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Newsletter of the
INTERNATIONAL
ENVIRONMENT FORUM
Volume 4, Number
2 July 2002
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"Reflect upon the inner realities of the
universe, the secret wisdoms involved, the enigmas,
-'Abdu'l-Bahá-
FROM THE EDITORS Members of the IEF have been actively involved in the preparatory meetings leading up to the World Summit on Sustainable Development taking place in Johannesburg, South Africa next month. This event, otherwise known as Rio+10 in recognition of the 10th anniversary of the Rio Earth Summit, many hope to be a pivotal occasion in the global management of Earth's natural resources. In addition to our participation in numerous WSSD events, the IEF is blessed to have the opportunity to hold our 6th annual conference at the National Centre of the Baha'is of South Africa. You'll find information about many of the exciting events taking place in a few short weeks below and on the IEF website. Please note the imminent deadline for taking part in the electronic conference. And please note that the kind of support for WSSD activities we asked for in the special email we sent out to members in early May is still needed, including donations (write to us if you did not receive that email). - Sylvia Karlsson and Christiana Lawson
6TH ANNUAL CONFERENCE OF THE IEF Making Globalization Sustainable and Just - Through Science, Values and Education 19 August-4 September 2002, Johannesburg,
South Africa
This conference will be held as a series of seminars running parallel to the WSSD. Building on the conclusions from the 5th IEF conference (see the IEF website) where the complementary roles of knowledge, values and education for sustainable development were explored, we hope to stimulate a dialogue with the broader civil society on these three essential components of decision-making. We will collaborate with appropriate NGOs (Baha¹i-inspired or others) in planning individual seminars. The IEF is also exploring a joint booth with the European Baha'i Business Forum (EBBF). The 6th General Assembly of the IEF will be held on the 31st of August. Electronic conference 1-18 August, 2002 During the three weeks immediately preceding the conference an email forum is offered for those who cannot come to Johannesburg. It will address the seminar themes and invite contributions and consultation which can then be fed into the conference in Johannesburg. To register for the electronic conference, send your name, full address and short introduction of yourself (ca 50 words) by 30 July to: ief-conf-registration@bcca.org For more information, see www.bcca.org/ief CALENDAR OF IEF ACTIVITIES AT WSSD 27 August "Dialogue
on Indicators for Sustainability" 18:00-20:00
31 August IEF
General Assembly 16:00
1 September "Value-Based
Education for Sustainable Development" 10:00-12:00
2 September "Integrating
Science in Local Communities" 15:00-17:00
3 September "Multiple
Dimensions of Globalization", 9:00-10:30
Further details regarding IEF activities in
Johannesburg will be found at http://www.bcca.org/ief/conf6prg.htm
3RD
PREPCOM of WSSD
At this PrepCom the IEF was represented by two members, myself and David Willis. We both got caught in the "hype" of the number of parallel events to attend simulatenously and interesting people to meet and thus we did not see much of each other! Short talks in the Vienna Café was about it. The meetings I attended in the brief four days I was there included the NGO Multistakeholder Dialogue Caucus, the seminar "Integrating Human Rights Framework for Sustainable Development" organised by the People¹s Movement for Human Rights Education, the seminar "Deepening and Broadening Participation in Sustainable Development" organised by the Earth Council, several meetings of the Science Caucus, one meeting of the Caucus on Legal and Institutional matters and last but not least the session "The Earth Charter: A Useful Tool for Governments" organised by the Values Caucus. One evening there was a briefing from Greenpeace. They expressed strong views that the whole process was close to complete failure particularly because so many countries were lobbying against strong language on renewable energy for the poor. Another evening there was a reception for the launching of a webiste for the Summit where example projects from around the worlds would be shown, broadcasts from the Summit would be made etc.
4TH
PREPCOM OF WSSD
Report by Sylvia Karlsson The 4th PrepCom of the WSSD was held in Bali, in a large conference complex in Nusa Dua, an exclusive tourist resort area on the Southern tip of the "Chicken Island," as some locals call it due to its shape. Proximity to the beautiful beaches was probably frequently used in media reports, but most participants hardly had time to even see the beach as the days were long and many negotiations lasted into the nights the second week. The first days were devoted to MultiStakeholder Dialogues between representatives of the Major Groups (Women, NGOs, Farmers etc. according to the groups defined in Agenda 21). These dialogues served as a forum for governments and Major Groups to discuss issues such as global governance, capacity building and priorities for the future. The rest of the days were full of long sessions of negotiations, tough ones, on the implementation document. The work on the political declaration that was scheduled to start did not take place (see item below on e-mail forum). The last days were a meeting at the Ministerial level and quite a large number of primarily environment ministers did attend. You may have heard on the news that the results from the PrepCom in Bali were pretty small (most NGOs would say dismal). It seems clear that there is little of the "Rio spirit" and the situations between North and South, between some subsets of countries and the rest, governments and NGOs have become very polarised and the blatant self-interest of countries is visible on all sides. It is a situation of having gone backwards from Rio according to many, and the Youth Caucus initiated a small demonstration, forming a line walking backwards through the halls of the Convention Centre in Bali one morning. Delegations spent a lot of space in the text quoting the text from Doha and Monterrey as these were already agreed upon. But it was much more difficult to use text from other UN meetings. In addition to following the process and engaging with many committed people from around the world, the work for IEF at the PrepCom consisted of, on the one hand, following some of the NGO Caucuses, such as those on values and spirituality, science, and education. In addition, much time was spent talking to the organisers of the Johannesburg Summit and its Civil Society Forum to figure out the logistical information necessary for arranging seminars there. The official documents from this PrepCom, such as the draft Plan of Action, and daily summaries of negotiations can be downloaded at: http://www.johanesburgsummit.org.
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IEF
WEBSITE
NEXT
ISSUE
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DRAFT POLITICAL DECLARATION FOR WSSD You are invited to join a discussion of the draft Political Declaration,
which has recently been published on the official WSSD site. It will be
discussed in relation to an alternative version drafted by Stakeholder
Forum for Our Common Future. Join the discussion on Earth Summit for All
at
2002 BERLIN CONFERENCE ON THE HUMAN DIMENSIONS OF GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE "Knowledge for the Sustainability Transition: The Challenge for Social
Science"
The Environmental Policy and Global Change Section of the German Political Science Association (DVPW) invites papers for the 2002 Berlin Conference on the Human Dimensions of Global Environmental Change, to be held in Berlin on 6-7 December 2002. Papers for the conference on one of three sets of questions are invited: KNOWLEDGE FOR SUSTAINABILITY: THREE RESEARCH QUESTIONS 1. Papers that analyse ways in which national and international politics and institutions influence the way sustainability knowledge is generated, distributed and used by actors. Papers could address, for example, ways in which political systems influence scientific research for the sustainability transition, including policies that shape the development and safe use of new technologies both harmful and beneficial to the sustainability transition. We also invite papers that examine the distribution and utilisation of knowledge, from scientific information to technical expertise, and that seek to explain the role of political institutions and political and societal actors in these knowledge-generation processes. 2. Papers that view knowledge as a factor that affects and influences political decision-making and analyse the ways in which existing knowledge--from scientific information to more general ideas, discourses or belief systems--affects the ways in which political actors respond to the global environmental crisis. 3. Papers that respond to the challenges raised by recent thinkers who have argued for fundamental changes in the way science is conducted--thinkers who have put forward integrative concepts such as 'earth system analysis', 'syndromes of global change' or 'sustainability science'. We welcome innovative and (self-)critical papers and hope to stir up debate within the social science community. The deadline for submissions is 31 July 2002. Further information will be posted at www.environmental-policy.de
GLOBAL ISLAND A new democracy game for young people on the Internet. The game is part
of a major global awareness campaign in connection with the World Summit
in Johannesburg. The Summit is getting closer and so is the first round
of Global Island (see www.globalisland.nu)
GREEN CROSS INTERNATIONAL - EARTH DIALOGUES The Earth Dialogues is a public forum initiated by Mikhail Gorbachev
and Maurice Strong, which aims to mobilise global public interest and action
to promote three important objectives essential to the future of humanity:
averting the ecological disasters which threaten our planet; fighting the
plague of poverty; and acting to ensure truly sustainable development.
For more information on their latest report, see http://www.earthdialogues.org/documents/synthesis.html
NEW PUBLICATIONS "Goals and Conditions for a Sustainable World" by John Cairns, Jr.,
University Distinguished Professor of Environmental Biology Emeritus, can
be downloaded at http://www.esep.de/journals/esep/esepbooks.html "Evaluation of U.S. Progress on Agenda 21". IEF members attending PrepCom
IV in Bali met John C. Dernbach of Widener University Law School in Pennsylvania.
Prof. Dernbach has recently edited Stumbling Towards Sustainability, a
new collection of essays that assesses the progress made in the United
States towards implementing the recommendations set out in Agenda 21. For
more information, visit the Environmental Law Institute's website: http://www.eli.org
NEWS FROM MEMBERS "Whither Diversity in the Environmental Movement" This article, written by new IEF member Norman MacLeod, is available
at < NEW
MEMBERS
Kate Lindsay (Canada) Andrew Mancey (Guyana) Adam O'Toole (Australia) Shakhti Prakash (India) Terry Robinson (USA) Steve Worth (South Africa) T. Dehday Beh (Ghana) Hanna Snorradottir (Sweden) Said Jalali (Portugal) Norman McLoad (USA) Lars Rogers (Switzerland) Gail Lash (USA) Mojgan Sami (USA) Welcome!
MISSING MEMBERS : Kaykhosrov Manucheri Erin O'Connor Terry Robinson Please inform the IEF Secretariat if you have a recent email for any of these members. We have lost contact with them.
UPDATE YOUR ADDRESS
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c/o Sylvia Karlsson Sigmund Freud Str. 36 D-53127 Bonn Germany Email: ief @ bcca.org [no spaces] website: www.bcca.org/ief Return to IEF Home Page |
Updated 19 September 2002
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PAST ISSUES OF LEAVES
Vol. 1, No. 1, April 1999
Vol. 1, No. 2, October 1999
Vol. 2, No. 1, April 2000
Vol. 3, No. 1, February 2001
Vol. 3, No. 2, June 2001
Vol. 3, No. 3, Sept 2001
Vol 4, No. 1, February 2002