Dear colleagues,
 
I have been watching this discussion with absolute fascination. I am presently 
an independent scholar working a business that coaches grad students to get 
their theses done, and works with junior and senior scholars for grants and 
publication editing -- many for whom English is not the primary language. We 
work from Korea to California to Kenya, using mostly Skype. My partner and I 
had a fascinating discussion just today about the virtue or not of meeting for 
a second coaching session with a local client -- 30 miles driving is 30 miles 
for both parties.
 
That said, I believe different interactions and creativity come forth through 
the FTF interactions.
 
Thanks for this discussion. Our company is www.rampartprosolutions.com.

 
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [gep-ed] Virtues of academic conferences
Date: Sun, 7 Dec 2014 20:39:43 +0000






Hi all,



For me, the choice to conference or not is a false choice. The question is one 
of number and frequency. If conferences were on 18 month cycles instead on 
annual, we could reduce our emissions by one-third. That seems like an 
appropriate reduction in the
 near-term and a sensible middle ground. It would also provide most of the 
benefits of annual conferences, and conferences could even be extended for a 
day.



I am not persuaded by the argument that academic travel for conferences is a 
small contributor.  We have seen the small fraction argument and the 
commons/free rider argument as a justification for not acting in many guises.  
I am no more convinced here
 than elsewhere.  Universities need to look inward and evaluate travel both for 
academic conferences and for study abroad programs (short, several week courses 
led by US faculty as opposed to junior year abroad).



Jeremy








From: Elizabeth De Santo <[email protected]>

Reply-To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>

Date: Sunday, December 7, 2014 at 3:22 PM

To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>

Cc: gep-ed <[email protected]>

Subject: Re: [gep-ed] Virtues of academic conferences







Dear all,



Thanks for this interesting discussion... of course as academics teaching 
environmental curricula, we are introspective and self-questioning about our 
choices and the example we set (perhaps more so than others working in the 
environmental field such as
 government employees and NGOs, it would be interesting to see a comparison of 
travel/carbon footprints in different professions).



Having worked in the non-profit sector as well (environmental NGOs), I join the 
voices here that are frustrated about the amount of air travel that is expected 
in both of these fields. On the one hand it's exciting that there are more and 
more conferences
 being organized, but on the other hand there is (in my view) a lot of 
redundancy and talking, without a lot of action. I am not including academic 
society conferences in that statement, they are a different beast altogether. 
Now that I am teaching at a small
 liberal arts school with limits on how much teaching time I am permitted to 
miss during the semester, I have narrowed down the amount of travel I do, and 
like others on this thread, I try to combine research within it. 



However there are two paradoxes we face - first, as academics in an 
interdisciplinary field, we need/want to try to experience other perspectives 
on environmental issues (I am a member of UK and US geographic societies as 
well as ISA and the Society for
 Conservation Biology, for example). We are therefore faced with a challenging 
choice about which conferences to attend. And second, for junior academics 
(like me) or others who are trying to build their reputations both within and 
outside of academia, we are
 increasingly called on to participate in expert workshops and other events 
that happen in between the larger society meetings. While cost of travel is 
often a limiting factor for me (!), if I did have unlimited funds for attending 
these events, I would feel
 torn about my potential contribution to the applied side of environmental 
policy, versus the carbon emissions this action entails. I like Raul's idea of 
offsets, and I've seen that offered at some meetings as well (as part of the 
registration fee).


Thus I think It's a complex problem and I'm enjoying seeing how many different 
perspectives on it are percolating here in this thread. I'm not sure we'll find 
a perfect solution anytime soon, but it's important that we are willing to be 
adaptive in the way
 we look at the issue.



Best,
Elizabeth 



Elizabeth M. De Santo, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Environmental Studies
Franklin & Marshall College
Lancaster, PA


On Sun, Dec 7, 2014 at 2:42 PM, Ronald Mitchell 
<[email protected]> wrote:




Without engaging the specific conference-related questions here, I will mention 
that I (as others, I am sure) have found that some portion of the objectives of 
NON-conference travel can often be accomplished
 via Skype – I have done guest lectures, workshop presentations, and even a 
book manuscript “scrub” via Skype. My gut estimate is that Skyping allows me to 
reap about 70-80% of the benefits while reducing the costs to myself and the 
planet by about 80-90%. 
 That said, this choice is easier for me, as I have tenure. [Also, from my 
perspective, the discussion and exchange on the list is valuable even if we 
disagree.]
 
I will also note that my emissions have grown over the years largely due to 
income not travel – I tend to like pay raises and tend to spend them on 
carbon-emitting activities.  I am working on it…
L
 
Lastly, a recent U-Oregon audit shows the following: about 40% of UO emissions 
come from faculty, staff, etc. air travel.  Click the pic for the full video. 

Ron
 

 
From:[email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Ronnie Lipschutz

Sent: Sunday, December 07, 2014 10:29 AM

To: [email protected]

Cc: [email protected]; Wil Burns; Paul Harris;
[email protected]

Subject: Re: [gep-ed] Virtues of academic conferences


 



I suppose that the question ought to be posed differently: individual choice 
vs. collective action or mobilization?  Consumer choice or mass action?  
Clearly, as a single person on a scheduled
 flight, one makes little difference.  But as Arlo Guthrie once pointed out, 
"If a whole bunch of people sing it [Alice's Restaurant]. it'll be a social 
movement!" (or something to that effect).  If academics were to begin a 
movement to change the social practices
 expected of us, the cumulative impact could be considerable and that would 
stand as a shared commitment. 


Now, I am not without sin, since, for ISA, I plan to fly to Houston, drive to 
New Orleans for one day and back, and fly home from Houston.  (Not really what 
I want to do, but I made a commitment
 to be on one panel this year.)  Yes, I am being hypocritical on this and would 
dearly love to find a way to interact with colleagues and not have to fly 
hither and thither.

Ronnie


 

On Sun, Dec 7, 2014 at 10:19 AM, John M. Meyer <[email protected]> wrote:
My question is both broader and narrower than the one that Paul begins with. 

 


If a conference  comes relatively close to me -- within a manageable day's 
drive (say 5 hours... for me that means San Francisco), it often feels like a 
less substantial climate impact to drive
 there and attend (sorry, no ready bus or train options, though carpooling can 
be feasible) than it does to fly to a more distant transcontinental or 
international destination for the same the same or similar event.


 


...and yet: when I fly to the more distant destination, I take a seat on 
already scheduled airlines and -- wherever possible -- local public transit. In 
that sense, the far longer trip generates
 far fewer 'new' carbon emissions, etc., than the shorter trip does. 


 


Is one better than the other? I pose the question not just as one of individual 
responsibility. But surely one approach, assuming Paul's is not an argument for 
eliminating all face-to-face meetings,
 is for concentrating these at the regional level. Yet it seems plausible that, 
at least in the US and other countries without robust public transit 
infrastructure, this might generate more 'new' emissions than a more distant 
national or international conference.


 


Is this distinction between otherwise scheduled and new emissions sound? Is it 
morally and or politically relevant in this case?


 


John




On Sunday, December 7, 2014, Raul Pacheco-Vega <[email protected]> 
wrote:

In the interest of disclosure, I sit on the Executive Committee of the 
Environmental Studies Section of ISA and I'm the Chair of the Professional 
Development Committee of AESS. And I travel
 quite a lot for field research and other academic workshops, so I am hardly an 
unbiased commenter. I do buy carbon offsets, though (this in no way makes me 
any less responsible for my carbon emissions, but at least I do try to offset 
and reduce them). 

 


I sit on the side of "there are very significant benefits to meeting 
face-to-face rather than online". I do a lot of online (WebEx, GoToMeeting, 
Skype, FaceTime) meetings, and with the rare
 exception of (OMG, a non-Jobs fan about to gush) FaceTime, I find almost every 
single model of non-face-to-face meeting sorely lacking.



 


I wrote a defense of large-scale conferences a while ago 


http://www.raulpacheco.org/2014/04/in-defense-of-large-academic-conferences-my-post-isa2014-reflections/


 


Like DG, I combine my large-scale academic conferences with fieldwork (as I did 
in Japan with IASC 2013, Uruguay with CLAD 2013, Toronto with ISA 2014 and 
Madrid with GIGAPP 2014). I also try
 to go to way fewer conferences than I used to do. But it's always important to 
keep it in mind. 


 


On the personal side of things, there are quite a lot of downsides to extensive 
academic travel. I also wrote about that. 


http://www.raulpacheco.org/2013/11/the-downsides-of-academic-travel/


 


Thanks for the reminder!


 


Best,


Raul


 








_____________________________________________________________________

Dr. Raul Pacheco-Vega


Assistant Professor, Public Administration Division


Centro de Investigacion y Docencia Economicas, A.C (CIDE, A.C.) 


Campus Región Centro






Circuito Tecnopolo Norte S/N, Col. Hacienda Nueva
Aguascalientes, Ags. 20313, Mexico
Tel.
(+52-449) 994-5150 x 5196
Cel.
(+52-449) 280-2484
Website - Twitter -
Facebook - 
CIDE webpage 
 
Read my publications: On Academia.Edu On

ResearchGate On 
Mendeley
My citations: Available on

Google Scholar 
 
Associate Editor,
Journal of Environmental Sciences and Studies








 

On Sun, Dec 7, 2014 at 10:27 AM, Ronnie Lipschutz <[email protected]> wrote:


Oops!  There's that old collective action problem again: I contribute so little 
that my stopping would hardly matter.


I know there are people looking into conferencing with robots.  You get to 
control your little unit, complete with camera, video screen, card printer and 
alcohol denaturer at sites kitted out
 for remote conferencing.  No extortionate hotel rooms, no high-priced cookies 
and no air travel torture. Hallway encounters are still possible (although 
bedroom encounters are not).



Of course the life cycle emissions of such a system would be fairly great, but 
this is a "reusable" arrangement that can be used again and again.  I admit 
it's not like face-to-face encounters, but...


Best,


Ronnie


 

Ronnie




 

On Sat, Dec 6, 2014 at 7:53 PM, Wil Burns <[email protected]> wrote:
OK, Paul, I'll bite on this topic, especially since you've raised it to me in 
my role as President of the Association of Environmental Studies & Sciences in 
the past. At the risk of being subsequently
 castigated by you as one of those people living in "willful ignorance," I'd 
respond as follows:



1. A recent study pegged the CO2 emissions associated with the annual 
presentation of ALL scientific papers at 0.003% of total annual travel 
emissions 
(http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0066508).
 Dare I say that total suspension of Environmental Studies/GEP conference 
travel would be little more than a symbolic gesture?

2. While you minimize the value of face to face interactions with scholars, and 
indicate that electronic means of interaction would yield commensurate results, 
I think that's a bit simplistic. Undoubtedly, we all could sit in our offices 
and watch each other
 make conference presentations on Skype. However, some of the most productive 
time that I've spent at conferences has been chatting in the hallways, and yes, 
bars, with colleagues, deriving new insights on environmental issues, hatching 
crazy schemes that sometimes
 come to fruition and may prove beneficial in some small ways. These are often 
happenstance encounters that I daresay would not occur in the halcyonic virtual 
world you sketch out in your posting;

3. Yes, young scholars often do spend a lot of time on their iphones and other 
electronic devices, but for me that’s yet another justification for in-person 
conferences. Such events help us to convey our passion for the field, our 
humanity, in ways that speaking
 to each other on a screen will never convey. Conferences are also a critical 
venue for networking for young people that can never totally be substituted for 
electronically;

4. Every effort should be made to reduce the carbon footprint of conferences. 
AESS has a committee researching such approaches, as does many other 
organizations. What these efforts can communicate to our students, and to the 
public, is that we're a microcosm
 of society, i.e. our activities do impose a carbon footprint, but every effort 
should be made to reduce it;

5. A reasonable compromise in this context might be to have a serious 
discussion about reducing the incidence of conferences, perhaps every other 
year, for example? In the end, however, I can't help but believe that a total 
cessation of conferences would do
 little for the environment while robbing our field of its life's blood, which 
is real world interaction and collaboration.





wil





Dr. Wil Burns, President, AESS

Co-Executive Director, Forum for Climate Engineering Assessment

A Scholarly Initiative of the School of International Service, American 
University

2650 Haste Street, Towle Hall #G07

Berkeley, CA 94720

650.281.9126 (Phone)

http://www.dcgeoconsortium.org



Skype ID: Wil.Burns

Blog: Teaching Climate/Energy Law & Policy, 
http://www.teachingclimatelaw.org



-----Original Message-----

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
HARRIS, Paul

Sent: Saturday, December 06, 2014 7:02 PM

To: [email protected]

Subject: [gep-ed] Virtues of academic conferences



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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Ronnie D. Lipschutz

Professor & Chair of Politics; Provost of College 8

UC Santa Cruz

1156 High St. Santa Cruz, CA  95064

e-mail: [email protected]

phone: 831-459-3275/459-2543

web site: 
http://politics.ucsc.edu/faculty/singleton.php?&singleton=true&cruz_id=rlipsch


"Nothing in the world...is as old as what was futuristic in the past."

(Ben Lerner,
10:04, p. 152)

 












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John M. Meyer, Professor

Department of Politics

Humboldt State University

Arcata, CA 95521  USA

707.826.4497 (voice)

707.826.4496 (fax)


[email protected]

users.humboldt.edu/john.m.meyer



 






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Ronnie D. Lipschutz

Professor & Chair of Politics; Provost of College 8

UC Santa Cruz

1156 High St. Santa Cruz, CA  95064

e-mail: [email protected]

phone: 831-459-3275/459-2543

web site: 
http://politics.ucsc.edu/faculty/singleton.php?&singleton=true&cruz_id=rlipsch


"Nothing in the world...is as old as what was futuristic in the past."

(Ben Lerner, 10:04, p. 152)

 










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