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Environmental Justice vs. Nature Protection

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Title: Environmental Justice vs. Nature Protection


1
Environmental Justice vs.Nature Protection
2
The Winding Road Incorporating Social Justice
and Human Rights into Protected Areas
  • Crystal L. Fortwangler

3
Primary Forms of Biodiversity Protection
  1. National Park Model
  2. Regional Approaches
  3. Community-Based Conservation
  4. Private Acquisition

4
The Yellowstone Model
5
Biosphere Reserves
  • Established by the United Nations Educational,
    Scientific and Cultural Organizations (UNESCO)
    Programme on Man and the Biosphere beginning in
    1971.
  • http//www.unesco.org/mabdb/bios1-2.htm

6
Biodiversity Protection in Practice Problems
  • Forced removal of local people to create
    protected areas.
  • Torture and intimidation of local people to
    enforce protection policies.
  • Restricting local peoples access to natural
    resources.
  • Excluding local people from participating in
    decision-making and management of local protected
    areas.

7
Biodiversity Protection in Practice Problems
  • Failure to actually protect biodiversity because
    local people exploit natural resources, kill
    animals and plants, encroach upon habitat, and/or
    denude or destroy habitat.
  • Worries that local people will put their own
    interests above the goal of protecting local
    biodiversity.
  • Worries that local people will make bad
    management decisions about how to protect natural
    areas.
  • Ironically, attempting to protect biodiversity
    might hasten its demise.

8
Feeding People vs. Saving Nature (1996)Holmes
Rolston III
  • If persons widely demonstrate that they value
    many other worthwhile things over feeding the
    hungry (Christmas gifts, college educations,
    symphony concerts),
  • And if developed countries, to protect what they
    value, post national boundaries across which the
    poor may not cross (immigration laws),
  • And if there is unequal and unjust distribution
    of wealth, and if just redistribution to
    alleviate poverty is refused,
  • And if one-fifth of the world continues to
    consume four-fifths of the production of goods
    and four-fifths consumes one-fifth,
  • And if escalating birthrates continue so that
    there are no real gains in alleviating poverty,
    only larger numbers of poor in the next
    generation,
  • And if low productivity on domesticated lands
    continues, and if the natural lands to be
    sacrificed are likely to be low in productivity,
  • And if significant natural values are at stake,
    including extinctions of species,
  • Then one out not always to feed people first, but
    rather one ought to sometimes save nature.

9
Nature as Community The Convergence of
Environment and Social Justice
  • Giovanna Di Chiro
  • Because mainstream environmental groups (MEGs)
    have focused so heavily on wilderness
    preservation and protecting endangered species,
    and have focused so little on urban and rural
    environmental problems, MEGs have contributed to
    the continued environmental injustices suffered
    by marginalized urban and rural peoples.
  • MEGs advocate top-down nature management at the
    expense of local communities, and MEGs contribute
    to participatory, recognition, and identity
    injustice.
  • MEGs perpetuate past colonial injustices by
    alienating people from nature.
  • With their focus on protecting nature
    (wilderness) and species out there in the wild,
    MEGs deny human-nature relationships.

10
U.S. Wilderness Act of 1964
  • Introduced in Congress in 1956 and rewritten 65
    times until it passed in 1964.
  • Created the National Wilderness Preservation
    System (NWPS) with 54 wilderness areas (9.1
    million acres).
  • Set a precedent for subsequent wilderness acts.
  • http//www.wilderness.net/index.cfm?fuseNWPS

11
Section 2c of the Wilderness Act of 1964
  • A wilderness, in contrast with those areas where
    man and his works dominate the landscape, is
    hereby recognized as an area where the earth and
    its community of life are untrammeled by man,
    where man himself is a visitor who does not
    remain. An area of wilderness is further defined
    to mean in this chapter an area of undeveloped
    Federal land retaining its primeval character and
    influence, without permanent improvements or
    human habitation, which is protected and managed
    so as to preserve its natural conditions and
    which (1) generally appears to have been affected
    primarily by the forces of nature, with the
    imprint of man's work substantially unnoticeable
    (2) has outstanding opportunities for solitude or
    a primitive and unconfined type of recreation
    (3) has at least five thousand acres of land or
    is of sufficient size as to make practicable its
    preservation and use in an unimpaired condition
    and (4) may also contain ecological, geological,
    or other features of scientific, educational,
    scenic, or historical value.

12
Wilderness Under Attack
  • Some members of the Environmental Justice
    Movement openly criticize wilderness for
  • Being racist, ethnocentric, colonialist, and
    elitist.
  • Putting nonhuman nature above people and
    sacrificing human interests to preserve
    wilderness.
  • Begin celebrated as a fiction or a place that
    really doesnt exist.

13
No Wilderness Argument
  • 1. The concept of wilderness denotes an area
    that exists independent of human cultures.
  • 2. To say that an area exists independent of
    human cultures is to say that it is uninhabited
    and/or untrammeled by people and has been such in
    the past.
  • 3. New interpretations of both old and new
    empirical evidence strongly suggest that no areas
    of the United States were uninhabited and/or
    untrammeled by people prior to current wilderness
    designation.
  • 4. No current wilderness areas (de facto or
    legally designated) satisfy criteria required to
    qualify as wilderness.
  • Conclusion Thus, there are no real wilderness
    areas in the United States. When viewed as a
    set, the category of wilderness has no members.

14
Moral Argument Against Wilderness Preservation
  • 1. Wilderness areasareas that are empty of
    people and their developmentswere created by
    Euroamericans who intentionally killed and
    removed Native American Indians from landscapes.
  • 2. Killing and removing Native American Indians
    from landscapes was morally wrong.
  • Conclusion Thus, because wilderness areas were
    created by morally wrong actions, the
    preservation of wilderness today is morally wrong.

15
Ethnocentric Argument Against Wilderness
  • 1. The idea of wilderness is largely a product
    of European and Euroamerican ethnic cultures.
  • 2. Wilderness preservation, as informed by this
    idea, is largely practiced only by people of
    European ancestry.
  • 3. The practice of wilderness preservation
    largely has ignored the presence of non-European
    descended peoples, such as Native American
    Indians.
  • 4. To ignore non-European descended peoples is
    wrong.
  • 5. Ethnocentrism is morally wrong.
  • Conclusion Thus, the practice of wilderness
    preservation and the idea of wilderness are
    ethnocentric, and because of this they are
    morally wrong.

16
Values Argument Against Wilderness Preservation
(Elitism Argument)
  • 1. Wilderness preservation historically has been
    justified by appealing to the aesthetic,
    religious/spiritual, recreational, and symbolic
    values of wilderness for people.
  • 2. Only people in privileged positions of
    economic, social, and/or political power
    historically have been able to appreciate these
    values.
  • 3. Because most people have never been in
    privileged positions of economic, social, and/or
    political power, most people have never been able
    to appreciate the values of wilderness.
  • 4. Further, many people who have not been in
    these privileged positions of power have needed
    to use wilderness resources in order to make a
    living in an economic sense.
  • Conclusion Thus, wilderness preservation is
    elitist. It is justified by appealing to values
    that are not available to most people. Further,
    protecting wilderness harms people economically.

17
Social Constructivist Argument Against Wilderness
  • 1. In order for the concept of wilderness to
    make sense, it must connote the idea of nature as
    existing independent of human cultures.
  • 2. The concept of wilderness thus presupposes
    that a meaningful conceptual distinction can be
    made between human cultures and nonhuman nature.
  • 3. Because wilderness and nature, like all other
    concepts, are human social constructions
    (concepts invented by social groups of people),
    it is problematic to say that wilderness exists
    independent from human cultures. That is,
    because the ideas of nature and wilderness are
    socially constructed, there are no non-socially
    constructed natural areas that exist independent
    of human cultures.
  • What the concept of wilderness connotesthe idea
    of nature as existing independent of human
    culturesis non-existent.
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