dear teachers,

Climate change... can destroy our world .. our children need to learn about
it, how can we bring it into our classrooms? in theory and practice...

Some teachers have replied to earlier similar mails with their work in tree
plantation, rain water harvesting, bio-diversity conservation etc ... as
teachers perhaps promoting the idea of simple living (which has
traditionally been a part of our way of living/our culture) ... can be an
important step. it would be useful if this were a part of our history,
geography, economics, sociology, physics, chemistry, biology, language
teaching ....


regards
Guru
IT for Change


The Climate Catastrophe Cannot Be Reversed Within the Capitalist Culture
Thursday, 18 August 2016 00:00 By Ashley Dawson, OR Books | Book Excerpt

Did you know that the Earth loses about one hundred species every day? In
Extinction: A Radical History, Ashley Dawson ties together history, science
and political theory to explain the impact of humans and capitalism on the
world's ecosystems. Get your copy of this book by making a tax-deductible
donation to Truthout!

The following is the introduction to Extinction: A Radical History.

His face was hacked off. Left prostrate in the red dust, to be preyed on by
vultures, his body remained intact except for the obscene hole where his
magnificent six foot long tusks used to be. Satao was a so-called tusker,
an African elephant with a rare genetic strain that produced tusks so long
that they dangled to the ground, making him a prime attraction in Kenya's
Tsavo East National Park.

These beautiful tusks also made him particularly valuable to ivory
poachers, who felled him with poison arrows, carved off his face to get at
his tusks, and left his carcass for the flies. The grisly death of Satao,
one of Africa's largest elephants, is part of a violent wave of poaching
that is sweeping the continent today. In 2011, twenty-five thousand African
elephants were slaughtered for their ivory. An additional forty-five
thousand have been killed since that time. If the present rate of slaughter
continues, one of the two species of African elephants, the forest
elephant, whose numbers have declined by 60 percent since 2002, is likely
to be gone from Africa within a decade.

The image of Satao lying faceless in the dust is a haunting one. While the
elephant as a species will probably not go extinct (since some individuals
are likely to be kept alive in game reserves and zoos), the decimation of
their numbers in the wild reminds us of a broader tide of extinction, the
sixth mass extinction Earth has witnessed. Only tens of thousands of years
ago, during the Pleistocene epoch, Earth was home to an immense variety of
spectacular, large animals. From wooly mammoths to saber-toothed cats to
lesser-known but equally exotic animals like giant ground sloths and
car-sized glyptodonts, megafauna roamed the world freely. Today, almost all
of these large animals are extinct: killed, most of the evidence suggests,
by human beings. As they spread across the planet, Homo sapiens decimated
populations of megafauna everywhere they went. Humanity essentially ate its
way down the food chain when wiping out biodiversity. Africa, our ancestral
home, is virtually alone in harboring some remnants of the Pleistocene
biodiversity. In the grisly death of Satao and his fellow elephants, we are
witnessing the final destruction of the world's remaining megafauna, the
endgame of an epoch of epic defaunation or animal slaughter.

But it is not just charismatic megafauna like elephants, rhinos, tigers,
and pandas that are being pushed to the brink of extinction. Humanity lives
amid, and is the cause of, a massive decimation of global biodiversity.
>From humble invertebrates like beetles and butterflies to various
terrestrial vertebrate populations like bats and birds, species are going
extinct in record numbers. For example, since 1500, 322 species of
land-based vertebrates have disappeared, and the remaining populations show
an average 25 percent decline in abundance around the world. Invertebrate
populations are similarly threatened. Researchers generally agree that the
current extinction rate is nothing short of catastrophic, clocking in
between one thousand and ten thousand times the rate before human beings
began to exert a significant pressure on the environment. The Earth is
losing about a hundred species a day. In addition to this tidal wave of
extinction, which conservation biologists predict will eliminate up to 50
percent of currently existing animal and plant species, the abundance of
species in local areas is declining precipitously, threatening the
functioning of entire ecosystems. This mass extinction is thus an under
acknowledged form -- and cause -- of the contemporary environmental crisis.

Although this wave of mass extinction is global, the vast majority of
species destruction is concentrated in a small number of geographical
hotspots. This is because biodiversity is unevenly distributed. On land,
tropical rainforests are the primary nursery of biodiversity. Although they
cover only 6 percent of the Earth's surface, their terrestrial and aquatic
habitats harbor more than half the known species on the planet. As E.O.
Wilson puts it, the tropics are the leading abattoir of extinction, their
great verdant expanses chopped up into quickly dwindling fragments, their
plant and animal species struggling to adapt to habitat destruction,
invasive species, over harvesting, and, increasingly, anthropogenic climate
change. From the great Amazon basin, to the rainforests of West and Central
Africa, to the jungles of Indonesia, Malaysia, and other parts of Southeast
Asia, human beings are eliminating the homes of millions of species. In
doing so, we are not only condemning vast numbers of species (the great
majority of them still unidentified) to extinction, but we are also
imperiling our own tenure on this planet.

(Image: OR Books)(Image: OR Books)With the publication of accessible works
of science journalism such as Elizabeth Kolbert's The Sixth Extinction, the
word has begun to get out about the dire plight of the planet's flora and
fauna. Kolbert's book takes readers on a terrifying tour, interviewing
botanists who follow the tree line as it vaults up the side of mountains in
the Andes and marine botanists who track the acidification of the oceans.
The current wave of extinction, she explains, follows five previous mass
extinction events that have devastated the planet over the last half
billion years. This wave is predicted to be the worst catastrophe for life
on Earth since the asteroid impact that destroyed the dinosaurs. Reflecting
on this melancholy reality, humanities scholars have begun to write about
"cultures of extinction." In response to such increasing concern, the Obama
administration recently set up an interagency task force on wildlife
trafficking, and has begun to discuss the trade networks linking the
slaughter of elephants and rhinos to guerrilla groups and crime syndicates
such as the Janjaweed and al-Shabab, which are using the high profits from
the illicit wildlife market to fund their operations.

All too often, however, initiatives such as Obama's result in a "war on
poachers" that ignores the underlying structural causes that are driving
habitat destruction and overharvesting of animals. The planet's
biodiversity hotspots, after all, are located in what Christian Parenti
calls the "tropics of chaos." In the planet's tropical latitudes, Parenti
identifies a catastrophic convergence, a supremely destructive alignment of
three factors: 1.) militarization and ethnic fragmentation related to the
legacy of the Cold War in postcolonial nations; 2.) state failure and civil
discord linked to the structural adjustment policies imposed on the global
South by institutions like the World Bank in the name of debt repayment
since the 1980s; and 3.) climate change-fueled environmental stresses such
as desertification. Parenti writes at length on the impact of this
catastrophic convergence on postcolonial people and states, but the picture
he provides of the stresses affecting the global South is incomplete
without a consideration of the relations between humanity and the natural
world in its fullest sense. We cannot understand the catastrophic
convergence, that is, without discussing the decimation of biodiversity
currently unfolding in the global South. Nor, conversely, can we understand
extinction without an analysis of the exploitation and violence to which
postcolonial nations have been subjected.

Extinction is the product of a global attack on the commons: the great
trove of air, water, plants, and collectively created cultural forms such
as language that have been traditionally regarded as the inheritance of
humanity as a whole. Nature, the wonderfully abundant and diverse wild life
of the world, is essentially a free pool of goods and labor that capital
can draw on. As critics such as Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri have
argued, aggressive policies of trade liberalization in recent decades have
been predicated on privatizing the commons -- transforming ideas,
information, species of plants and animals, and even DNA into private
property. Suddenly, things like seeds, once freely traded by peasant
farmers the world over, have become scarce commodities, and are even being
bred by agribusiness corporations to be sterile after one generation, a
product farmers in the global South have aptly nicknamed "suicide seeds."
The destruction of global biodiversity needs to be framed, in other words,
as a great, and perhaps ultimate, attack on the planet's common wealth.
Indeed, extinction needs to be seen, along with climate change, as the
leading edge of contemporary capitalism's contradictions.

Capital must expand at an ever-increasing rate or go into crisis,
generating declining asset values for the owners of stocks and property, as
well as factory closures, mass unemployment, and political unrest. As
capitalism expands, however, it commodifies more and more of the planet,
stripping the world of its diversity and fecundity -- think about those
suicide seeds. If capital's inherent tendency to create what Vandana Shiva
calls "monocultures of the mind" once generated many local environmental
crises, this insatiable maw is now consuming entire ecosystems, thereby
threatening the planetary environment as a whole. There are at present no
effective institutions to deal with the "cancerous degradation" of the
global environment that David Harvey argues is brought about by capital's
need for continuous exponential growth. And yet capital of course depends
on continuous commodification of this environment to sustain its growth.
The catastrophic rate of extinction today and the broader decline of
biodiversity thus represent a direct threat to the reproduction of capital.
Indeed, there is no clearer example of the tendency of capital accumulation
to destroy its own conditions of reproduction than the sixth extinction. As
the rate of speciation -- the evolution of new species -- drops further and
further behind the rate of extinction, the specter of capital's depletion
and even annihilation of the biological foundation on which it depends
becomes increasingly apparent.

Extinction: A Radical History is intended as a primer on extinction for
activists, scientists, and cultural studies scholars alike, as well as for
members of the general public looking to understand one of the great but
all too often overlooked events of our time. Extinction is both a material
reality and a cultural discourse that shapes popular perceptions of the
world, one that often legitimates an inegalitarian social order. In order
to respond adequately to this planetary crisis, we need to transgress the
boundaries that tend to keep science, environmentalism, and radical
politics separate. Indeed, extinction cannot be understood in isolation
from a critique of capitalism and imperialism. Extinction: A Radical
History begins with a discussion of the notion of the Anthropocene, using
this term not simply to ask fundamental questions about when the sixth wave
of mass extinctions began, but also about whom exactly is responsible for
extinction. The second section outlines the different facets of extinction
that are products of capitalism, from early modern forms of defaunation
such as fur hunting to the episodes of mass slaughter such as whaling that
arose in tandem with the industrial revolution. This section also discusses
forms of collateral ecocide such as coral bleaching and extinction related
to invasive species, as well as forms of ecological warfare such as the use
of Agent Orange in Vietnam and the polluting of the Niger Delta. The third
section of Extinction: A Radical History looks at disaster biocapitalism :
the variety of political, economic, and environmental responses by capital
to the extinction crisis.

This section highlights not just the glaring failure of efforts to address
extinction within a capitalist framework, but also the increasing trend to
open a new round of accumulation using synthetic biology to address the
crisis. Finally, the section on radical conservation explores various
anti-capitalist solutions to the extinction crisis, approaches grounded in
social and environmental justice.

The specter of extinction haunts the popular imagination today.
Contemporary culture is filled with depictions of zombies, plagues, and
other spectacular representations of ecological catastrophe. For those who
inhabit the wealthy nations of the global North, such representations are
portents of a terrifying world to come. But for the billions of people
around the world whom Ranajit Guha and Juan Martinez-Alier call "ecosystem
people," whose fate is intimately intertwined with the planet's flora and
fauna, the question of extinction relates directly to their own present and
future survival.  The butchering of an elephant such as Satao may enrich a
few poachers, but it dramatically impoverishes the ecosystem he inhabited.
We are only just beginning to understand the impact of the liquidation of
large wildlife like elephants on the habitats they inhabit, but it is
becoming clear that such holes punctured in the web of life have a dramatic
cascading effect. As millions of species are snuffed out, the biodiversity
that supports the planetary ecosystem as we and our ancestors have known it
is imperiled. This catastrophe cannot be stemmed -- let alone reversed --
within the present capitalist culture. We face a clear choice: radical
political transformation or deepening mass extinction.

source -
http://www.truth-out.org/opinion/item/37281-climate-catastrophe-cannot-be-reversed-within-the-capitalist-culture

IT for Change, Bengaluru
www.ITforChange.net

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