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Hey, get me out of here, I don’t want to go to landfill!

Recently, there have been several changes at IRIS. Annette Dubreuil is staying on as a part-time project co-ordinator, and is giving up her duties as IRIS co-ordinator. She will be putting her sustainable business model for aboriginal communities into action. She has been working on this project for the past 2-3 years, voluntarily, and is going to pursue her dream of making it happen. I have asked her to keep checking in with us and to let us know how it's going.

We welcome, as part-time summer IRIS co-ordinator, Meagan Heath. Meagan is finishing her MES in the Faculty of Environmental Studies. She is an expert on garbage, was one of the organizers of this year's York U garbage survey, and works part-time for CSBO - Campus Services and Business Operations. She is a woman of many talents including being tri-lingual, and she is passionate about reducing waste. If you read my blogs, you will know, that I, too, am passionate about reducing, reusing and recycling.

Meagan is a very good sport, and I have challenged her, this summer to go head to head with me on coming up with ways of getting rid of the annoying items that we keep putting in our garbage, as opposed to recycling them. This could be, preventing these items from even coming into our homes, or coming up with novel ways of reusing them. Each week, we will post a photo and do a duelling blog. Readers are welcome to weigh in with other suggestions. If we can, we will add a voting button to the blogs.

Here is our first challenge - it's the common milk bag and associated milk bags. What can we do to avoid using them or to redirect them from landfill, in the case where they are not part of a blue box programme (other than having a cow in our back garden?)??

Dawn R. Bazely

(Read Meagan's response: Sack your bags.)


Canadian Business Ethics Research Network Conference

CBERN 3rd Annual Conference in Montréal: May 27-30

Register Now at: www.cbern.ca/cbern_events/cbern2010/

We're less than a week out from our 3rd Annual CBERN Conference, this year in downtown Montréal! This year's Conference promises to be an engaging opportunity for networking and dialogue.

On Thursday, PhD students from departments across the country will come together for a day of workshops organized by the PhD Cluster, including sessions on Natural Resources and the Political Role of Corporations with faculty and student comments, a keynote address by Fred Bird, PhD research presentations on themes ranging from sociological analysis of mining practices to a Kantian theory of markets, and an impressive Professional Development workshop.

Our Friday public dialogue colloquium, "Human Rights, Resource Extraction and First Nation Economic Development", begins with Charles Sampford's "Human Rights from an International Perspective", followed by a panel discussion on Bill C-300: "The ethical responsibilities of Canadian mining companies engaged in resource extraction in developing countries". The panel features Hon. John McKay, MP, John Lewis (KAIROS Canadian Ecumenical Justice Initiatives), Gordon Peeling (The Mining Association of Canada) and T. Murray Rankin (Heenan Blaikie LLP).

The first afternoon session, organized by Ben Bradshaw (University of Guelph), examines mining in relation to community development, with a particular emphasis on First Nation impacts of mining developments in the Schefferville area and the new Impact-Benefit Agreement Community Toolkit. Speakers include Phil Einish (Naskapi Nation of Kawawachikamach), Dirk van Zyl (Mining Engineering, University of British Columbia), Allen Edzerza, (Negotiator/Consultant) and Paul Wilkinson (Paul F. Wilkinson & Associates Inc.).

Friday closes with a panel featuring Jim Cooney (Jim Cooney and Associates) and Jean Vavrek (Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy, and Petroleum) that will identify the research required to advance Canadian CSR initiatives, particularly in the resource sector.

Saturday's Annual General Meeting includes a morning overview of CBERN initiatives over the past year, afternoon breakout sessions to plan next steps for 2010-11 and a brief governance and finance meeting.

Throughout the Conference, opportunities for conversation have been built into the agenda. To further support these connections, Sunday morning's "Research Conversations in Business Ethics" is a scheduled opportunity to meet in groups that will be organized around participant-identified needs and interests over the preceding days.

For further information or to register for the Conference, please visit http://www.cbern.ca/cbern_events/cbern2010/ or contact Michael Windle at mwindle@cbern.ca.


Developing your Sustainability Strategy

"The Right Sustainability Strategy Can Reduce Costs, Decrease Risks and Create New Product Opportunities" according to the 2010 CEO Business Roundtable report "Enhancing Our Committment to a Sustainable Future". The report hightlights the practices of over 60 leading companies (ABB, FedEx, PepsiCo, Motorola, Siemens, Wal-Mart) and how sustainability is integrated into day to day operations and corporate culture. How does your sustainability strategy stack up to these best practices? Do you have a complete sustainability strategy? This workshop can help.

Date: Thursday, May 27, 2010 from 8:30 AM - 4:30 PM (ET)
Location: Toronto, Ontario | Humber Institute of Technology & Advanced Learning

Register for Developing your Sustainability Strategy in Toronto, Ontario on Eventbrite

An organization's sustainability strategy can have a significant impact upon its reputation with customers, employees and within the supply chain.

False starts and poorly integrated efforts hurt the creditability of the initiative, the implementation team and the company.

This workshop will provide you with experienced advice, proven frameworks, best practices and tools to simplify the sustainability process.

You will also have the opportunity to work on your own sustainability planning process and receive coaching during the workshop. Our sustainability workshops are also a great place to build sustainability networks and communities of practice.

What you will Learn:

Using examples, case studies, best practices and hands-on activities, you will:
· List the steps in developing a sustainability strategy and begin to customize them for your organization.
· Develop a business case for sustainability including drivers, opportunities, risks, issues and challenges.
· Develop a process for a definition, vision and goals for sustainability for your organization.
· Create a plan to assess the impact of sustainability on our organization's economic, environmental and social performance.
· Identify methods for determining sustainability metrics.
· Discuss methods for prioritizing and implementation of sustainability initiatives.
· Understand and analyze case studies and best practices for integrating sustainability into corporate governance, operations and the culture of the organization.
· Establish a draft plan for tracking progress toward targets; and reporting achievements and progress towards sustainability goals.

Register for Developing your Sustainability Strategy in Toronto, Ontario on Eventbrite

Expert Workshop Leader:

Anthony Watanabe, Ph.D. President & CEO, Innovolve

Dr. Watanabe has been helping leading organizations successfully adopt sustainability strategies for more than 10 years. Working with organizations like Procter and Gamble, The Minto Group, Sustainable Buildings Canada, and World Wildlife Fund he uses the processes of integrative thinking to build sustainability strategies that align with core business drivers and crafts "truly ownable" sustainability agendas.

Dr. Watanabe is an accomplished speaker having delivered presentations on sustainability to business, government and civil society organizations in Canada, the United States and Europe.

Innovolve Website: http://www.innovolve.com
Registration Information
Date: Thursday, May 27, 2010 from 8:30 AM - 4:30 PM (ET)
Location: Toronto, Ontario | Humber Institute of Technology & Advanced Learning

CBSR Members: $ 299
Regular Registration: $ 375
Graduate and Undergraduate students can register for $ 75 (plus GST).


Freshly arrived in the land of the Long White Cloud

Auckland in the morning

Could it be? Am I actually in New Zealand in again? This little country that captured my imagination and admiration 3 years ago is once again my home. I’m ecstatic!

This time I’m here on a three month internship with the New Zealand Green Building Council in downtown Auckland, in the North Island. Unfortunately, everyone I’ve told so far while in NZ about my job seems to have no clue what I’m talking about. This doesn’t necessarily surprise me as this country is notorious for its poorly designed homes. No insulation and no proper heating systems mean that this winter (switched seasons you see) I will be freezing!
Lucky for New Zealand I love it no matter what! Also, the opportunity for improvement is massive!

A few other things that make this country special include:
- every toilet has dual flushing
- being bare foot downtown is very, very common
- pedestrians do NOT have the right of way. This I learned the hard way when I dared to cross the street at a stop sign.
- plastic bags still rule the grocery stores
- diagonal crossings are everywhere downtown. There might not be many more impressive sights than 50 people completely overtaking a busy downtown intersection from every direction.

The NZGBC has so far been fantastic. I don’t really anticipate this assessment to change during the next 90 days and so I’m eager and excited for things to come. The office is small and very friendly. Also, a noticeable plus, everyone has a kiwi accent. I will also attempt to recreate it for myself as a souvenir to take home.

I’ve so far been helping out by completing a variety of tasks for the Green Star team, New Zealand’s building rating tool. There is much change in the office – the founding CEO, Jane Henley, has recently transferred to become the CEO of the World Green Building Council in Toronto therefore the new CEO, Alex Cutler, is still getting her feet wet. Similarly, the Project Manager for the new rating tool for homes is also a new arrival. Therefore before I can thoroughly get amongst it all, they too must familiarise themselves with it the massive scope of it all.

It’s an exciting atmosphere with lots going on, new buildings are coming through the system and everyone’s giving it their all. It’s going to be a great winter!

Now to buy myself a hot water bottle (heating, kiwi-style)…


In Defence of the Sphere of Influence

Posted on Behalf of Prof. Stepan Wood, member of IRIS

Why the WGSR should not follow Professor Ruggie’s advice on defining the scope of social responsibility

by Stepan Wood, May 2010

The Issue

The Working Group on Social Responsibility (WGSR) of the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) will meet in Copenhagen from May 17 to 21, 2010 for what is likely to be its last meeting to work on ISO 26000, an international guide on social responsibility. One of the central challenges for the WGSR is to define the scope of an organization’s responsibility for human rights abuses committed by third parties. Should an apparel company be responsible for violations of workers’ rights in its suppliers’ factories? Should a mining company be responsible for illegal killings and assaults by private security forces contracted to protect its assets and personnel? Should manufacturers of law enforcement equipment be responsible when police use them to suppress lawful assembly and expression? In short, where and how should the boundaries of an organization’s responsibility be drawn when actors outside the organization violate human rights?

ISO 26000, approved by a large majority in a recent “Draft International Standard” ballot, answers this question largely in terms of an organization’s degree of control or influence over others’ conduct. This “leverage-based” approach is based on the concept of “sphere of influence”, introduced into SR discourse by the United Nations Global Compact. Professor John Ruggie, the Special Representative of the United Nations Secretary General on Business and Human Rights (SRSG), has warned the WGSR not to take this approach, calling it inconsistent with his three-part “protect, respect, remedy” framework.1

Although Professor Ruggie’s views deserve great respect, ISO 26000 should maintain its “sphere of influence” approach because:

  • It reflects broad societal expectations
  • It is consistent with “due diligence”
  • It does not encourage inappropriate political interference
  • It does not encourage “gaming”
  • It is simple and intuitive
  • It builds on existing ISO standards
  • It avoids making a false distinction between supporting human rights and avoiding abuses
  • It is a necessary part of the solution to the business and human rights problem.

Fulfilling Societal Expectations

Decades of anti-sweatshop campaigns and consumer boycotts show that social actors – citizens, consumers, workers, indigenous and local communities, NGOs – will hold businesses accountable for the way in which they exercise or fail to exercise the influence they have over others to prevent or lessen human rights abuses. As one report put it, “society at large will hold a company responsible for violations occurring in plants from which it sources products or services, and therefore over which it has a degree of influence.”2

ISO 26000 reflects this widespread societal expectation when it says that “there will be situations where an organization’s ability to influence others will be accompanied by a responsibility to exercise that influence…. Generally, the responsibility for exercising influence increases with the ability to influence.”3 This is in line with the Global Compact’s E-Learning tool, which says: “the more control, authority or influence a business has over a situation giving rise to human rights abuses (or the means to improve respect for human rights), the greater the business responsibility to act.”4

Promoting Due Diligence

The “sphere of influence” approach is consistent with and supports the concept of due diligence which lies at the heart of the corporate responsibility to respect human rights. According to Professor Ruggie, due diligence “comprises reasonable steps by companies to become aware of, prevent, and address adverse impacts of their activities and relationships.”5 For him, “sphere of influence remains a useful metaphor for companies to think broadly about their human rights responsibilities and opportunities beyond the workplace” but “is of limited utility in clarifying the specific parameters of their responsibility to respect human rights” because it conflates “impacts” with “leverage”.6

In Professor Ruggie’s view, the scope of social responsibility is defined by

“the actual and potential human rights impacts generated through a company’s own business activities and through its relationships with other parties,”

not by leverage.7 Corporations are responsible for their contributions to the actions of others, most importantly in the form of complicity in human rights abuses, which he defines as knowing contribution to another’s abuse of human rights.8

What Professor Ruggie fails to acknowledge, and what ISO 26000 and the Global Compact recognize, is that an organization may contribute to human rights abuses by acts of omission as well as commission. When an organization has the ability to prevent or mitigate adverse human rights impacts by exercising influence over an actor with whom it is in a relationship, yet elects deliberately not to exercise that influence, it contributes to the resulting abuse. Its degree of complicity and hence responsibility may be less than if it had actively conspired with the abuser, but it is implicated nonetheless.

Discouraging Political Interference

Professor Ruggie asserts that it is undesirable “to require companies to act wherever they have influence, particularly over Governments.”9 Presumably, what makes this undesirable is the possibility of inappropriate meddling in public policy. Yet surely such irresponsible political involvement would be inconsistent with social responsibility by definition. Social responsibility includes responsible involvement in politics and public policy, as ISO 26000 recognizes.10

The only reason to conclude that leverage-based social responsibility is not desirable is if one believes that organizations are bound to exercise their political influence irresponsibly. If this is true, the entire project of social responsibility is in jeopardy. If, on the other hand, organizations can exercise their influence responsibly, there is no reason not to demand they do so.

Discouraging Strategic Gaming

Professor Ruggie warns that “using influence as a basis for assigning responsibility invites strategic manipulation.”11 In his most recent report he explains that

the proposition that corporate human rights responsibilities as a general rule should be determined by companies’ capacity, whether absolute or relative to States, is troubling. On that premise, a large and profitable company operating in a small and poor country could soon find itself called upon to perform ever-expanding social and even governance functions – lacking democratic legitimacy, diminishing the State’s incentive to build sustainable capacity and undermining the company’s own economic role and possibly its commercial viability. Indeed, the proposition invites undesirable strategic gaming in any kind of country context.12

The concern seems to be that leverage-based corporate responsibility will give governments an incentive to shirk their responsibilities in the hope that companies will step in to fill the breach. But the state’s responsibility to protect human rights is independent of business’s responsibility to respect. The state’s potential liability for neglecting or violating human rights is not diminished by corporate action to support those same rights. Only the most unscrupulous governments would treat such a situation as an excuse to shirk their legal responsibilities, and those governments would likely neglect their duty to protect human rights regardless of how the corporate responsibility to respect is defined.

Promoting Simplicity

Sphere of influence may be a metaphor, but it is one that organizations and stakeholders of all kinds can understand intuitively. The idea of concentric circles of influence radiating outward from the organization is simple. It subsumes a wide variety of relationships with different forms and pathways of influence under a single simple principle: the more influence the organization has over processes and outcomes, the more responsibility it has to exercise its influence.

There are various ways to operationalize the concept of sphere of influence, including the principle of “proximity”13 and the UN Global Compact’s “Arc of Human Rights Priorities” with its twin axes of human rights impact and connection to the company.14 Ruggie rejects the concept of proximity because it is unclear (e.g. what does “political proximity” mean?) and in some cases misleading (e.g. “geographic proximity” may obscure the fact that actions can affect people far away). He concludes that “it is not proximity that determines whether or not a human rights impact falls within the responsibility to respect, but rather the company’s web of activities and relationships”.15

It is hard to imagine how the term “web of activities and relationships” is any clearer than proximity, a concept familiar to lawyers worldwide. Proximity plays a central role in private law in all the common law countries, as well as in international law.16  Among other things, it is central to legal concepts of causation (“proximate cause”), foreseeability and duty of care. While its meaning is open-textured and context-dependent, millions of legal practitioners and judges employ it routinely to resolve disputes.

Professor Ruggie proposes a three-part process to determine the scope of a company’s responsibility that is at least as abstract and vague as the “leverage-based” approach he rejects. In his view, to determine the scope of its responsibility a company should:

  • understand the country context within which it operates;
  • assess the impacts of its own activities; and
  • analyze whether it might contribute to abuses through its relationships with third parties.17

How organizations, let alone their stakeholders, are expected to translate these factors into concrete limits on social responsibility is far from clear. How does a country’s human rights context affect the firm’s degree of responsibility? How does one distinguish between an organization’s “own” activities and those of “others”? Two examples Ruggie gives of a firm’s “own” activities, having “direct impact,” are political lobbying and the provision of security for personnel and assets. These are odd examples, since security and lobbying functions are typically entrusted to third parties. Moreover the impact of lobbying on human rights is indirect since it is the implementation of laws and policies that affects human rights, not the lobbying activities that may have influenced their content. By presenting security and lobbying as activities with direct impacts, Professor Ruggie adds to the confusion surrounding these issues.

Nor is it clear what kind or degree of contribution to abuse through an organization’s relationships is sufficient to attract responsibility. On one hand, Professor Ruggie writes that “[a]voiding complicity is part and parcel of due diligence for ensuring that companies respect human rights”.18 On the other hand, he suggests that other forms of involvement might also give rise to responsibility.

One example is knowingly benefiting from another’s abuse of human rights, which Professor Ruggie suggests is included in the scope of the corporate responsibility to respect human rights even if the firm did not contribute to the abuse.19 He also seems to suggest that a company’s mere presence in a setting where human rights abuses take place may give rise to responsibility: “operating in contexts where abuses occur and the appearance of benefiting from such abuses should serve as red flags for companies to ensure that they exercise due diligence”.20 Other forms of involvement are suggested by his admonition that a company should

“assess whether it might contribute to or be associated with harm caused by entities with which it conducts, or is considering conducting business or other activities” and “ensure that the company is not complicit, or otherwise implicated in human rights harms caused by others”.21

In short, for all his emphasis on due diligence and complicity, Professor Ruggie is ultimately unclear about what kind and degree of connection to third-party human rights violations is sufficient to engage corporate responsibility.

As Professor Ruggie acknowledges, determination of the scope of the responsibility to respect is bound to be inductive and fact-based.22 This is no different from the “sphere of influence” approach he rejects. The latter, however, offers the advantage of conceptual simplicity: a firm’s leverage varies on a continuum from no influence to complete control, and its responsibility varies with its degree of leverage: the more leverage, the more responsibility.

Building on Existing Standards

The sphere of influence approach fits well with existing widely accepted standards, including ISO 14001. ISO 14001, the world’s leading environmental management system standard, recognizes that to be considered environmentally responsible, an organization should identify and manage the environmental aspects of its activities, products and services that it can control and those it can influence. The European Union’s voluntary Eco-Management and Audit Scheme (EMAS) does likewise.

While there is a lively debate over how to operationalize the principle of control and influence, and how far up or down the value chain it extends, the worldwide environmental management community is in agreement on the basic proposition: an environmental management system should address the environmental aspects over which an organization determines it has control or influence. ISO 26000 should take a page from ISO 14001 and affirm that to call itself socially responsible, an organization should answer for human rights abuses it can control and those it can influence.

Avoiding False Distinctions

“Asking companies to support human rights voluntarily where they have leverage is one thing,” writes Professor Ruggie, “but attributing responsibility to them on that basis alone is quite another”.23 This statement presupposes a sharp distinction between the purely voluntary activity of promoting human rights and the obligatory responsibility of avoiding human rights abuses.24

But promotion of human rights and avoidance of abuse are regions on a continuum, not the two mutually exclusive parts of a dichotomy. The transition between them is gradual and continuous, not abrupt. Leverage over other actors is just as relevant to defining the one as it is to the other, as ISO 26000 recognizes when it says “an organization has the responsibility to respect human rights, including in its sphere of influence”.25 The utility of the concept of sphere of influence is not limited to the context of voluntary human rights promotion.

Solving the Business-Human Rights Problem

Ultimately, an approach that limits corporate responsibility to positive acts of commission while ignoring acts of omission is bound to fail. An approach that calibrates responsibility to an organization’s degree of control and influence over adverse human rights impacts is needed to solve the business-human rights problem. Acting responsibly within an organization’s own workplace is the least of the problems facing social responsibility (not that it is a small problem).

The real challenge of social responsibility lies in an organization’s relationships with contractors, suppliers, customers, local communities and end users. Organizations often have substantial influence over the decisions and actions of these actors.

While ISO 26000 is right to acknowledge that an organization “cannot be held responsible for the impacts of every party over which it may have some influence,”26 it should equally acknowledge that the problem of human rights abuses cannot be solved by allowing organizations simply to wash their hands of abuses perpetrated by actors with whom they have a significant relationship and over whom they have a significant degree of influence.

Only by affirming that a firm’s responsibility varies with its ability to influence decisions and actions will social responsibility standards galvanize the sort of changes that are needed to improve respect for and realization of human rights.

Conclusion
The concept of sphere of influence is central to ISO 26000’s definition of social responsibility. It is integrated throughout the document. While its use in ISO 26000 suffers from some awkwardness and inconsistency (as do many other aspects of the document), it sends the right general message. With the greatest respect for Professor Ruggie, the WGSR should not change ISO 26000 to accommodate his concerns.

Stepan Wood is an Associate Professor at Osgoode Hall Law School and member of the Steering Committee of the Institute for Research and Innovation in Sustainability (IRIS), York University, Toronto; a member of the Standards Council of Canada’s Canadian Advisory Committee on Social Responsibility; and vice-chair of the Standards Council of Canada’s Canadian Advisory Committee on ISO/Technical Committee 207/Subcommittee 1, Environmental Management Systems. Correspondence: swood@osgoode.yorku.ca. The views expressed herein are the author’s and do not reflect the views of York University, IRIS, or the Standards Council of Canada.


Food blog no. 1 – waste not, want not

My friend and colleague, Prof. Ellie Perkins recently forwarded an article to a number of us about the "cost of eggs". I assumed that it was all about the nutritional value of hens' eggs and expected to read that I could soon keep chickens in my back garden in Toronto - and why not? Vancouverites can. With the advent of the growing season, I am currently in an "urban agriculture" headspace, as well as engaged in the ongoing battle to increase the number of vegetarian meals that my family eats (for both cost and carbon footprint reasons) to over 50%. It turned out that Ellie's article was a very curious piece about the high value placed on the eggs of students with high SAT scores by couples hoping to conceive via fertility treatments and egg donations! Eggs are parts of life cycles, and all organisms need food as they go through their life cycles. Food security and sustainability of supply are huge issues. When I began teaching ecology at York in 1991, global per capita food production had been steadily rising. In recent years, per capita food production has been declining for various reasons, but there is still enough food to feed the world, if we could get it distributed.

Tristram Stuart's book Waste, highlights the issue of how much food is wasted as a result of our industrial-scale approach to agriculture and best-by dates which result in enormous quantities of food being thrown out. Many families throw out much of the food from their fridges and GOOD magazine tells us that the average American wastes 0.5 lbs of food per day. In London, England, 176,000 bananas are thrown out everyday. Both GOOD and Stuart point out that, if diverted appropriately, this wasted food, could address issues of hunger quite seriously and it could also reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

Another way of putting into perspective the information about just how much food never makes it into people's stomachs, is to take a look at the excellent series, What the World Eats. It is based on the book, Hungry Planet, and shows photos of families from around the world with their weekly groceries spread out before them, as well as the cost. A picture really is worth a thousand words, and this is the book that I would want to see in everyone's house, on the kitchen table.

The 2001 AAAS Atlas of Population and Environment, is also an excellent resource.

So, take-home message number 1 - eat ALL of the food that you buy for you and your family. Do this before thinking about eating locally or organically or turning vegan - which I'll cover later. Reducing food waste at the local kitchen level takes a lot of planning and is hard work. I DO THIS, and so can you. Follow GOOD's and Martha's advice and plan weekly family menus. Freeze leftovers and use up food that's on the edge of going off. As Gordon Ramsay  points out, time and again, in his books and tv shows - good restaurants waste very little food - they would not make money if they did.

Dawn R. Bazely


LCBO probably makes more progress in one flyer than Toronto’s cycling advocates make in two years…

My latest set of blogs are a bit delayed, because following on from teaching BIOLOGY 2010, York's Plant Biology course, and the arrival of a very early spring, I am writing a lot about food - security and sustainability. These blogs take a lot of fact-checking and research and are time-consuming to write.

So, here's a quick shout out to the LCBO - the Liquor Control Board of Ontario - who this past weekend, likely did more to promote cycling as a form of sustainable transportation among non-enthusiasts, than all of the cyclists, cycle clubs and cycling advocates that I know, put together, including the City of Toronto cycling office!

[photopress:LCBO_french_lessons1.jpg,full,centered]

They put a very handsome young man, dressed in an impeccably tailored suit on a bike, and made it the cover of last weekend's flyer promoting French wine. This arrived as an insert in our Saturday paper.

Marketing-wise, we'd normally expect to see this chap in an ad for an expensive sports car, but here he is, on a bike, looking cool and trendy. Ahem, note to male members of my fellow middle-aged cohort "you are more likely to keep fitting into your expensive suits, if you cycle, rather than buy a sports car".

I have cycled hundreds and hundreds of kilometers in Oxford and Cambridge, as well as in the Netherlands, and Sweden. Everyone and their dog cycles around. BUT here in North America, despite the best intentions of  advocates, cycling's just not as widely perceived as something that everyone should do, for all of their life. I hope that this flyer cover has some unintended consequences that are good for the environment and people's health.

Just one beef about the adverts: as the parent of a teen, who thinks that bike helmets are totally dorky, despite the stats and the wide availability of cool helmets (widely reviewed, including at the website, Outdoor Urbanite) - I do wish that the inside shot with the baguette and flowers showed the model wearing a bike helmet.

[photopress:LCBO_french_lessons2.jpg,thumb,pp_image] DrumTom

Dawn R. Bazely


Climate movement reboot in Bolivia

From the Western media, you may not have known that a historic climate change conference was held last week in Bolivia. Hard on the heels of the failure in Copenhagen, Evo Morales, Bolivia's first indigenous president, proposed the people's conference as a counterpoint to the pessimism and big power politics in Denmark.

Over 30,000 people attended the conference and met in 17 + 1 working groups to hash out a people's agreement. Along with a proposed universal declaration for the rights of Mother Earth, enormous energy and spirit is being unleashed in the Global South to bear on the existential threats facing the human species, something to keep in mind in the complacent North that is sleepwalking through the unfolding disaster.

And despite the predictable and almost deliberate media blackout, it is again the South that is taking the lead, and amongst them, the poorest of the poor. Since taking power in 2005, Morales has been in the forefront of calling for the defense of Mother Earth, or Pachamama as she is known in the Andes. His thoughts on the matter are encapsulated in a LA Times op-ed that appeared following the conference.

Bolivia's situation is particularly parlous, as the glaciers that supply the parched country most of its water have been in full retreat. The country is also one of the poorest in the hemisphere, having been plundered mercilessly by conquistadors, dictators, and neoliberal governments for much of its history. Morales has made major strides in the five years of his administration, yet still the contradictions and difficulties of balancing extractive industries that supply much of the government's revenue with the government's environmental advocacy remains.

For more insight, see Naomi Klein's article, "An New Climate Movement" and the conference's Spanish language site.



Report Back for Cochabamba (May 7)

Your chance to hear from participants in the World People’s Conference on Climate Change and the Rights of Mother Earth, held in Cochabamba, Bolivia, April 19-22.

Time: Friday, May 7, 2010, 7pm
Location: Steelworkers Hall Toronto, 25 Cecil Street
(east of Spadina, south of College)

Donation $5 or pay what you can.

Principal speakers

- Robert Lovelace, Ardoch Algonquin First Nation
- Ben Powless, Mohawk from Six Nations in Ontario, member of the Indigenous Environmental Network
- Kimia Ghomeshi, Campaign Director, Canadian Youth Climate Coalition
- Danny Beaton: winner of the National Aboriginal Achievement Award for Environment and Natural Resources
- Delegation from Toronto Bolivia Solidarity

Plus

- Messages from supporters and sponsors
- Bolivian dance troupe and First Nations indigenous drumming.
- Bolivian food and beverages.

Sponsoring organizations

- Canadian Youth Climate Coalition
- CAW-Sam Gindin Chair in Social Justice and Democracy at Ryerson
- Climate and Capitalism
- Common Frontiers
- KAIROS Toronto Center
- Latin American Solidarity Network
- Ontario Public Interest Research Group (OPIRG)
- Toronto Bolivia Solidarity
- Toronto Climate Campaign
- Toronto Forum on Cuba
- Toronto Haiti Action Committee

To add your organization to the Sponsors’ list, email Torontoboliviasolidarity@gmail.com

For more information please see the poster and flyer.


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