ecology

$100 Trillion Will Change Hands in the Next 20 Years - Here's How It Can Ensure Our Sustainable Future

The following excerpt is from The Clean Money Revolution: Reinventing Power, Purpose, and Capitalism, by Joel Solomon with Tyee Bridge (2017, New Society Publishers). Reprinted with permission.

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Green Rush Blues: California Cannabis After Legalization

The huge underground cannabis economy was woven into the commercial fabric of California long before the 2016 passage of Proposition 64, which legalized marijuana for adult use. Transforming a shadowy, multibillion-dollar industry into a heavily taxed and regulated structure presents unique and enormous challenges. Who will gain and who will lose under the new regime? Will the expected financial dividend from legalization be broadly distributed throughout the Golden State? California’s cannabis regulations are supposed to accomplish two key objectives: Curtail illicit sales and rein in extensive harm to the natural environment caused by black market growers. But the way legalization is being implemented could have the opposite effect. Steep taxes, higher operating costs, and an insatiable out-of-state demand for California cannabis all but ensure that the black market will survive – if not thrive – in the near term and ecological abuse will continue, as Angela Bacca reports in this special, three-part series.

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It's Going to Take a New Economy to Save the Planet

Each day, we can see new evidence that the economy fails to serve people or planet. I spoke with Stewart Wallis, the former executive director of the New Economics Foundation from 2003 to 2016. A fellow of the Club of Rome, he is a member of the World Economic Forum’s Global Future Council on Values and Technology, and a board member of the New Economy Coalition. He is currently leading a major new initiative to create a global “new economics movement” called WE All (Well-Being Economy Alliance). We discussed how to galvanize action for a new economy. 

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How an Ecological Approach to Architecture Can Help Reinvent Urban Food Systems

The following is an excerpt from WORKac: We’ll Get There When We Cross That Bridge by Amale Andraos and Dan Wood, published by the Monacelli Press, 2017. WORKac (WORK Architecture Company) is a New York-based architecture firm founded by Amale Andraos and Dan Wood.

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What Is Erotic Ecology and Can It Help Save the Planet?

The following is an excerpt from the new book Matter & Desire: An Erotic Ecology, by Andreas Weber (Chelsea Green Publishing, 2017).

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How Climate Change Hurricanes Are Rapidly Accelerating the Militarization of America

Deployed to the Houston area to assist in Hurricane Harvey relief efforts, U.S. military forces hadn’t even completed their assignments when they were hurriedly dispatched to Florida, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands to face Irma, the fiercest hurricane ever recorded in the Atlantic Ocean. Florida Governor Rick Scott, who had sent members of the state National Guard to devastated Houston, anxiously recalled them while putting in place emergency measures for his own state. A small flotilla of naval vessels, originally sent to waters off Texas, was similarly redirected to the Caribbean, while specialized combat units drawn from as far afield as Colorado, Illinois, and Rhode Island were rushed to Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. Meanwhile, members of the California National Guard were being mobilizedto fight wildfires raging across that state (as across much of the West) during its hottest summer on record.

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To Avoid Ecological Calamity, We Must Adopt More Human-Scale Technologies

The following is an excerpt from Kirkpatrick Sale's forthcoming book "Human Scale Revisited: A New Look at the Classic Case for a Decentralist Future" (Chelsea Green, May 2017):

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Trump's Border Wall Will Have Severe Ecological Consequences

It looks like Donald Trump’s “great, great wall” is actually going to happen. Its likely impact on human society has been well-noted, but in the longer-term a barrier across an entire continent will also have severe ecological consequences.

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Ecologists Aren't Paying Enough Attention to Synthetic Chemicals - to the Detriment of Public Health

Manmade chemicals may alter ecological processes, yet few scientists are studying the role of these chemicals in global environmental change, say a group of researchers from the U.S. and Germany in a scientific paper recently published in the journal Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment.

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U.S. Senate Clears Bill to Curb Wildlife Trafficking

On Thursday night, the U.S. Senate acted to curb wildlife trafficking when it passed the Eliminate, Neutralize, and Disrupt (END) Wildlife Trafficking Act (H.R. 2494), sending it back to the House for final action. This bipartisan legislation, which was championed by Sens. Chris Coons, D-Del., and Jeff Flake R-Ariz., provides tools and resources necessary to combat the global poaching crisis that threatens some of the world’s most iconic species with extinction. A parallel effort has been led in the House by Reps. Ed Royce, R-Calif., and Eliot Engel, D-N.Y., and we expect the House to take up the bill next week.

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From Ecosystems to Species to Cultures, Diversity Is Key to Survival

It’s been shocking to watch news of the Brexit vote in Britain, Donald Trump’s promise to build a wall between Mexico and the U.S. and the ongoing threats and violence against ethnic minorities in many parts of the world. I’m not a political or social scientist, but my training as a biologist gives me some insight.

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