt, maybe), but our attitude seems to
> something along the lines of "I teach about environmental solutions, so I
> don't have to be part of them myself," or, even more powerfully, "My
> research shows that institutions matter more than individuals, so I can
> justify living as I do." How many decades more will scholars take these and
> similar views, and continue to set the wrong example?
>
> I wonder what our students, particularly those who study climate change,
> think each time we jet off to a conference? The word “hypocrite” instantly
> comes to mind.
>
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-- 
D.G. Webster
Assistant Professor
Environmental Studies Program
Dartmouth College
6182 Steele Hall
Hanover, NH 03755
phone: 603-646-0213
http://www.dartmouth.edu/~envs/faculty/webster.html

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