Dear teachers,

making/keeping our lifestyle simple by avoiding/reducing consumption is a
necessary individual action, to combat the danger of global warming ...
here as teachers we can work with students through teaching and through
personal example to lead a life of 'simple living, high thinking'

Read the article below, source
http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/40237-mitigating-climate-disaster-will-require-both-systemic-and-lifestyle-changes

This also fits in very well with our Indian spiritual / cultural /
philosophical legacy, for focusing on 'need' instead of 'greed'.  However
it sharply opposes the economics that we teach in our schools and colleges,
where 'growth based on increasing demand/consumption' is seen as the main
or only goal of state and society... Growth that is equitable and
sustainable should be our focus, not growth for sake of GDP... Our
economics text books must change to reflect this .... We need to bring in
'Gandhian economics' which removes this foundation of 'increasing
demand/consumption' as the aim of economics.

Comments welcome.

regards

Guru

During the negotiations over the Paris Agreement
<http://unfccc.int/files/meetings/paris_nov_2015/application/pdf/paris_agreement_english_.pdf>
on
climate change in December 2015, Sunita Narain
<http://time.com/4299642/sunita-narain-2016-time-100/>, an environmental
activist from India, argued for a focus on the ties between global
inequality and consumption by the relatively wealthy. "An inconvenient
truth is that we do not want to talk about consumption or lifestyle," she
asserted
<http://www.npr.org/sections/goatsandsoda/2015/12/08/458917881/india-to-u-s-cut-back-on-your-consumption>
.

It may be difficult to recall following Donald Trump's inauguration, but it
was little more than a year ago when delegates representing the world's
governments approved the United Nations accord. They pledged to prevent a
temperature increase "well below" two degrees Celsius, and to strive to
limit it to 1.5 degrees, over the average global temperature before the
Industrial Revolution.

If there was hope that the United States would take the steps needed to
meet its commitments through decisive action by the federal government, it
is now diluted markedly.

It's not that the Obama administration was leading the United States on a
sufficiently low-carbon path. But at least it accepted the scientific
consensus that fossil fuel consumption is warming the planet and
destabilizing the climate; and the need for far-reaching reductions in
greenhouse gas emissions.

Nonetheless, Obama's White House embodied climate denialism of a different
sort than those who characterize climate change as a "hoax." It embraced an
"all-of-the-above
<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/tom-engelhardt/obama-energy-policy_b_5626558.html>"
energy policy allowing for fracking and offshore oil drilling, as well as
corporate capitalism and endless growth. It also oversaw an obscenely
bloated US military -- the world's biggest
<http://climateandcapitalism.com/2015/02/08/pentagon-pollution-7-military-assault-global-climate/>
institutional
consumer of fossil fuels. The administration thus helped perpetuate
reliance on carbon energy, high consumption levels, and, hence, an
unsustainable level of greenhouse gas emissions.

This exemplifies a "soft denialism
<http://neweconomicperspectives.org/2016/10/pocket-handbook-soft-climate-denial.html>"
shared by many associated with the broad left and the climate movement in
the United States and the West: a failure to scrutinize lifestyle and
everyday consumption. In this sense, one of the most striking things about
the administration's climate policy was that it asked nothing of
individuals or households regarding how we live. It made it seem like our
salvation lies solely in large-scale transformations achieved by new
technologies and "clean energy."

Many downplay the need for personal changes, characterizing them as empty,
self-satisfying symbolism or a diversion from big-picture transformations
-- ranging from new government regulations to, for the more radical, a
dismantling of capitalism. Writer Dave Roberts, for example, in defending
actor and climate activist Leonardo DiCaprio from charges of hypocrisy due
to his lavish lifestyle
<http://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/How-Leonardo-DiCaprios-Carbon-Footprint-Clashes-With-His-Climate-Claims.html>
, argues
<http://www.vox.com/2016/3/2/11143310/leo-dicaprios-carbon-lifestyle> that
"no single human can directly generate enough emissions to make a dent"
given the enormity of global emissions. Policy change, Roberts says, needs
to be the focus. And author Tim Wise, responding to those who think that
individuals should forego flying because of its large carbon footprint
<http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/27/sunday-review/the-biggest-carbon-sin-air-travel.html>,
insists that, unless a boycott "were going to reasonably include millions,"
it would be "less than meaningless" and "self-righteous, self-referential,
ascetic bullshit."
Collective action and individual action are necessarily linked in the
effort to make structural change.

No doubt that a focus on individual practices and lifestyle sometimes is
self-indulgent, and undermines, and obscures the need for, large-scale
transformations. But this result is hardly inevitable. Indeed, collective
action and individual action are necessarily linked in the effort to make
structural change. Like any project of far-reaching change, the effort to
radically cut carbon dioxide emissions, and environmental degradation
broadly, is a multi-front endeavor. Thus, if the world is to avoid
dangerous levels of climate disruption, dramatic cuts in individual
consumption -- particularly by the tenth of the world's population
responsible for half of global CO2 emissions
<https://www.oxfam.org/en/pressroom/pressreleases/2015-12-02/worlds-richest-10-produce-half-carbon-emissions-while-poorest-35>
--
must be part of the equation.

*Environmental Injustice*

A strength of the environmental movement, or one of its wings, is its focus
on environmental injustice, how the distribution of environmental
detriments -- air pollution, for example -- is tied to race and class.
Environmental
justice advocates
<https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2016/12/how-the-environmental-movement-can-recover-its-soul/509831/>
show
that there are many "natures," that not all air is created equal, that some
better enjoy the right to breathe than others because of where they were
born, live and work, and that such inequities are tied to systemic
injustices.

These inequities illuminate who is most likely to be among the
estimated 200,000
people in the United States
<http://www.sciguru.org/newsitem/16498/study-shows-air-pollution-causes-200000-early-deaths-each-year-us>,
and about 2.6 million people worldwide
<http://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/releases/2014/air-pollution/en/> (a
2012 figure), who die prematurely annually due to outdoor air pollution.
Most vulnerable are those at society's margins. A key reason is the
location of high polluting sources -- heavily trafficked roads, factories,
power plants, airports, truck terminals -- in relation to where they reside.

Many in the climate movement embrace environmental justice concerns, as do
many who fight for social and economic justice. Yet, the little attention
that everyday and individual consumption receives illustrates that the
implications of the environmental justice analysis have not been taken far
enough.

If the environment and social (in)justice are tightly tied, it is
especially true with consumption. The United States, for example, uses more
energy for air conditioning than the entire continent of Africa (with more
than 1 billion people) uses for all purposes combined
<http://e360.yale.edu/feature/cooling_a_warming_planet_a_global_air_conditioning_surge/2550>
.

Or take flying. While many in the world's wealthy parts hop on planes
numerous times a year, it is an elite activity
<http://www.airspacemag.com/daily-planet/how-much-worlds-population-has-flown-airplane-180957719/>:
The vast majority
<http://www.slate.com/articles/business/moneybox/2015/06/air_travel_and_climate_regulation_why_the_epa_might_let_big_aviation_off.html>
of
the world's population has never flown
<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/john-mandyck/fewer-than-18-of-people-h_b_12443062.html>.
It is also the most ecologically costly activity one can undertake. A
round-trip flight from New York to San Francisco, for example, generates two
to three tons of carbon dioxide emissions per passenger
<http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/27/sunday-review/the-biggest-carbon-sin-air-travel.html>.
This is roughly the amount of the annual emissions of an average Brazilian
<http://data.worldbank.org/indicator/EN.ATM.CO2E.PC>.

In a world of great disparities, nature's exploitation is always tied to
power and the making of the world's social fabric. This is particularly so
regarding the allocation of benefits and detriments of environmental
resource consumption. Hence, nature embodies the ugly "-isms" associated
with class, race and gender (among others) that inform the uneven
life-and-death circumstances people experience globally.

Just as, say, patriarchy helps explain why men generally have more wealth
and income than women, nature's organization and its use illuminate how a
small slice of the world's population is able to devour  most of the
planet's resources. It also illuminates why those who suffer most
<https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/energy-environment/wp/2016/04/04/as-the-climate-changes-risks-to-human-health-will-accelerate-obama-administration-says/?postshare=9191459876217216&tid=ss_tw-bottom>
from
climate change's ill effects tend to be the already vulnerable
<https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2016/sep/06/black-lives-matter-protesters-occupy-london-city-airport-runway>.
Accordingly, the ability to consume a lot derives from and helps (re)produce
<http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2016-02/ysof-gww022416.php> ecological
injustice.

*The Individual-Collective Connection*

To ignore or downplay what one does vis-à-vis a system of sorts that brings
about benefits and injury in a highly unequal manner, is to posit a simple
(and non-existent) divide
<http://kevinanderson.info/blog/a-succinct-account-of-my-view-on-individual-and-collective-action/>
between
individuals and the collective. Imagine someone responding to criticism of
his racist behavior by labeling the hoped-for anti-racist practices as
"self-righteous, self-referential, ascetic bullshit."

Meanwhile, he argues that a focus on his actions is foolhardy and that he,
as a true anti-racist, dedicates his energies to fighting structural
racism. Few, if any, would "buy" such a stance. That many do so regarding
environmental matters reflects how they imagine nature: as outside of
social power and not involving dynamic ties between structures and
individual agency.

This illustrates how critics of a focus on personal consumption perceive it
as purely individual, and the individual as isolated. Take radical
environmentalist Derrick Jensen. He contends
<https://orionmagazine.org/article/forget-shorter-showers/> that calls for
personal cuts in consumption mistakenly blame individuals (especially those
on the political-economic margins) rather than "those who actually wield
power in this system and ... the system itself." To support this, Jensen
asserts that, in terms of water, individuals and municipalities are
responsible for only 10 percent of consumption, with agriculture and
industry ingesting what remains. Similarly, households and individuals use
about 25 percent of US energy, he reports. The rest belongs to the
military, agribusiness, corporations and other institutional actors.

Jensen's sharp boundary between individual and corporate consumption
provokes many questions: For whom do agricultural and corporate interests
produce the resource-intensive stuff they sell? Doesn't consumer demand
inform what (and how much) they produce? And doesn't this help explain
why hundreds
of billions of dollars are spent globally
<http://adage.com/article/media/marketers-boost-global-ad-spending-540-billion/297737/>
each
year on advertising to shape people's desires and to produce "needs"? Does
this not reflect corporate entities' appreciation that their well-being is
dependent upon choices individuals make, and thus their great effort to
influence them? Although the sum of actions of individuals matter much more
<https://orionmagazine.org/article/multiplication-saves-the-day/> than that
of one person, that sum is built upon individual practices, and vice-versa.

This reflects how our actions influence others, how "walking the talk"
lends weight to our politics. For instance, research finds
<http://news.indiana.edu/releases/iu/2016/06/attari-climate-credibility.shtml>
that
the general public gives greater credibility to climate scientists calling
for large emissions reductions when their behavior is consistent with the
advocacy. Conversely, the public is less likely to take seriously champions
of climate-change-necessitated cuts in consumption who consume a lot.

Hence, it is not enough to assert, as Naomi Klein has done
<http://www.theage.com.au/good-weekend/is-naomi-klein-idea-on-saving-the-planet-too-radical-to-be-useful-20161207-gt5ybe.html>
in defending her flying footprint that, "We all work within the systems
that we want to change." Nor is it sufficient to argue, as has Bill McKibben
<https://www.nytimes.com/2016/08/07/opinion/sunday/embarrassing-photos-of-me-thanks-to-my-right-wing-stalkers.html?_r=0>
in protesting climate change denialists who stalk people like himself to
catch them driving a fossil-fueled car or committing other environmental
sins, that, "Changing the system, not perfecting our own lives, is the
point."

The world *does* limit us. Moreover, we will always get dirty hands if we
live in a society dominated by industrial capitalism and powered by fossil
fuels. But invoking systemic limitations or the strawman of perfection to
effectively say, "This is the best I can do" -- particularly by individuals
who are wealthy (in the global sense) and consume a lot -- is to downplay
human agency. It is to pretend that we have little room for maneuver, and
to dismiss individuals' need to think hard about their practices -- as long
as one is engaged in the fight that seeks systemic change.

As anyone who has spent time listening to middle- and upper-class people
discussing their recent electronic gadget purchase, their latest "home
improvement" project, their drive to get a cup of coffee, or an upcoming
long-distance trip knows, high-consumers have a lot of room to rein
themselves in.

In the recently released National Geographic climate change film, *Before
the Flood <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6nQYv15PJ4M>*, Leonardo DiCaprio
interviews Sunita Narain. Narain references that DiCaprio is from the
United States and says, "Your consumption is really going to put a hole in
the planet. And that's the conversation that we need to have."

DiCaprio responds, "You're absolutely correct," but then says that such an
argument is difficult for US Americans to hear, and that changes in their
lifestyles are "probably not going to happen." The solving of the climate
crisis will occur, he says, because "renewables will become cheaper the
more we invest into them, and that will solve the problem," leading Narain
to shake her head in dismay.

If "this changes everything" -- *this *being climate change, as Naomi Klein
suggests in the title of her book -- *this *necessarily includes what
individuals do -- not least for reasons of environmental equity.

*Meeting the Challenge of Now*

To meet the temperature obligations of the Paris Accords, the world's
wealthy parts need to achieve zero net emissions in the next two decades.
It's ludicrous to think that technology and infrastructural and systemic
changes alone will meet this enormous challenge, not least because some of
the technologies do not exist and large-scale transformation typically
takes a lot of time. Given Paris's obligations -- in addition to cuts in
consumption needed in light of other ecological challenges -- there simply
isn't room for some to maintain high-consumption lifestyles. And given
the Paris Agreement's
commitment <https://unfccc.int/resource/docs/2015/cop21/eng/l09.pdf> to
undertake emissions cuts so as to "to reflect equity and the principle of
common but differentiated responsibilities" and in support of efforts "to
eradicate poverty," the top global consumers must radically cut their
consumption immediately to allow the poorest of the Earth's denizens to
increase theirs.
If the world's top 10 percent of carbon dioxide emitters were to cut their
emissions to the level of the average European Union citizen, global
emissions would decline by 33 percent.

According to climate scientist Kevin Anderson
<http://carbonneutralshef.weebly.com/delivering-on-2-degrees---kevin-anderson.html>,
if
the world's top 10 percent of carbon dioxide emitters were to cut their
emissions to the level of the average European Union citizen, global
emissions would decline by 33 percent. If the top 20 percent were to do so,
the reduction would be about 40 percent. (Here's one small example of what
can be done: drying laundry by evaporation on clotheslines and racks --
like the vast majority of  Italy's people
<https://www.italybeyondtheobvious.com/doing-laundry-washing-clothes-traveling-in-italy>
do,
for instance -- instead of by fossil-fueled dryer would reduce a typical US
household's CO2 emissions by about one ton annually.)

For people who, like me, fit into the top 20 percent, it means giving up
things, especially our ecological privilege -- the ability to devour a
disproportionate share of the Earth's resources and dump the associated
detriments on others. It means reducing our wants, slowing down, consuming
much less, and sharing and supporting one another, while pushing each other
to do so. Among other benefits, jumping off the capitalism-fueled
consumption bandwagon may allow us space and time to explore and develop
alternative ways of living.

It is imperative that high-profile organizations and figures in the
climate, environmental justice, and anti-racism and economic justice
movements lead the way. Imagine, for example, if they were to advocate deep
cuts in individual consumption to fight air and water pollution in addition
to climate change. Imagine also that they were to call for limiting travel
to modes that stick to the Earth's surface when going to demonstrations or
meetings, or to give lectures, and to model that behavior. And then imagine
they were to explain to their constituencies and audiences why they make
such choices, how they are tied to struggles for larger transformation, and
to urge them to follow suit. Were this to happen, what may at first seem to
be individual, "less than meaningless" and "bullshit" would likely take on
a very different character.

This is *not* to suggest that changes by individual high consumers will be
sufficient -- far from it. But such changes, in addition to helping others
to see possibilities for a more sustainable lifestyle, can help catalyze
larger transformations. Nor is it to say that it is unnecessary to confront
large institutions and processes that drive much ecological destruction and
their associated injustices, as well as to work to remedy technologies and
infrastructures that limit our ability to live lightly. Indeed, such
endeavors are vital. One reason is that structural changes can greatly
increase the possibilities for changes in individual consumption.

This manifests how we do not confront an either-or choice. It is a matter
of acting individually *and* collectively, as well as focusing on the
everyday and structural to bring about democratic, just and sustainable
ways of relating between peoples and places and novel institutional
arrangements. To assume that broad, deep transformation emanates simply
from changes at "the top" can only lead to an impoverished politics.

Far-reaching change requires sustained work on multiple fronts, and a lot
of it. And that work -- the bridge-building and making of dynamic ties
between different scales and spheres -- is what our focus needs to be, not
a downplaying of the value of, or outright rejection of, individual actions
in the fight against climate change and environmental degradation.

It is a task, following the globe's warmest year on record
<https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/01/170118112554.htm>, that the
Trump era only makes more necessary.

IT for Change, Bengaluru
www.ITforChange.net

-- 
-----------
1.ವಿಷಯ ಶಿಕ್ಷಕರ ವೇದಿಕೆಗೆ  ಶಿಕ್ಷಕರನ್ನು ಸೇರಿಸಲು ಈ  ಅರ್ಜಿಯನ್ನು ತುಂಬಿರಿ.
 - 
https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSevqRdFngjbDtOF8YxgeXeL8xF62rdXuLpGJIhK6qzMaJ_Dcw/viewform
2. ಇಮೇಲ್ ಕಳುಹಿಸುವಾಗ ಗಮನಿಸಬೇಕಾದ ಕೆಲವು ಮಾರ್ಗಸೂಚಿಗಳನ್ನು ಇಲ್ಲಿ ನೋಡಿ.
-http://karnatakaeducation.org.in/KOER/index.php/ವಿಷಯಶಿಕ್ಷಕರವೇದಿಕೆ_ಸದಸ್ಯರ_ಇಮೇಲ್_ಮಾರ್ಗಸೂಚಿ
3. ಐ.ಸಿ.ಟಿ ಸಾಕ್ಷರತೆ ಬಗೆಗೆ ಯಾವುದೇ ರೀತಿಯ ಪ್ರಶ್ನೆಗಳಿದ್ದಲ್ಲಿ ಈ ಪುಟಕ್ಕೆ ಭೇಟಿ ನೀಡಿ -
http://karnatakaeducation.org.in/KOER/en/index.php/Portal:ICT_Literacy
4.ನೀವು ಸಾರ್ವಜನಿಕ ತಂತ್ರಾಂಶ ಬಳಸುತ್ತಿದ್ದೀರಾ ? ಸಾರ್ವಜನಿಕ ತಂತ್ರಾಂಶದ ಬಗ್ಗೆ ತಿಳಿಯಲು 
-http://karnatakaeducation.org.in/KOER/en/index.php/Public_Software
-----------
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