Ethical Pulse - from the Ethical Junction membership

Archive for December, 2009

UK civil rights

Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009

Please sign our urgent petition and spread the word http://petitions.number10.gov.uk/Home-ed-families/

The Children Schools and Families Bill (second reading due 11/1/10) reverses the assumption of innocence, places the state, rather than parents as primarily responsible for children, and imposes an incredibly bureaucratic scheme without evidence of either need or benefit. it conflicts with many international human rights laws, and relies on enforced compliance through fear to avoid legal challenges. it attempts to portray an element of choice in a number of clauses, which in effect does not exist since the penalties for exercising these choices effectively exclude the option of Home Education. Although it appears to only relate to Home Education, it will set a dangerous precedent regarding the role of the state in basic parenting decisions, and will have huge consequences for all families regarding rights of access to the family home, and to routinely interview children on their own.

Here’s a poem /card you could send to others too http://www.newsfromnowhere.org.uk/XmasPoem.pdf

And this one’s just for fun! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_QjdcdG4mP4

Olive Co-operative Ltd is an active member of Ethical Junction, learn more

Eco-Shopping as a Great Way to Help the Green Agenda

Monday, December 21st, 2009

Although the green agenda is at the forefront of political and social commentary at the moment, that does not necessarily mean that the average person understands how they can help the environment. Advertising, consumerism and capitalism are the basis of our thriving economy and as such, simply deciding that ‘being green’ comes down to halting consumerism is wildly optimistic if not completely unrealistic. Therefore, eco-shopping can be a good introduction to how to be eco-friendly whilst retaining the current mode of lifestyle that many consumers enjoy. 

One of the main problems with the green agenda, as I see it, is how depressing it can be! ‘Eco-warriors’ often put people off with their unrealistic expectations, therefore making it seem impossible that the average person can do anything to make a difference, bar giving up their home and setting up in a mud hut. Instead of looking at the green agenda as something requiring us to give up our way of life, we must try to find ways to incorporate green living into our every day lives. 

People need to believe the small differences can make a positive impact towards change. This feeling is never going to come about through the constant ‘apocalyptic’ language of the scientific and political fields and must be found somewhere else. Whilst it is entirely true that green wash holds problems for eco shopping, many eco retailers do an honest job of combining fairtrade, organic and natural produce that can replace some of the more harmful products that we use on a day to day basis. This is not buying more, it is replacing what we have (when it’s finished) with something more sustainable. Surely even if this is a small step, it is a step towards a better consumer attitude towards purchasing goods? 

One of the primary ways that can motivate people to purchase ‘green’ is by offering a cashback and carbon offset solution. Gaining a certain percentage on their purchases back makes it a reward for making a green decision and can have a positive impact on consumership. It is these small changes that can make a big difference to the way both companies and their clients advertise and sell their products. Rewarding people for shopping in an eco-friendly manner can increase sales (making profit for the green company) and increase awareness of the many great eco-friendly products that are out there. 

It is completely understandable that people are very cynical about green shopping as there has been so much press over ‘green wash’ and companies using global warming and climate change to advertise their products without any green credentials. However, this can be overcome simply with the knowledge of when to buy certain things. Replacing your goods with eco brands is something you should only do when your current product has run out. Replacing disposable plates with biodegradable ones has a positive effect on waste management and replacing your light bulbs with energy efficient ones can be good for the world as well as bringing down your electricity costs. This is why so many green sites combine their product sales with blogs and information on how to be an effective green consumer. If this informal education can give them a little bit of ‘food for thought’ about the impact their purchase is having on the environment then they may end up making consciously positive consumer decisions in the long run.

Consumerism is seeped into every part of our society, it helps our economy run smoothly and provides a large section of money for charity, non-profit and public services (such as the NHS and the Police). We shouldn’t be looking to stop advertising, to chastise people for buying necessities or living in homes without solar panels. We should be looking for ways to introduce positive change to the lives we already lead. We must look to educate and inform the public on their consumer choices and the effect these have on the overall ecology of the world. Eco-shopping is one route with which to introduce the green agenda to people without preaching. It gives people options, rather than criticising their decisions, which could put people off entirely.

MoreEco is an active member of Ethical Junction, learn more

Keen2learn Top 10 Educational Games For December

Friday, December 18th, 2009

Following the November announcement of top ten educational games on the www.keen2learn.co.uk site these are the December results. Christmas has influenced some titles proving that these games are the ideal present.

  1. Crystal Rain Forest: For the 3rd month running this firm favourite tops the poll. Using maths skills and logo programming language to help save the planet
  2. LogiRobot New entry educational toy robot is a truly unique and multi-talented robot with a mind of its own. It can be used in simple play or in more complex and engaging projects that help you understand the principles of control, automation and robotics.
  3. Bunja: Climbing one place this maths game is based on MP3 technology provides hours of fun and is small enough to fir in a pocket when travelling around.
  4. Spelling Board Games. Nobody wants to spell – unless it is part of this popular English games pack.
  5. Feel Good Friends: Parents and teachers have found this game developed to boost the self esteem in children is great fun for anyone to play.
  6. Electric City New entry manly due to the popularity of this science game as a present. Create the fascinating Memory Circuit and understand all about feed-back systems. Make a Burglar Alarm, Light Breaker, Door Alarm, Water Sensor, Alarm Light, Flash Back, Morse Code, Metal Detector and Lie Detector. Test your logical skills.
  7. 6 Maths Board Games – Basic New entry to the top 10. Ideal maths resources and games to help understand the basics in maths.
  8. Make a Face Puppets New entry  these educational tactile face puppets can be used to create different fun faces and expressions. Used as puppets they are ideal for PSHE role playing or to provide opportunities to talk about feelings and emotions. Each face is supplied with 10 Velcro parts and 6 labels.
  9. Nubble Deluxe New entry Everyone loves Nubble! – teachers, pupils and parents. It is the perfect way for pupils to sharpen their numeracy skills. The range is now joined by the a new high resolution version of Nubble! that includes a Headstart option in which between 10 and 50 hexagons are randomly covered over at the start of the game.
  10. Kiddoku Children’s Sudoku. Drag and drop the pieces in the grid so that every row and every column contains just one copy of each type of piece. The program includes 4×4, 5×5 and 6×6 grids..

Keen 2 Learn is an active member of Ethical Junction, learn more

C Mobile – eco mobile phone deals

Friday, December 18th, 2009

C Mobile is the Eco Friendly Mobile Company for people who want an alternative mobile provider to help them live a brighter green life. So what makes our mobiles phone bundles eco-friendly?

We donate £1 per month of our commission from every contract phone to the Natural Energy Trust.  The Trust aims to help your local community produce its own renewable energy from the elements, whatever works best:

  • Solar power on the roof of your sports club, school or community hall
  • Putting a turbine in an old watermill
  • Geothermal heating
  • Small wind turbine

As well as the regular mobile charger we package all our handsets with a FREE Solar charged energy pack to ensure our mobiles can be charged off grid as much as possible.  Place it in the window to catch the sun during the day, use the free stored energy to charge your phone at night.

Recycling your mobile is also part of our process!  Every box we send out comes with a recycling freepost label so you can use the box your new phone comes in to return unwanted old mobiles.  You can take the cash or choose to donate it to the Natural Energy Trust.  Our recycling partner ensures the maximum re-use of handsets and monitors the extraction of materials where suitable and where not.

Visit us at www.cmobile.co.uk, to see how your new mobile can make the difference.

C Mobile is an active member of Ethical Junction, learn more

amba nature’s Winter Sale starts on Christmas Day! 50% off all items!

Thursday, December 17th, 2009

This won’t last forever so don’t hang around; with a massive range of products to choose from and free delivery free on orders over £50, why would you.

Sale ends midnight 23rd January 2010.

Orders placed between 24th December and 3rd January will be processed on the 4th January.

Buy online at www.ambanature.co.uk

amba nature is an active member of Ethical Junction, learn more

Want to increase your revenue? Sell your ethical products online

Thursday, December 17th, 2009

Ethicalonestopshop.com was launched in August 2005 with the aim to make it as easy as possible for people to shop ethically. www.ethicalonestopshop.com

By joining this company, you will be  joining many big brand ethical names, including Ecover and Lavera. You can be a part of this business, all for FREE!!!

 NO JOINING FEE!

 NO HOSTING FEE!

NO ADVERTISING FEE!

How it works?

All you have to do it upload the product as a CSV file or you can add new products manually. We will then negotiate the commission together. When customer orders a product from the website, an email will be sent to you, you will then log in to secure the  website for payment and you will dispatch the product to the customer!

 To join follow this link  http://ethicalonestopshop.com/eoss/joinus/d/retailers+join+us/  

 ethicalonestopshop is an active member of Ethical Junction, learn more

Computers To Replace Handwriting In GCSE Educational Exam Room

Thursday, December 17th, 2009

At last a feint glimmer on the horizon. The age of the computer is to enter into school exams which should end the annual GCSE  marking fiasco and improve the options for many school children and teachers.

Children entering secondary school next year should be able to take their GCSE exams on a computer. Wow! children won’t be penalised by examiners not being able to read scripts. Children who needed help with handwriting may be judged more centrally on the subject knowledge. Corrections will not look a mess, and with spell check, grammar corrections and internet access children should get great marks! Well no, those nasty examiners will turn all the extra facilities off in the exams. The software can even detect if your answers look mysteriously similar to the guy sitting next to you. Of equal horror it will track ability traits in a subject area down to a particular teacher. This could be good news to the following year where corrective  guidance can be far more  targeted. Maybe  it could form a precise means to influence bonus payments to teachers.

Good typing skills could surpass handwriting ability. This dilemma has perplexed some teachers and keen2learn. Previous articles “Is it still the Queen’s English” and “Will Technology Supersede Handwriting Skills In Children” voices opinion  that despite its depleted use  handwriting may survive so we can communicate when the power is off and  sign the odd cheque,  although this won’t be much use in couple of years now the banks are withdrawing cheques, sorry thats’ an awful pun.

There is  an upside. The cost of equipping schools with sufficient terminals to sit  exams could be offset by a massive reduction in exam marking costs. Costing around £65m a year, the manual marking has been recently scorned for inaccuracies and critical delays. Technology may be the answer to streamline the process and automate marking so the candidate could have an instant result. Ctrl +P and print out your GCSE certificate as you leave! The scary bit,  just imagine if results were trending too high and the questions could be  adjusted to make them  harder during the actual exam. Could be done, just as the budget airlines increase the prices depending on the number of people enquiring about a flight.

Computerisation is the way of the world. We need to move with the times and capture every element of the benefits this can bring to education. Inventive ways to interest children through educational games on a computer, and immediate feedback on performance to teachers,  parents and children can only be a good thing. John Durnford, general secretary of the Association of School Leaders said ” In five years’ time this will seem extremely normal”


Keen 2 Learn is an active member of Ethical Junction, learn more

YouGen has been shortlisted for the Green Web Awards

Thursday, December 17th, 2009

Ethical Junction member, YouGen, has been shortlisted for the Green Web Awards. The winner will be decided by public vote.

We aim to make it simple for people to find out which (if any) renewable energy is suitable for their home, and then to find a local supplier they can trust to install it. We’re still very new – the full site only went live in April this year, so it’s very exciting to be shortlisted. It feels a bit David and Goliath as one of the other sites in our category is The Guardian’s Ethical Living site.

The inspiration for the site came when we were renovating our house a few years ago. I did a lot of research into biomass boilers, but when it came to deciding whether or not to go ahead I was faced with quotes that differed by £5,000, and no way of telling how the products or installers compared. We played safe and stuck got an efficient condensing gas boiler, but the idea for YouGen was sparked.

While there is now more help available, it is still very difficult for homeowners to know whether they are getting a good deal. Recently published research from Oxford University found that prices for wood-fuelled boilers varied from just over £3,000 to £16,000, and solar hot water systems prices varied from £1,000 to £8,0001.

YouGen helps people to choose a good installer by inviting people who have already used them to rate their service on the website. In such a new market, it’s often not possible to ask a friend or colleague for recommendations.

YouGen aims to plug that gap and help people to choose a supplier by encouraging people to come to the site and rate their installer. We enter everyone who does into a draw each month to win a GEO Minim Home Energy Hub.

Voting for the Green Energy Awards is open until 31 December 2009. If you like what we offer at YouGen, please vote for us!

Cathy Debenham
cathy@yougen.co.uk
www.yougen.co.uk

YouGen is an active member of Ethical Junction, learn more

A Personal Report from Ben Brangwyn at COP15

Thursday, December 17th, 2009

This report comes from Ben Brangwyn of Transition Network, who is out in Copenhagen flying the Transition flag while avoiding getting teargassed.

I’m finding that Copenhagen has a very intense and charged atmosphere, and largely positively so. Transition Network and the transition ideas have a good visibility over here, with involvement in at least 7 workshops and a steady stream (and occasional tsunami) of people from all over the world to our stand in the Expo area, interviews with several of the excellent broadcasting outfits (PositiveTV and ClimateTV) and a screening of “In Transition 1.0″ in the main hall at KlimaForum.

It may be worth giving a quick explanation of how the whole Copenhagen circus is organised, because it’s not always been that clear. The highest profile event is the official COP15 negotiations in the Bella Centre, a lifeless concrete block towards the outskirts of Copenhagen surrounded by security, housing both official delegations from all the countries that could afford to come, representatives of NGOs, pressure groups and lobbyists – this is where the legally binding agreement will be hammered out, or not. Parallel to this is the KlimaForum09, held principally in a huge sports and events centre in the middle of Copenhagen, with an overwhelmingly colourful programme of workshops, forums, screenings, meetings, exhibits and debates. It feels to me like a cauldron of creativity and hope, with an edge of despair and desperation.

The most bizarre and incongruent aspect of KlimaForum09 is apparent only when you travel from one side of the building to the other. The route takes you through a glass walkway where your gaze is drawn down towards the totally unexpected scene of palm trees, a labrynth of blue water pools, multi-coloured buoyancy aids and several hundred adults and kids happily splashing around in a high energy, high carbon, totally unsustainable microclimate, apparently blissfully unaware of what’s going on around them. It’s a paradox that must leave the people from the vulnerable countries reeling.

And “reeling” would be an apt description of how I felt after two of the most intense conversations I’ve had here. The first was with a Ghanian man at our Expo stand. He was hoarse from having regailed a hall of activists with accounts of what it’s like to be suffering at the front line of climate change. The overconsuming west has discovered and stolen their diamonds, gold, valuable metals and minerals and Ghana is still crushingly poor. To top that, he tells me that they’ve now discovered oil, and will be taxing its extraction by the oil companies at 10% (Norway taxes it at 70%). The facts themselves don’t bring the reality of the picture to life, but when he tells me how a mining outfit found gold in a nearby village and “had to” level the local school to make way for the extraction infrastructure and “repaid” the community by building a school for them 25 miles away, the picture starts getting a lot clearer. And if that wasn’t enough, now the west has effectively stolen their liveable climate. For me, witnessing this man and is non-accusing demeanour, as I quietly add up my lifetime’s contribution in flights, furniture, food, fuel and steel consumption that looks like it might just have sealed the fate of children who will die of hunger and inadequate sanitation, this is a crushingly shameful experience.

Having barely recovered from that, I’m then approached by two Nigerian men who, beneath their genuine demeanour of cooperation and friendliness, have an anger and frustration that’s barely hidden. As they explain how C02 pollution is just another in a series of devastating acts of pollution that brought by the extreme consumptive patterns of “developed” countries, the list only comes to life when they give an account of the daily search for safe drinking water in the Delta region (an area highlighted in Age of Stupid). You can’t take it safely from the wells because of pollution and the drops in the water table. You can’t take it safely from the rivers because they’re polluted. You can’t take it from the sea because it’s saline and desalination is so energy intensive. And you can’t take it from the sky, because the gas flaring pollutes the skies.

I hope desperately that the depth of accountability that I personally feel for all of this, that the work I and my colleagues devote ourselves to, that the determination we bring to transitioning out of these ways of living that are crushing humans and biodiversity so comprehensively are somehow evident to them. I can’t tell though. I can’t see a damn thing through the tears of shame that are welling uncontrollably.
And why would I want to control them? If we don’t let that shame well up, if we don’t acknowledge the message it tells us about being out if integrity with deeply held beliefs, if we don’t let it energise our actions and determination, if instead we just swallow it, then we’re doing ourselves, our sense of humanity and our fellow beings on this planet a deep disservice.

Transition’s objectives of having a positive impact on social justice is implicit, rather than explicit, and I understand why some people don’t see it straightaway – hell, sometimes it feels hidden even to me. It’s a familiar pattern – I witness and feel another being’s pain at our unthinkingly consumptive patterns of behaviour, I start to beat myself up about not doing more, and then eventually apply some intellectual recognition of the benefits an ubiquitous fabric of transitioned communities will bring to these all-too-familiar horror stories. And at that point am I heartened by the work we’re doing, filled with the faint hope that our heartfelt intentions will have the effect we transitioners dream of.

And it seems right now that here in Copenhagen, more than anywhere, one of the key assertions underpinning Transition is more appropriate and potent than ever – if we wait for the politicians, it’ll be too little too late; if we do it as individuals – it’ll be too little; but if we do as communities, it might just be enough, just in time.

——————————————————————
Over, but not out.
Ben.

Source: Transition Culture

Transitional demands, by Sarah Irving

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

From modest beginnings as a permaculture class project at a college in Kinsale, Ireland, the Transition movement has spread its message of community resilience and low-carbon living around the world. The first ‘transition town’ in Totnes, Devon, established by permaculture tutor Rob Hopkins in 2005, now has counterparts as far afield as New Zealand, Japan, Canada and Finland.

According to the ‘official’ Transition website (www.transitiontowns.org) ‘a transition initiative is a community working together to look peak oil and climate change squarely in the eye and address this big question: for all those aspects of life that this community needs in order to sustain itself and thrive, how do we significantly increase resilience (to mitigate the effects of peak oil) and drastically reduce carbon emissions (to mitigate the effects of climate change)?’

Twelve steps guide transition initiatives through a process designed to end in a clear vision, based on practical, demonstrable experiences, of how a community will implement an ‘energy descent plan’ to survive the threats of climate change and exist without the accustomed abundance of fossil fuels to heat our homes, move us around, light our streets and cook our food. As Ben Brangwyn, one of the Transition Network’s trustees, puts it, ‘If we wait for governments, it’ll be too late; if we act as individuals, it’ll be too little; but if we act as communities, maybe it’ll be enough.’

Four years later, Transition Town Totnes activities include nut tree planting for locally-produced protein, garden-sharing to grow food on underused land, and a business exchange which, says Ben Brangwyn, works on the basis that ‘one business’s waste is another’s raw materials.’ According to Brangwyn, around 5 per cent of Totnes’s 8,500 inhabitants are actively involved in the transition town and around 12-15 per cent are signed up to its mailing list.

Unusually for an environmental campaign, Transition Towns sees older people as vital to finding sustainable ways to live. It highlights the experience of those who’ve lived through wartime shortages and rationing. A participant at a transition cities discussion in Manchester in October 2009 flagged up invaluable skills – like preserving fruit and vegetables – found among people such as Women’s Institute members.

But even transition devotees admit that scaling up to city level presents new challenges. The early successes – such as Totnes and Lewes – were often fairly small, fairly affluent, very white market towns with existing interests in green issues and ‘alternative’ lifestyles.

One of the best-known critiques is the Rocky Road to a Real Transition pamphlet issued in April 2008 by the Trapese popular education collective. It asked whether Transition is ‘about political change’ and questioned the extent to which it engages with marginalised people and challenges established power structures. Other campaigners have highlighted the fact that middleclass consumption, such as multiple cars, overseas holidays and large houses, often has a much bigger carbon footprint than that of low-income families. The extent to which Transition could bring about real change, Trapese also suggested, was limited by vested political and corporate interests, which it seems to try to work around rather than confront.

In a July 2009 reprint of Rocky Road, Trapese acknowledged the value of the debates that the pamphlet had provoked. The collective noted that in Leeds and Glasgow, transition city plans emphasised the need for a ‘just transition’, recognising the specific dilemmas of post-industrial cities. Transition spokespeople stress that the movement is very much a ‘work in progress’, and the network’s website repeats that no one claims to know that Transition is the right way forward.

Transition in the City

Around Britain, transition initiatives – some of them signed up to the ‘official’ list and some still ‘thinking about it’ – exist in Manchester, Glasgow, Liverpool, Sheffield, Cardiff, Nottingham, Bristol, Edinburgh and in areas of London including Brixton, Tooting and Finsbury Park.

As Ben Brangwyn stresses, climate change isn’t just an ‘environmental issue’ but will spark ‘a refugee crisis’ that will put pressure on our cities and their social fabric. Craig Barnett of Transition Sheffield has done groundbreaking work with the City of Sanctuary project, thinking about ways to integrate environmental asylum seekers into Britain’s urban life. And other Transition City initiatives, such as Montpelier in Bristol, have tried to tackle everyday ‘urban’ problems, debating drug use and removing phone boxes where they’ve become a focus for vandalism and drug deals.

But with its roots in white, middle-class environmentalism, Transition has its work cut out to be truly relevant in our inner cities. Ben Brangwyn insists that efforts have been made, with meetings held in mosques and community centres, but admits that the network has had trouble ‘getting to grips with this properly’ and that initiatives need to forge diverse partnerships to make a real impact. A core group member from one city also pointed out that if Transition doesn’t get beyond the ‘usual suspects’ of the environmental community, then it’s likely to be drawing on already over-committed people who either have very limited time to give, or who have to abandon other projects to take up Transition.

‘If we wait for governments, it’ll be too late; if we act as individuals, it’ll be too little; but if we act as communities, maybe it’ll be enough’

Penny Skerret of Transition City Manchester is similarly honest, admitting that ‘from my experience, Transition is still a white, middle-class movement.’ She acknowledges that, especially in cities, Transition groups can be dominated by well-meaning people from affluent, ‘alternative’ suburbs who talk about community, but have no understanding of the strength, cohesiveness and depth of knowledge that may exist in inner city ‘no-go’ areas close by.

‘I visited a school in Miles Platting, a very marginalised area of Manchester, where an artist is making a garden in the school playground,’ describes Skerrett. ‘One of the things that’s emerged there is that there are lots of people who are asylum seekers and refugees from parts of the world where climate change is happening now, who have experience of extreme weather and famine. Their stories create real meaning for the children in the school about what climate change is. That’s a really important way of making connections between Manchester and what’s happening on the news.’

Do it yourself

Anyone can set up a transition initiative in their neighbourhood, town or city. In some cities, such as Manchester, a core group has formed and worked quietly on building itself up before interacting with other groups or holding public meetings. Other cities, like Liverpool, have tried to overcome their fear of being a ‘talking shop’ by adopting a more open approach, starting projects such as community allotments at an early stage.

Initiatives are asked to contact the central Transition Network Ltd (TNL) at the ‘mulling’ stage. TNL is itself a charity, set up to ‘inspire, encourage, network, support and train’. To call themselves an ‘official transition town’ as listed on the network website, initiatives must fulfill criteria ranging from demonstrating understanding of peak oil and climate change, to communicating with other transition bodies and local authorities and organisations, to training members of the core team.

Individual transition initiatives take various forms. In smaller towns, a single core group with themed sub-groups dealing with issues such as food, energy or transport can work. But transition cities have struggled with this model, finding the city too large a unit to maintain regular meetings or a sense of united community.

Transition Nottingham and Bristol have successfully used a central ‘hub’ to provide co-ordination, training and publicity and work on city-wide problems such as transport, while smaller groups in neighbourhoods such as Montpelier in Bristol or West Bridgford in Nottingham deal with local issues.

Another challenge of which participants at the Manchester event in October 2009 seemed aware was the danger of Transition being seen as a brand seeking to stamp itself on existing sustainability initiatives and trying to colonise other groups’ work.

As Manchester’s Penny Skerrett puts it, ‘I always go back to permaculture, in that biodiversity is the most important thing. In somewhere like Manchester the more groups there are across the city, the more healthy the city will be. So the idea of Transition coming in and trying to turn that into some kind of monoculture is just not going to work. There’s no reason for it and it will get people’s backs up.’

Supping with the devil?

One of Rob Hopkins’ ‘12 steps to Transition’ is ‘building a bridge to local government’. Environmental initiatives across the UK have an uneven history of relationships with local and national government, peppered with betrayal and mistrust.

At Manchester’s Transition in the City discussion, attitudes varied between wary optimism from some Mancunians, given (Labour) Manchester City Council’s willingness to listen during the climate change action plan process (see box on opposite page), and the despair of Liverpool activists at their (Liberal Democrat) council’s announcement that it was spending £300,000 taking Liverpool to the Shanghai World Expo but sending no one to the climate summit in Copenhagen.

Transition towns vary in their relationship to the local state. One woman involved in a transition initiative in the north of England seethed as she described ‘wasting ten years of her life working with New Deal for Communities’.

But Caroline Downey, director of the Bridge 5 Mill environment and community centre in a marginalised area of Manchester, pointed out that much of the renovation done there in the late 1990s was carried out by New Deal trainees. While the founders had been sceptical about government unemployment schemes, New Deal had given the fledgling centre a paid workforce and provided the trainees with a more rewarding and varied training experience than they might have found at more conventional employers. 

‘Sometimes it is possible, if you’re careful, to use government and local authority agendas to your advantage,’ says Downey.

The diversity of transition initiatives means that there is no hard and fast rule for relationships with local government. Some have good personal connections or positive local authorities. Others, such as Brighton and Bristol, towns with existing, highlyvocal campaigning communities, have a reputation for more oppositional relations. Yet even Bristol Transition neighbourhoods have helped to win public funding for specific projects, such as work on Montpelier Park.

‘The issue is how close your relationship is,’ said a transition activist from the south west of England. ‘It’s great to get one-off funding, but it gets dangerous if you have core funding from councils. That can taste too much like co-option or dependency.’

The transition initiative in Lewes, along with those in Totnes and London’s Brixton, has launched its own currency to encourage local economies to thrive.

True transition?

There’s no doubt that the Transition model addresses some of the long-running criticisms of environmental movements, combining awareness about the wider fate of the planet with a focus on the human impacts of climate change and peak oil. This is not landscape conservation – it’s a basic survival agenda.

Despite its more holistic ideas, the question is whether the Transition movement has the ability to rise to the massive challenge it sets itself. And the jury must still be out on this. Transition’s rhetoric – of community, self-sufficiency, relevance to the elderly and to minorities as well as the white, middle-class ‘concerned’ – is spot on. But to be genuinely inclusive, many of the people who currently run transition initiatives need to take long, hard and possibly uncomfortable looks at how they work and how that might need changing. Transition’s decentralised model makes it open to any community, but it also means that anyone – however (un)qualified and (un)committed – can claim their local transition town title.

On a wider scale, Transition is also open to the criticisms levelled against ethical consumerism, green living and other ‘lifestyle’ movements. By concentrating on the level of individual change, they don’t necessarily address the bigger structural challenges of political expediency, corporate power and economic inequality, which may let small-scale agendas effect change so far, but no further.

In practice, most ‘transitioners’ are individually aware of the need to lobby, campaign or take direct action alongside their personal or community efforts, and they may promote these alongside transition activities. On the other hand, Transition’s relentless positivity, working with the things people have in common rather than on a more oppositional stage, may count it out of very necessary struggles.

At the moment, the Transition model holds immense promise for environmental and social change. But it remains to be seen whether its adherents have the strength to take it from a minority lifestyle choice to the much bigger force for democratic grassroots change that it could be.

Published Dec 15 2009 by Red Pepper


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