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Title: Environmental Justice, Literature, and Service Learning: Putting Theory into Practice


1
Environmental Justice, Literature, and Service
Learning Putting Theory into Practice
  • Presentation for the biannual conference of the
  • Association for Literature and Environment (ASLE)
  • June 12-16, 2007
  • Wofford College, South Carolina
  • Dr. Greta Gaard, Dept. of English, UW-River Falls

2
Environmental justice movement responds to
environmental racism, classism, sexism,
anti-naturism/speciesism (anti-toxics)
  • Radioactive waste on Native lands
  • Landfills and hazardous wastes in African
    American and Latino communities
  • Banned pesticides exported to Third World
  • Toxic labor conditions for farmworkers,
  • maquila workers, sweatshop workers
  • Akwesasne Mothers Milk Project
    connects indigenous women,
    water, whales
  • 1991 expanded to include public health, worker
    safety, land use, transportation, housing
    resource allocation, community empowerment

3
Why teach EJ lit? Personal/Political/Literary
Motivations
  • Feminist framework for viewing environmental
    justice
  • Val Plumwood (1993), Feminism and the Mastery of
    Nature
  • master model self/other
  • Expanding students conceptual frameworks, making
    connections btw. social and environmental justice
  • Literature illuminates life, offers intellectual
    and emotional connection to real issues

4
Outcomes EJ, Literature, Research
  • Studying politics alone would not have given me
    any sort of connection to important issues. The
    politics get really boring and it would be easy
    to tune out and just do what I needed to do to
    get through the class.
  • The literature gave me people to connect and
    identify with. It made it easy to see how these
    characters that I cared about were being
    affected.
  • After reading the literature, we did research to
    see how the things presented in the novels really
    play out in the real world. To find out that
    these things are actually going on and affecting
    real people is very powerful.
  • -Katie Austin, Spring 2007

5
EJ Literature Service Learning course
contexts at UWRF
  • literature fiction, poetry, nonfiction
    essays, speeches, websites, social action writing
  • ethical citizenship UWRFs General Education
    criteria
  • Identify individual and collective
    responsibilities to the social natural
    environment of community, nation, world
  • Focus on the process of decision-making regarding
    values ethics in personal, professional,
    civic life

6
SOTL Research QuestionsEJ and Service Learning
  • What could students learn by triangulating EJ
    lit, research, their own service learning
    experiences?
  • Is service learning an integral component for
    teaching EJ literature?

7
ENG 228 Course Groundwork
  • Literary texts diverse and international
    literature of many genres, reflective of the
    movement
  • Learning Community discussion, reflection,
    goal-setting and assessment
  • 3 reflective papers on course themes
  • Civic engagement or Service learning
  • Portfolio of coursework, introduced by
    self-reflective and self-evaluative letter
  • Researching real world correlations for the
    literature
  • Service learning practicing ethical citizenship

8
EJ Literature Themes
  • Ecology Identity Where We Live, Who We Are
  • What we Eat
  • Where we Work
  • Social Power, Ecological Power
  • -gt civic engagement
  • Economy, Ecology, Globalization
  • For a Future to be Possible

9
The Literature
  • Ecology Identity Readings from Langston
    Hughes, Margo Tamez, Gary Snyder, Gloria
    Andaldúa, Ken Saro-Wiwa, Rachel Carson, Wendell
    Berry, Vandana Shiva, Alice Walker, Sandra
    Steingraber
  • Food Ruth Ozeki. My Year of Meats.
  • Work Ana Castillo. So Far From God.
  • Power Water (Hogan, Solar Storms),
    Nuclear (Terry Tempest Williams, Refuge),
    Oil (Marnie Mueller, Green Fires).
  • Globalization Karen Yamashita,
    Tropic of Orange.
  • EJ Future Deming Savoy, eds.
    The Colors of Nature Culture,
    Identity, and the Natural World.

10
Videos as Narrative Literature
  • Rachel Carson
  • Diet for a New America
  • Zoned for Slavery
  • Power, Good Nukes, Oil on Ice
  • Black Gold

11
EJ Lit Service Learning Phase One
  • Group projects linked to the topic of power
    (water, nuclear, oil)
  • Service learning as engaged citizenship can
    include
  • Internet research engagement w/EJ organization,
    online activism, research or letter-writing
  • Collaborative role-play exploring ethical
    perspectives strategies for resolving conflicts
    in a situation related to your topic, performed
    on or off campus
  • Service learning of at least 10 hours.

12
Outcomes Group 1 Water
  • Educational Campaign
  • Creating a PowerPoint illustrating
  • Hydroelectric power generation, impact,
    alternatives
  • Presenting PPT and information on campus
  • Flyers promoting the event
  • November 2, 2006 600 p.m. (18 people)
  • Posting the event
  • Facebook
  • My Space

13
Group 2 Nuclear
  • PPT on Nuclear Power
  • from Los Alamos NV Test Site to Yucca Mountain,
    Chernobyl, Prairie Island
  • Strategies of Civic Engagement
  • Flyers from ppt.
  • Facebook group
  • Chalking
  • Letters to Xcel Energy

14
Group 3 Oil
  • PPT on Oil in the Amazon (Ecuador, Venezuela,
    Argentina) Texaco
  • Chevron-Texaco.ppt
  • Role-play performance on tensions between oil
    executives, govt. officials, SA citizens,
    indigenous coalitions w/intl. activists as
    strategic solution

15
Student Reflective Essays
  • Through this class I have held an on-campus
    presentation, emailed environmental justice
    groups, signed petitions on the internet, and
    been made aware of several environmental justice
    issues.
  • I plan on sharing what Ive learned with
    everybody who ever brings up EJ issues, talks
    about the big name corporations Ive learned
    about, or asks whats going on in the world
    concerning indigenous people. Im glad I got the
    chance to get up and do something and that I was
    challenged to do more than just read whats going
    on in the world.

16
Student Reflective Essays (pt. 2)
  • I do think the activism was a bit much, I dont
    think you can really demand someone be an
    activist, but you can ask to carry on the issues,
    spread the knowledge to the ignorant, and make an
    attempt to make your life better and the worlds
    life better likewise.
  • To demand someone be an activist is sort of
    hypocritical, since an activist is someone who is
    opposing the demands of an oppressor of sorts
    Its like someone making it a law to think for
    yourself, and vehemently enforcing it.

17
Phase One Evaluation
  • What succeeded?
  • Civic engagement via physical, face-to-face, and
    virtual spaces
  • One group of students did connect with off-campus
    activists others wrote letters to toxic
    corporations
  • Gen. Ed. Goal 1 for ethical citizenship
    Identify individual and collective
    responsibilities to the social natural
    environment of community, nation, world
  • identify factors of social natural environment
    that influence ethical decision-making
  • What fell short?
  • Students physically remained on campus
  • Civic engagement misperceived as taking a
    specific viewpoint
  • Gen. Ed. Goal 2 Focus on the process of
    decision-making regarding values ethics in
  • personal,
  • professional,
  • civic life
  • evaluate
  • ethical conflict
  • and ways to
  • address it to
  • serve the world

18
EJ Lit Service Learning, Phase Two Service
Learning in the Community
  • Service learning guidelines (handout)
  • Service learning assessment paper
  • Service learning activity log (time, hours,
    tasks, reflections), documents created
  • Assessment paper (750-1000 words)
  • Service learning placements opportunities
    (handout in syllabus)
  • Service learning presentations in class

19
Service learning guidelines
  • What is service learning?
  • Meets community needs, fosters civic
    responsibility, enhances the academic
    curriculum
  • Combines advocacy activism with classroom
    learning
  • Promotes application of abstract concepts to
    actual situations
  • How do you choose a service learning placement?
  • What EJ issues are you interested in?
  • What do you want to know after completing
  • this experience?
  • What skills can you offer? Develop?
  • How does service learning work?
  • Read Do Reflect -- Write

20
Placements OpportunitiesIndividuals, Groups
  • Al Gores Global Warming Slide Show
  • Habitat for Humanity
  • Kinnikinick Land Trust
  • YMCA Teen Center
  • United Way Food Drops
  • Community Food Pantry restocking
  • Soup Kitchen
  • Animal Shelter
  • Trout Unlimited Rush River Clean-Up Day
  • UWRF Volunteer Day
  • Center for Hmong Arts Talent
  • Mpls. Food Pantry for HIV families

21
Home for Life Animal Shelter
22
Kinnikinnick Senior Center
23
Service Learning Outcomes food hunger
  • Going into the church, I had my preconceived
    notions of what type of people would be there
    to eat. every vision was gone. There were
    people and families of all walks of life, waiting
    to eat. helping serve the meals has made me see
    that hunger doesnt affect just one type of
    person.
  • Heather Hanson

24
Outcomes United Way Food Drop
  • As I was working, I found the first principle of
    EJ reverberating in my mind it affirms the
    sacredness of Mother Earth, ecological unity, and
    interdependence of all species, and the right to
    be free from ecological destruction. Through
    hands-on experience, it became evident that
    ecological unity and interdependence of species
    is vital in order to secure the right to be free
    from ecological destruction. Emily Syring

25
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26
Outcomes soup kitchen
  • Upon first hearing about this event, I was under
    the impression that we would be feeding people
    who were in great need of the food. Once the
    event began, though, I discovered this was not
    the case. Families, lonely senior citizens, girl
    scouts, and volunteers all enjoyed the feast.
    After I left, I had no uplifting feelings about
    what I had just partaken in as I did not think it
    made any difference whatsoever.
  • Amy Anderson, Spring 2007

27
Outcomes Rush River Cleanup
  • The area we were in is pretty far out into the
    country, so there wasnt as much trash as I
    expected. Sarah had explained that the main
    thing to look for was scrap metal, and there was
    a list of certain things to avoid, due to
    meth-lab dumpings. If I had been in charge, I
    would have targeted a more urban, polluted river
    that really needed the group effort to clean up.
    I would have organized more of a massive effort
    and networked with other organizations. The
    part I didt agree with was the distance we all
    had to drive to clean up a miniscule amount of
    trash in a river thats use is limited to the
    people who fish it. It almost seems like the
    river is privatized in that way.
  • Krystal Hoppe, Spring 2007

28
The Rush River Trout Unlimited
29
Rush River Cleanup
30
Outcomes facing the opposition
  • One particular business owner didnt deem the
    brochures announcing the new Free Health Clinic
    for underinsured people appropriate for his
    clientele. I was mad when I left that building.
    Why wouldnt you want to help those who need
    it?
  • Lacey Felmlee

31
Phase Two Evaluation
  • Gen. Ed. Goal 1, identify responsibilities
    identify factors that influence ethical
    decision-making
  • Increased self-awareness through service learning
  • What succeeded?
  • Getting students off-campus with specific
    placements
  • Civic engagement via physical spaces
  • Individuals and groups
  • Deeper insight into EJ issues, applications of
    the readings
  • (Re) new interest in civic engagement
  • What fell short?
  • Delayed placements
  • Gen. Ed. Goal 2 evaluate ethical conflict
    ways to address it to serve the world

32
Evaluate Ethical Conflict Evaluate Ways to
Address It
  • Street rallies protests
  • Road blocks blockades
  • Coalition-building
  • Using the media
  • Boycotts
  • Using public space (internet, flyers, posters,
    chalk, performance)
  • Letter writing
  • Addressing schools and churches
  • Running for public office
  • Instituting or adapting human rights
    proclamations
  • Writing / passing EJ legislation

33
Student Responses to Service Learning Experiences
  • Evaluate ethical conflict Students saw
    environmental justice problems as a result of
    cultural, governmental, and economic forces
    combined -gt little interest in stakeholder
    approach to resolving conflict.
  • In SW rural WI, activism is more single-issue
    than EJ activism .
  • Nature is defined as wild, rural, or non-urban.
  • Most activism is issue-oriented rather than
    systems-oriented.
  • Students were very attached to immediate results,
    feel-good experiences.

34
Reflections Future Directions
  • Guidelines for service learning specific
    placements
  • Individual or group, self-selected
  • Spaces of civic engagement, virtual and physical
  • Reporting findings to the General Education Cmte.

35
Future Directions Solutions!
  • While I explored the current problems and my
    theories as to why they are occurring, I rarely
    addressed how to fix these problems or how these
    problems could create even greater conflicts in
    the future. If I were to rewrite my papers, I
    would focus more on proposing solutions to the
    problems I addressed and I would discuss possible
    outcomes if changes do not occur.
  • Emily Syring, Spring 2007

36
Resources
  • Institute for Service Learning at UW-Milwaukee
    www.uwm.edu/Dept/ISL
  • Campus Compact www.compact.org
  • Big Dummys Guide to Service Learning
    http//www.fiu.edu/time4chg/Library/bigdummy.html
  • Rutgers Citizenship and Service Education program
    http//case.rutgers.edu/
  • National Service-Learning Clearinghouse(NSLC)
      http//www.servicelearning.org/resources_tools/l
    inks/index.html
  • Service-Learning Advocacy Action Brief
    http//www.service-learningpartnership.org/aab

37
Events leading to the environmental justice
movement
  • 1982 Warren County, NC - predominantly black
    and poor residents oppose a polychlorinated
    biphenyl (PCB) disposal landfill in their
    community.
  • 1987 Toxic Wastes and Race, a study
    commissioned by the United Church of Christ
    Commission for Racial Justice
  • Correlating waste facility sites and
    demographics, the study found race was the most
    powerful variable predicting location.
  • Other variables were poverty, land values,
  • and home ownership.
  • 1991 First National People of Color
  • Environmental Leadership Summit 4 days
  • in Washington D.C.

38
1991 First National People of Color Environmental
Leadership Summit
  • Broadened the EJ movement beyond the anti-toxics
    focus to include
  • Public health
  • Worker safety
  • Land use
  • Transportation
  • Housing
  • Resource allocation
  • Community empowerment
  • Built a multi-racial grassroots movement around
    environmental economic justice
  • Created a 17-point Principles of Environmental
    Justice http//www.ejrc.cau.edu/princej.html

39
17 Principles of Environmental Justice
  • 1. affirms the sacredness of Mother Earth,
    ecological unity and the interdependence of all
    species, and the right to be free from ecological
    destruction.
  • 2. demands that public policy be based on mutual
    respect and justice for all peoples, free from
    any form of discrimination or bias.
  • 3. mandates the right to ethical, balanced and
    responsible uses of land and renewable resources
    in the interest of a sustainable planet for
    humans and other living things.
  • 4. calls for universal protection from nuclear
    testing, extraction, production and disposal of
    toxic/hazardous wastes and poisons and nuclear
    testing that threaten the fundamental right to
    clean air, land, water, and food.
  • 5. affirms the fundamental right to political,
    economic, cultural and environmental
    self-determination of all peoples.
  • 6. demands the cessation of the production of all
    toxins, hazardous wastes, and radioactive
    materials, and that all past and current
    producers be held strictly accountable to the
    people for detoxification and the containment at
    the point of production.

40
17 Principles (contd)
  • 7. demands the right to participate as equal
    partners at every level of decision-making
  • 8. affirms the right of all workers to a safe and
    healthy work environment, without being forced to
    choose between an unsafe livelihood and
    unemployment. It also affirms the right of those
    who work at home to be free from environmental
    hazards.
  • 9. protects the right of victims of environmental
    injustice to receive full compensation and
    reparations for damages as well as quality health
    care.
  • 10. considers governmental acts of environmental
    injustice a violation of international law, the
    Universal Declaration On Human Rights, and the
    United Nations Convention on Genocide.
  • 11. must recognize a special legal and natural
    relationship of Native Peoples to the U.S.
    government through treaties, agreements,
    compacts, and covenants affirming sovereignty and
    self-determination.

41
17 Principles (contd)
  • 12. affirms the need for urban and rural
    ecological policies to clean up and rebuild our
    cities and rural areas in balance with nature,
    honoring the cultural integrity of all our
    communities, and providing fair access for all to
    the full range of resources.
  • 13. calls for the strict enforcement of
    principles of informed consent, and a halt to the
    testing of experimental reproductive and medical
    procedures and vaccinations on people of color.
  • 14. opposes the destructive operations of
    multi-national corporations.
  • 15. opposes military occupation, repression and
    exploitation of lands, peoples and cultures, and
    other life forms.
  • 16. calls for the education of present and future
    generations which emphasizes social and
    environmental issues, based on our experience and
    an appreciation of our diverse cultural
    perspectives.
  • 17. requires that we, as individuals, make
    personal and consumer choices to consume as
    little of Mother Earth's resources and to produce
    as little waste as possible.
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