Last week, in preparation for CEJ’s upcoming annual Future Generations Conference, True Wealth in a Green World, I viewed three films that address interrelated aspects of why a new jurisprudence is needed for the sake of true green wealth and the survival and flourishing of nature and the human spirit. I thought I would share these resources with you, even if you can’t personally attend our conference, and I encourage you to look for the highlights of each of the keynote presentations, Bill Belleville, Janelle Orsi, and Janie Barrera, on our website and on YouTube, as we plan on posting them shortly thereafter.

Animate Earth: Science, Intuition & Gaia by Stephan Harding, Coordinator of the Master of Science in Holistic Science at Schumacher College, invites consideration of the critical roles that intuition and holistic science play in healing our relationships with Earth. It argues for an expanded science that moves beyond mechanistic portrayals of nature so as to reveal nature as a sentient, living being rather than as dead, inert objects that are here for commodification. Its core premise that nature can be known by both science and intuition (yet acknowledging that Earth’s complex and intricate relationships are never fully known) supports CEJ’s position that humanity has a moral and legal responsibility to protect the entire Earth community which provides the basis of life for us and future generations.  I invite you to check it out at www.animateearth.com.

A second recommended film is Green Fire: Aldo Leopold and a Land Ethic for Our Time. This is a documentary of the life and legacy of famed conservationist Aldo Leopold. Although Leopold’s Sand County Almanac was published posthumously in 1949, his land ethic philosophy continues to live in the work of people and organizations across the Earth. Leopold’s vision of a community that cares about both people and land is at the heart of creating laws and policies that transform the commodification of nature into a way of mutually enhancing relationships. One can purchase a copy at www.GreenFireMovie.com.

The Economics of Happiness is the story of the disturbing consequences of market globalization and how localization movements can reverse these trends.  As Joanna Macy states, “(T)his film connects the dots between climate chaos, economic meltdown, and our own personal suffering. It presents the localization movement as a systemic alternative to corporate globalization, as well as a strategy that brings community and meaning to our lives.” This film is an in-depth analysis of the concepts that CEJ will be exploring in our upcoming True Wealth in a Green World conference.  I invite you to visit  www.theeconomics ofhappiness.org for more information.

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Last week I returned from the U.N. Climate Change Conference in Durban, South Africa, where I participated with other international NGO representatives dedicated to creating global climate justice. In addition to attending the actual climate negotiations, I attended sessions addressing the various financial and mitigation mechanisms being considered to absorb carbon and other greenhouse gas emissions. The overall framework for addressing climate change is becoming more and more a model of increased commodification of Nature, whereby the global market can profit from using the forests, soil, and eco-systems of the least developed nations in order to offset emissions.

There was very little official discussion on actually reducing the amount of carbon emissions.  While the U.N. representatives negotiated elements of a potential new framework to be adopted by 2015 and implemented by 2020, many of the NGO and civil society members advocated for action now. The official voices of the small island nations and Pan-African networks pleaded that mandatory reduction of carbon emissions not be tabled until 2020, as they are already experiencing dislocation due to rising sea levels and long term droughts.

One of the most energizing parts of being in Durban was joining other international colleagues from the Global Alliance for the Rights of Nature, including South African environmental lawyer Cormac Cullinan, former Bolivian Ambassador to the U.N. Pablo Solon, indigenous leader Tom Goldtooth, South Durban community activist Desmond D’sa, and Shannon Biggs from Global Exchange, in hosting a series of activities to advance the rights of Nature and strengthen coalition-building with other environmental and human rights organizations.

We spent a day in a wilderness reserve strategizing how best to advance the rights of Nature agenda at the upcoming Rio+20 Conference on Sustainable Development to be held in Brazil in June, 2012. I also joined Cormac for a panel presentation at Diakonia, the World Council of Churches headquarters in Durban, addressing “The Earth Bears Witness: Who Should Stand Trial?”

Desmond D'Sa, Tom Goldtooth, Shannon Biggs, Natalia Greene, Cormac Cullinan & Pablo Solon (L-R). Photo courtesy of Shannon Biggs, Global Exchange.

I completed my African journey with several days in northeast Kenya visiting our sisters who serve at St. Clare’s School for Girls near Meru, Kenya. While there I had the opportunity to teach several classes, sharing with the young women the U.N. Climate Change Conference outcomes and exploring with them the major influence of recently deceased Kenyan Nobel Laureate Wangari Maathai. We bonded immediately as I spoke of meeting Wangari at Thomas Berry’s memorial service at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in 2009, and the long-term impact she has had on my sense of eco-feminism and the empowerment of women and protection of Nature.

I also visited the Samburu National Reserve and met many elephants who wanted to get “up close and personal.” (Click here for video:  Elephants Samburu Dec. 2011.) The beauty of the Samburu game reserve and of the Kenyan spirit remain as gifts to me.

As we transition from the season of darkness into light, I extend to you my wishes for a graced holiday season, and my gratitude for your support and generosity throughout this year.

May we move forward into 2012 with the words of recently departed Vaclav Havel, playwright and previous President of the Czech Republic, in our hearts.  He wrote about the hope necessary in times of darkness: “Hope is not the conviction that something will turn out well, but the certainty that something makes sense, regardless of how it turns out.” It is the conviction that our lives will have meaning and our story will continue.

Third Annual Future Generations Conference

“True Wealth in a Green World”

February 10, 2012

Barry University School of Law, 6441 E. Colonial Drive

Orlando, FL

 

The program brings together speakers from green business, microlending, law, and other fields to examine what makes a society rich and explore methods of creating true wealth for all members of the Earth community.

Speakers will include:

+ Bill Belleville, award-winning environmental writer and documentary filmmaker, author of Salvaging the Real Florida:  Lost & Found in the State of Dreams and numerous other works focusing on nature, conservation, and a sense of place; learn more at Bill’s website, billbelleville.com;

+ Janelle Orsi, Esq., Director of the Sustainable Economies Law Center, pioneer in the field of sharing law, and author of The Sharing Solution:  How to Save Money, Simplify Your Life & Build Community;  find out about her “legal services for a sustainable, equitable, and sharing world” at janelleorsi.com;

+ Janie Barrera, President and CEO of AccionTexas, the largest non-profit microlender in the United States; visit acciontexas.org for more information about AccionTexas’s programs and community-based approach.

CLE credit will be offered.  For further information and to join the mailing list, please contact Jane Goddard at jgoddard@barry.edu or (321) 206-5788.

Click here for:    True Wealth Flyer    True Wealth Registration Form

                           True Wealth Program Agenda

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