Tufts University
UEP News
 
Environmental Justice, Climate Justice, and the Capabilities Approach: The Flourishing of Human and Non-Human Communities
 
10/29/2009 12:34:00 PM
 

Professor David Schlosberg

 

Wednesday, April 1, 2009, 12:00-1:15 p.m.

Brown House, 97 Talbot Ave., Medford Campus

Most authors who have addressed climate justice focus on conceptions of equity, and in particular inequity between existing human populations or between existing and future generations of human beings. Professor Schlosberg argues that the issue of climate change necessitates a much more broad understanding of climate justice. His thesis is that the capabilities approach, developed by Amartya Sen and Martha Nussbaum and expanded in key ways, can be applied to a conception of climate justice. This capabilities-based conception of climate justice will be compared to the demands of both the environmental justice and climate justice movements.

 

David Schlosberg, Barron Visiting Professor in the Environment and Humanities at Princeton University, Professor of Politics and International Affairs, and Director of the Environmental Studies Program, at Northern Arizona University, is known nationally and internationally for his work in environmental political theory, environmental justice, and environmental movements.  Schlosberg’s most recent book is Environmentalism in the United States, co-edited with Elizabeth Bomberg.  He is currently co-editing The Oxford Handbook of Climate Change and Society.

 
 
 
Announcement - Citizen & Planner Leaders for Local Sustainability Eco-municipality Leadership Training Session
 
10/29/2009 9:55:00 AM
 
 
May 29th - June 2, 2009
Tufts University, Medford, MA
 
This coming spring in 2009, a 4-day national training session will take place at Tufts University to increase citizen and planner leadership capacity in communities and their local governments to initiate and lead a change process to become a sustainable community. This sustainable communities approach has a substantial track record of successful implementation – possibly the most extensive in the world - in over 100 municipalities in Sweden, U.S., and around the world. The objective of the training is to prepare potential local leaders – including citizens, local officials, planners, or municipal staff – to be able to lead a process involving sustainability education, communication, and a strategic implementation process.

 

Faculty:  Sarah James & Torbjörn Lahti, co-Directors of the Institute for Eco-municipality Education & Assistance (IEMEA), and co-authors of The Natural Step for Communities: How Cities & Towns Can Change to Sustainable Practices (New Society Publishers, 2004, winner of the 2005 Planetizen Top Ten Book Award. Torbjörn Lahti is the founder of the Swedish eco-municipality movement, and he and Sarah James are co-founders of the emerging U.S. eco-municipality movement. Between them, they have worked with over 150 municipalities in Sweden and the United States.

Julian Agyeman, Professor of Urban and Environmental Policy and Planning (UEP), and Chair of the Department of UEP at Tufts University. He is author of  Sustainable Communities and the Challenge of Environmental Justice (New York University Press, 2005), among other books.

 

With guest speaker Bert Cohen, co-founder of the Portsmouth, NH ecomunicipality initiative.

 

Cost: The fee for attendees requiring accommodations will be $2,275 , inclusive of tuition, room, and board. Participants registering and paying before April 15, 2009 pay a discounted rate of  $2,175. For persons not requiring accommodations, the cost will be $2,000, or $1,900 if paid before April 15, 2009. Unfortunately, no scholarships or reduced rates are available.

 

Primary Sponsor: The Tufts University Department of Urban and Environmental Policy & Planning. Co-sponsors: The Massachusetts Chapter of the American Planning Association and the American Planning Association Environment, Natural Resources, & Energy Division.

 

Registration: To register for this training, send the accompanying registration form and a check made out to IEMEA. (Sorry, no credit cards!) There is a 25-person limit. In the event of oversubscription, priority will be given to individuals presently leading or involved in local eco-municipality initiatives. Final registration deadline: May 11, 2009.


WHAT YOU WILL LEARN IN THIS TRAINING SESSION

 

  • An in-depth understanding of what sustainability means both at the global and local community level, including the Natural Step framework for sustainability. 
  • An in-depth examination what it means to satisfy human needs within a sustainability context, including psycho-social human needs.
  • How to present and communicate sustainability ideas and concepts to a variety of different audiences, plus tools and materials to accomplish this.
  • How to design and lead a five-year “bottom-up” process for transforming a municipal government and its larger community to become an ‘eco-municipality’ – a sustainable community led by (particular) sustainability objectives which are practiced throughout  the government and larger community.
  • How to engage and involve the entire community – citizens, businesses, institutions, municipal departments and agencies – in defining a guiding vision and implementing actions to move toward sustainable practices.
  • How to bring key municipal tools, such as master plans, land use regulations, capital improvements planning, and municipal budgeting into alignment with sustainability objectives.

 

Program questions: email Sarah James at james.s@att.net

Please select and print the following registration form

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Citizen & Planner Leaders for Local Sustainability

Eco-municipality Leadership Training

May 29-June 2, 2009 at Tufts University

 

R E G I S T R A T I O N    F O R M  (Please print)

(Discount deadline – April 15; Final registration deadline – May 8)

 

Name _______________________________________________________________

Affiliation/organization ________________________________________________

Title _________________________

Mail address _________________________________________________________

Telephone   (day) ________________________ email ________________________

 

Do you require accommodations?  Yes ____       No _____

 

Circle appropriate fee:

Before 4/15/09

After 4/15/09

With Tufts accommodation

1850

2025

No Tufts accommodation

1600

1775

Fees include all meals.

 

Please describe your current involvement or interest in eco-municipality leadership.

_____________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________

 

Please send this form with check made out to IEMEA to:

            Institute for Ecomunicipality Education & Assistance (IEMEA)

47-12 Cogswell Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02140

For questions, please call 617-576-1745 or email james.s@att.net

 

 

 
 
 
Nella Young Receives Fellowship to Study Urban Revitalization
 
10/28/2009 12:02:00 AM
 

 

 

Nella won one of only ten German Chancellor Fellowships and will be  working in Saxony-Anhalt with the International Building Exhibition  2010 project and the state planning agency, where she will study arts- based strategies for revitalization.

The German Chancellor Fellowship is intended for career-oriented  individuals who identify a German host and design a project to expand  their professional expertise and accomplishment.  The Foundation  welcomes applicants from all professions and fields of study, with  preference given to the humanities, law, social and economic  sciences. Ten awards are given to U.S. citizens annually. The  fellowship is awarded for twelve months, starting in June with a  three-month intensive language course. In addition to project work,  the fellowship includes a two-week study tour through Germany, a  reception by the Federal President, and the concluding seminar in  Berlin with a reception at the Federal Chancellery. The German  Chancellor Fellowship Program was inaugurated in 1990 by the  Alexander von Humboldt Foundation to promote the transatlantic  partnership between Germany and the United States. Since then, the  program has expanded to include fellows from the Russian Federation  and the People's Republic of China.

Links:

http://www.humboldt-foundation.de/buka
http://www.americanfriends-of-avh.org/
http://www.iba-stadtumbau.de/ 

 
 
 
 
 
 
UEP
 
 
Tufts
 
 
 
Department of
Urban and Environmental
Policy and Planning
 
Tufts University
97 Talbot Avenue
Medford, MA. 02155 USA
Phone (617) 627-3394