Environment170′s Weblog


Wangari Maathi Lecture by environment170
June 10, 2009, 7:15 am
Filed under: 11505682, Community Service/Volunteer, Lecture Series, Spring 2009

This is a review of the talk with Nobel Peace Prize winner Wangari Maathi and her effort in community environmental restoration and awareness in her country of Kenya and the whole of Africa itself. Her background as a biologist and founder of the Green Belt Movement as well as her election into Kenyan parliament have garnered her many accolades and prestige. Her initial foray into environmental conservation began with the first United Nations women’s conference in Mexico in 1975; at this summit, her and her fellow colleagues realized the environment was drastically changing and began a program led by women to plant tree’s. This became the Green Belt Movement. However, since then he has met with vigorous opposition from her government, because she began looking into environmental causes and asking questions about how government had been managing resources. Her fight has been devoted to make both government and citizens aware about the destruction and mismanagement of environment and resources. However, her restoration of the environment started from the top down with the need for a responsible government and “bottlenecks” in the development of Kenya. She spoke of how ill left mother countries had left their colonies, which beget a cycle of disrepair and elite uncommitted to the welfare of the people and the natural resources. Another topic that tied into mismanagement was the constant debt of the countries, the lack of fair trade and failures in accountability for the government. During the question portion of the talk, she spoke of the role of women in environmental reconstruction. Her point was that while men and women clearly had a role, women had a larger and perhaps more important role as they where closely tied to agriculture and the land. In the Green Belt Movement, women mostly plant the tree’s and use the money they earn to supplant the household. Maathi also promoted the idea of resource conservation and organizing scientific methods to conserve water in times of draught now more frequent due to depleting resources.

I found that a great deal of Wangari Maathi’s lecture dealt more with political aspects in terms of the pit falls she had to overcome for environmental restoration rather than the how her programs have been implemented. Concurrently, she spoke of the history of her country and the recurring theme of how indebt and her country has been because of previous government which has forced the country to sell its raw resources at extremely low prices to the same countries the owe money to thus creating a vicious cycle they can never get out of. In terms of women’s role in environment conservation, her comments reminded me of the lecture given by Dr. Sandra Harding whom spoke of feminist science and the different role that women take in environmental study and the different methodologies. Both Dr. Harding and Maathi view the role of women in science and more specifically environmental science as working closer to the land and the agriculture which I found to be a very interesting correlation. Overall, her lecture and the question and answer portion was geared to her general philosophy on how to better Kenya and all of Africa via not just environment but socio-political change. However, she successfully tied all the topics back to the inherent problem the there is indeed a need to reform the environments of Kenya as the majority f the land is becoming deserts and draughts much more frequent because of mismanagement relating to and begetting the severe poverty of the country. She did a rather concise and thorough job of explaining the environmental hardships facing her country and some of the possible resolutions.

Bryan Ali



by environment170
April 6, 2009, 5:38 pm
Filed under: Lecture Series

Environmental Lecture Series, Occasional Sundays at the Museum of Natural History, Los Angelessustainable_sundays

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On Campus Lectures by environment170
March 26, 2009, 1:45 am
Filed under: Lecture Series | Tags: , , ,

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Dr. Wangari Maathai, Noble Prize winner

Join us for a lecture by Dr. Wangari Maathai, an environmental and political activist who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2004 for her contribution to sustainable development, democracy and peace.

Monday, April 20, 2009
7:00 PM – 8:00 PM
UCLA Fowler Museum Auditorium

Dr. Wangari Muta Maathai (born April 1, 1940 in Ihithe village, Tetu division, Nyeri District of Kenya) is an environmental and political activist. In 2004 she became the first African woman to receive the Nobel Peace Prize for “her contribution to sustainable development, democracy and peace.” Maathai was an elected member of Parliament and served as Assistant Minister for Environment and Natural Resources in the government of President Mwai Kibaki between January 2003 and November 2005. She is of Kikuyu ethnicity.

Click here for a full biography on Dr. Maathai.

Cost: Free and Open to the Public

Sponsor(s): Burkle Center for International Relations, Zocalo Public Square

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Dr. P. Dee Boersma
Wadsworth Endowed Chair of Conservation Science, University of Washington
Penguins as Marine Sentinels
Professor Boersma will discuss the declining penguin populations
in the world’s temperate southern oceans and the human-driven factors,
such as global warming, oceanwide oil pollution, depleted fisheries, and
tourism and development that are contributing to this decline.  These
temperate penguin species are now “marine sentinels” for the planet’s
southern oceans. The effects on Magellanic penguin populations reveal
the consequences of these overarching environmental threats on the
oceans as a whole.

Dr. Boersma is the Wadsworth Endowed Chair in Conservation Science in the University

of  Washington’s Department of Biology,  where she is  currently serving as Acting Chair.

CLICK HER
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for more information
date
Wednesday, April 15, 2009

time
7:00 pm

location

Lenart Auditorium at the Fowler Museum of Cultural History
complimentary drinks and hors d’oeuvres reception to follow




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