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January 31, 2006

With us or against us

by Sylvia S Tognetti

I was going to follow-up on the last post with a few more comments about scientists taking policy positions but sometimes events and even scientists speak for themselves. So you have probably already seen or heard about the conflict between Jim Hansen, who directs the Goddard Institute for Space Studies at NASA, and the administration, through politically appointed officials in charge of public affairs, about whether or not he or any other government scientist are free to explain or express opinions about the policy implications of their scientific findings. So I'll be brief.


As Dr. Hansen pointed out, in an interview with the New York Times, "It would be irresponsible not to speak out, particularly because NASA's mission statement includes the phrase "to understand and protect our home planet." On the other hand, the job of politically appointed public affairs officers, is "to make the president look good" - according to comments made by the recently appointed George Deutsch to Leslie McCarthy, a public affairs officer at Goddard who is a career civil servant. Of course, as Hansen also points out, there is no paper trail of this - which, as Chris Mooney suggests, is probably deliberate.


So, as in the wiretapping case, what we have here is a president who is circumventing the laws of the United States that he is sworn to uphold. Bush could, of course, seek a change in the law so as to redefine NASA's mission - and admit that he gives higher priority to searching for water on Mars than to the health and welfare of Americans and other human beings, for which maintaining a habitable Earth is a prerequisite. And if he is successful, we would then be able to send him to Mars too. But if not, let the impeachment proceedings begin.


Desperate to hear someone take leadership and present a strategy for this actually happen, I went to hear Al Gore's speech a few weeks ago, live at Constitution Hall, and was not disappointed. Although the main focus of Gore's speech was on illegal eavesdropping on American citizens, his core message was about danger to the Constitution caused by the loss of checks and balances among the different branches of government. Well, Gore wouldn't be Gore if he didn't also make an example out of science and global warming - he also mentioned White House censorship of James Hansen, in making a case for why checks and balances are critical to getting good scientific and other information to be considered in policy decisions. Here I think he departed from prepared remarks when he explained that it is only because of checks on power that policy agendas must be supported with reasons, that are backed up by scientific evidence - and that different perspectives can be presented and challenged. This is normally done through the process of oversight hearings, which haven't happened for a long time. The oversight hearings that Gore himself used to conduct as a Senator were legendary for making world renowned experts feel as if they were presenting a dissertation defense. The point is, science is not and has never been policy neutral. What sets scientists and other experts apart is that they can make a case, and also defend it with the best available evidence - which is the only way that an informed decision can be made. Science for policy is driven by values, which are implicit in policy goals and in the framing of questions it asks - and Bush is either with us or against us.


I have been occupied the past few weeks - moving my office, changing computers and attending a conference and stuff - but my new years resolution is to post on a more regular basis - and I have several posts in the pipeline which include comments on the flurry of recent posts on climate models, the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (for which I wrote much of the freshwater chapter in the finally released technical volume on policy responses), and some notes and observations from the 6th Annual conference of the National Council on Science, Policy and the Environment that I attended last week.

Posted by Sylvia S Tognetti at 1:15 AM | TrackBack

January 10, 2006

Traffic report

by Sylvia S Tognetti

Welcome to visitor number 10,000*, who followed a link here from Effect Measure, where you can find out everything that is and isn't known about Avian Flu. So, with kudos to Revere, I'll take the opportunity to post a few comments on environment and public health. For some reason, there seems to be more general acceptance of uncertainty on health matters than on, say, climate. At least I have never heard Bush say it was necessary to have certainty that the Avian flu has mutated before making decisions, even if his decisions have left much to be desired. And those who have serious ailments have no problem with the idea of getting second and even third professional and other opinions about what to do, and aren't surprised to get different answers.

There is another observation I have been wanting to make. Public Health docs seem to have no problem taking on the political battles needed to promote public health. In fact, the Code of Ethics of the American Public Health Association requires this:

We promote the scientific and professional foundation of public health practice and policy, advocate the conditions for a healthy global society, emphasize prevention and enhance the ability of members to promote and protect environmental and community health.
as do the AMA Principles of Medical Ethics:
III."A physician shall respect the law and also recognize a responsibility to seek changes in those requirements which are contrary to the best interests of the patient."

And its a good thing too. Otherwise, our rivers might still be valued more as sewers, and our lives more miserable and short. In many places in this world, they still are.

So why is it that, in the environmental arena, scientists still dance around taking positions on policy issues? Hopefully, this is changing. The Millennium Ecosystem Assessment is somewhat of a breakthrough in that it explicitly connects ecosystems - which happen to also be the source of avian flu - to human well-being. The connection to human well-being is also implicit in the concept of ecosystem services, which refers to economically significant benefits that ecosystems provide for humans. More on that later.

~~~~~~~~~~~

*At least according to site meter. I have no idea how many visitors this site has actually had. Statistics provided by my webhost show over 40,000 visits and over 12,000 unique visitors. Of course, that includes RSS feeds, admin, and peddlers of poker and piills (I delete about 75 spam comments and trackbacks a day. My apologies if I have accidentally deleted anything legit.) This blog was launched last February.

Posted by Sylvia S Tognetti at 7:39 PM

January 9, 2006

The missing Puccini factor

by Sylvia S Tognetti

In this earlier post, among other things, I spoke about what I call the Puccini factor, which you can only find in lettuce from Torre del Lago, but I'm also using the term to describe the unique qualities of a place, and of things that come from such a place, that you will never find in Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs), and that science will probably never be able to quantify. For example, grapes that are genetically the same, grown on different soil, do not produce the same wine. Like people, places have identities made up of unique constellations of the basic stuff. Unless, as in these Post-Normal Times, they are made to look like someplace else. I once read that a favorite way to pass the time in Los Angeles is to drive around looking for real neighborhoods. Even in the Washington DC area, you can find a place in Gaithersburg called North Potomac and a place in Rockville called Chevy Chase View. And in Chevy Chase, you can find a decontextualized Tuscan Villa - i.e., without the idyllic landscape. Where I live, a place I call Muddy Spring, one of the historic landmarks is the Tastee Diner, complete with parking lot. I'm not kidding. To be fair, there is also a postage stamp sized park at the spot of the original "Silver" Spring. But I digress.

Coincidentally, on the same day as I wrote about the Puccini factor, Ulisse SiFossiFoco (my favorite blogger and now co-author on a work in progress), put up a post that describes the missing Puccini factor, as he imagines it, and for which I felt compelled to provide a translation, below. For the missing SiFossiFoco factor, i.e., to read it in its original Florentine vernacular, click here.

I can imagine an American soldier in Iraq. As I imagine him, I ‘m certainly not thinking of a boy from New York or Los Angeles, but rather a boy who lives in one of those many parts of America cultivated with genetically modified corn that one passes through at two hundred kilometers an hour to arrive in a small town of few souls that has a commercial center, a small church, a sheriff ’s office and a bar where one can get drunk in the evening - as the sole evasion. I imagine him in Iraq, as one who renounces his own thought for the virtue of ready-made collective thought, manufactured for him by war-mongered (is there a better word?) experts of psychology, sociobiology and marketing.

I imagine him to be very ingenuous and, because of this, disposed to obey any order because that is how things are done, because everyone does it.

I also imagine him to be shrewd, because I don’t see this American boy as stupid. His shrewdness consists of wanting to earn a little money for himself, to count a little bit more in society, to have a house and remove from his back a pre-fabricated destiny as a worker of genetically modified corn in the enormous expanse of genetically modified cornfields that, for 18 or 20 years has been not only his whole panorama, but also that of his family throughout it's entire history.

I imagine a military professional, like those emerging also among us here in Italy after the abolition of obligatory military service. A boy or a girl of this new Italian “professionalism”: the only profession in our economy that does not make use of flexi-time, day-labor, contracting, and temp work. The only profession that promises adventure on a fixed salary, as long as there is peace, and then, at a select level of compensation, or in exchange for a state funeral and a medal if the extraordinary is called for.

If I were to hear him speak, this American soldier, I’m sure that in between the folds of the slang of his cornfields beyond the ocean, it wouldn’t be hard to pick up on some accents of Calabria, Sicily or Abruzzo that fill the Italian military barracks of today: who knows why?

Posted by Sylvia S Tognetti at 7:23 PM | Comments (1)

January 8, 2006

Management of the Great Lakes, explained

by Sylvia S Tognetti

Something else happened in 2005. Henry A. Regier was honored with a Lifetime Achievement Award for important and continued contributions to Great Lakes Research at a conference of the International Association for Great Lakes research. Here is how he explained conflict over management of the Great Lakes:

Two strategies have been used within our Great Lakes Basin's governance institutions in recent decades to cope with adverse interrelationships between humans and the rest of nature. Important features of each strategy can be traced back to different emphases within Darwinism a century ago. T. H. Huxley emphasized the role of agonistic or combative interactions within natural selection while P. Kropotkin emphasized mutualistic or cooperative interactions. Capitalists invoked Huxley's Mutual Harm version for legitimation of their practices while communitarians invoked Kropotkin's Mutual Aid version. Implicitly the more legalistic regulatory strategies that now dominate within governance in our Basin presuppose Mutual Harm dynamics and seek to temper such harm through pre-cast technocratic capabilities. Participatory democratic programs, now sub-dominant, seek to foster Mutual Aid dynamics less formally. Old Rational Management tries to Temper Mutual Harm Technocratically, TMHT. Drama-of-the-Commons Governance tries to Foster Mutual Aid Democratically, FMAD. Currently, the higher the level of governance in which action on some environmental issue is centred, the more likely that TMHT will dominate, and vice versa. This asymmetry creates problems in hybrid cross-level Adaptive Co-Management and vertical inter-agency partnerships.

Scenarios for 2006 anyone? Any idea what category those of an "Intelligent Design" persuasion might fall into?

Comments are welcome here and may also be sent directly to Henry at "hregier at rogers dot com."

Update 1/11/06: the above was posted at the Resilience blog with some links added to more about Henry, the award and about adaptive co-management of ecosystems. To which I want to add: kudos and congratulations! ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

More housekeeping: One of these days, I will learn how to add a feed for comments to this blog - as suggested by James Annan, in a comment on the last post. Apparently, some news readers, unlike mine, refresh updated posts.

Posted by Sylvia S Tognetti at 1:11 PM

Bill 'Sixty Percent' O'Reilly

by Sylvia S Tognetti

In a discussion of media ethics and mistakes made by Fox news in reporting that the Sago miners had been found alive, Sixty Percent O'Reilly notes that "Standards today are just not what they were ten years ago." Of course, as Murray Waas notes, O'Reilly wasn't on the air ten years ago! And if Sixty Percent O'Reilly himself had any standards, he might have instead been discussing the lowering of safety standards in the mines instead of perpetuating ignorance by covering it up with self-serving blather. According to this article in the Christian Science Monitor, Serious and Substantial safety violations in the Sago mine were four times higher in 2005 than in 2004

Some people say (as Fox news likes to say) that "Sixty Percent" is an underestimate of the amount of crap in what O'Reilly says, and that it is really more like 95%. I'm not one for beancounting, and to give O'Reilly some credit, he actually accepts that global warming is real, unlike Amy Ridenour, and other denialists who call themselves skeptics, but then again, he also thinks that it caused the tsunami, but is no big deal.... Video at Crooks and Liars.

Transcript and video of Ol Reilly on the Letterman show available here.

Posted by Sylvia S Tognetti at 1:09 PM

January 7, 2006

Housekeeping

by Sylvia S Tognetti

If you read this blog from an RSS feed, without actually clicking on the page, you probably miss the revisions I always feel compelled to make the next day. Like in the last two posts. Just so you know.

Posted by Sylvia S Tognetti at 1:20 PM | Comments (1)

January 6, 2006

Starting from Zeta

by Sylvia S Tognetti

The end of 2005 didn't end the hurricane season of 2005, which finally ended today as Zeta disintegrated. For more, see Jeff Masters blog at Wunderground, for which I am adding a special link to the blogroll because he doesn't just report the weather - he also reports on departures from normal - and not just about hurricanes. Check out his explanation of what this cloud is, and why we will probably be seeing it more often.


Before moving on, a comment about 2005: After Katrina, can anybody still believe that more and better scientific information will necessarily lead to better policy decisions?


2005 was the year that some proclaimed the science wars to be over (see also this post by PZ Myers] - largely because of a war on science itself that made differences between the two cultures pale in comparison. It's about time. I have gotten into a few arguments with scientists myself, but it is only because I value science that I even bother. I have often heard statements to the effect that it is necessary to "get the science right" before dealing with the mushy stuff, like policies and institutions. The catch is, that getting good scientific information that is relevant to social concerns, and to particular places, is itself an institutional challenge. Not to mention getting it to actually be used in decision-making, or getting a decision to actually be made....


Although this is beginning to be recognized, and great efforts have been made to collaborate across these disciplinary divides, there is a pitfall in this too, in that everything seems to get reduced to the conceptual framework of the discipline of the person who designs and initiates the study. This is an issue I became very conscious of over 15 years ago when I worked at the National Academy of Sciences, where I helped to organize and staff what may have been the first committee composed of an almost even split between natural and social scientists. Subsequently I went to graduate school but never quite managed to get a dissertation off of the ground - probably because I developed a background in both the natural and social sciences and could never reduce an argument to either one without feeling like I was making a caricature out of reality (ok, so there were other reasons, like major differences with my first graduate adviser and a program switch that was all for the best). More recently, as part of a working group for the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment, I felt like I had entered into a world created by a couple of ecological modelers, or some sort of soft bureaucracy structured to correspond with the compartments of their model (still, in spite of the unwieldy process, there is a lot of good material in the soon to be released technical volumes - more on that later).


2005 also catapulted Chris Mooney's book, The Republican War on Science to the bestseller lists, and Chris Mooney himself to an appearance alongside Jon Stewart on the Daily Show. I have put off weighing in on the debate about the politicization of science because the topic makes me want to write a whole book myself (which won't happen without some way to also pay the bills). Roger Pielke Jr. usually raises good questions but, in this case, what he called "the cacophony over scientific integrity on one side and junk science on the other" is more than cacophony. I hope he can at least agree that there is a difference between cherry picking facts to tell a story that illustrates a particular perspective, and just making them up.


What is more interesting to me is where some of the negative public reactions towards science, or experts in general, comes from. In science for policy, there is a tendency that parallels that found in interdisciplinary efforts, which is that of reducing complex problems to a scientific framework that leaves out much of what people care about. This frame is itself a hidden value judgment, which, for example, is ultimately what is behind the opposition to GMOs in Europe. A few months ago, Mario Giampietro passed through town and gave me an earful of scientific explanations for his objections to GMOs and why functional equivalence is a myth. He has even published articles about this. But over dinner, he gave me the real reason, in his own language. You can't make gnocchi without the yellow sticky potatoes that come only from Avezzano in the Abruzzo. If you try to make gnocchi with Idaho potatoes it will be a disaster! If you want to find out what kind of peaches are best for soaking in wine you will have to learn Italian and go ask a Roman - some things are better left not only in their own language but also in their cultural context. But these peaches only grow at Castel Gandolfo, the summer residence of the pope. There is no functional equivalent.


As I half grew up in Italy, I understand this only too well. One of my favorite things to do when I visit family in Pisa is to go on a bike ride to the market with my aunt. The last time I did this, one of the vendors held up a head of lettuce and said it came from Torre del Lago. He went on to insist that, if you eat this lettuce you will hear Puccini. Hearing Puccini might have only been my imagination, but the association of the image with the taste seared the taste in my memory. I'm sure there is nothing else like it anywhere. The controversy isn't about GMOs, but about a way of life and the value of places. Where food comes from is no less important than where people come from. But policy decisions are not based on such things. As for functional equivalence, it depends on the functions you are looking at. If looking only at nutritional characteristics of food, it is possible that soylent green could be engineered to be functionally equivalent to potatoes from Avezzano or lettuce from Torre del Lago - but what I will call the Puccini factor would be lost forever. And the world itself would become a less interesting place to live.


As for that book... maybe if I put "Tuscany" in the title, people would even read it. As a half Pisan, DOC, I know I can tell a more interesting story than Under the Tuscan Sun, and, as a geographer, it would also give me a chance to rant about what makes places unique and special.... (Interested publishers can write to me at sst at postnormaltimes dot net).

May we all find at least some moments of normalcy in the coming year.


Posted by Sylvia S Tognetti at 10:53 PM | TrackBack


 


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