What’s the Problem Here?

Let‟s start with the bad news first. Simply put, ours is a small and much-abused planet. We have so degraded our environment, so disrupted our biosphere, so stressed physical carrying capacities that the lives of millions of people on the planet (certainly our cherished “ways of life”) are at risk....

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Joni Seager
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.515.2776
http://www.praxis-epress.org/CGR/26-Seager.pdf
Description
Summary:Let‟s start with the bad news first. Simply put, ours is a small and much-abused planet. We have so degraded our environment, so disrupted our biosphere, so stressed physical carrying capacities that the lives of millions of people on the planet (certainly our cherished “ways of life”) are at risk. The litany of contemporary environmental horrors is now familiar, even to grade-school children: ozone depletion; acid rain; chemical pollution of groundwater; the startling and escalating rate of loss of bird, animal, and plant species; tropical deforestation; increasingly massive and deadly chemical, oil, and toxic spills; and the list could go on for pages. The daily newspapers are filled with a barrage of bad news, all of it larger than life. We hear how many acres of trees have fallen in the Amazon between the time of our morning coffee and our evening meal (over 1,500 acres on an average day); we are told, with uncomfortable precision, how many of us will be likely to develop skin cancer in the coming decades, and how many of us will die from it (more than 6,500 a year in the US alone); we are mesmerized by images of the ozone hole over the Antarctic pulsating in astral colors. These are the Big Problems. Nature is clearly in trouble, and we with it. If we are going to solve these environmental problems, we need to bring to bear on them all of our analytic and political skills and resources, including feminist analysis. But what can feminists contribute to our understanding of the environmental problems? Is there a place for feminist voice in the environmental chorus? As a feminist and a geographer, I posed these rhetorical questions to myself a number of years ago – and, surprisingly, my first answer was “no, ” feminist analysis was not