This document provides an environmental audit for Benedictine communities. It contains information on assessing and inventorying various environmental practices within Benedictine communities, with a focus on air pollution, drinking water, water conservation, and sanitation. The document includes sections on outdoor air pollution, indoor air pollution, drinking water quality and sources, water conservation, and sanitation. Each section provides questions to consider in assessing current practices, and templates to complete when inventorying practices and sources. The overall aim is to evaluate how Benedictine communities can improve their environmental stewardship.
Building Partnerships with the Faith Community: A Resource Guide for Environm...Z2P
This document provides a guide for environmental groups to build partnerships with faith communities. It discusses the value of such partnerships, including that faith communities have a long history of environmental stewardship. It also notes that policymakers are inclined to listen to faith voices, and the public sees links between religion and the environment. The guide offers tips on tone and outreach approaches in partnering with faith groups. It provides examples of partnership activities and introduces some major US faith traditions and organizations. The guide aims to help environmental groups understand faith perspectives and find opportunities for collaborative work.
What We Eat And Why It Matters: Exploring A Theology Of Food Z2P
This document provides suggestions for facilitating a study group exploring the theology of food. The study uses a 5-part DVD series examining how food intersects with faith through topics like the Eucharist, biblical passages, and the church's mission. Suggestions include showing a DVD segment followed by discussion, incorporating meals to enhance reflection, and exploring key biblical passages. The goal is to inspire deeper thought on how what we eat relates to our spiritual lives and God's vision for creation.
The document outlines the Green Church Initiative of the Virginia Conference of the United Methodist Church. It discusses the church's responsibility to care for God's creation and calls churches to make commitments in four areas: worship, learning and teaching, lifestyle, and community involvement. The church signs a covenant pledging to implement ideas in each category such as incorporating creation care themes into worship, education programs, reducing energy and waste in church facilities, and advocating on environmental issues.
Food Sovereignty for All: Overhauling the Food System with Faith-Based Initia...ElisaMendelsohn
This document provides guidance for faith-based organizations seeking to establish effective community food projects. It emphasizes the importance of setting realistic goals, carefully planning projects to fit available resources, and partnering with local farmers and low-income communities. By understanding challenges faced by the poor and building relationships across groups, faith communities can work for systemic change while increasing access to healthy, local food. Starting small and growing projects over time helps ensure long-term sustainability and participation from the faith community.
Community-Based Solutions for Environmental & Economic Justice - Magnuson Hea...Z2P
The document summarizes the 4th annual Community-Based Solutions for Environmental & Economic Justice conference organized by the Community Coalition for Environmental Justice. The one-day conference was held on May 7th, 2005 at the University of Washington and included keynote speeches, workshops, and presentations on topics related to indigenous peoples, rural and urban communities, youth, globalization, and brownfields. The conference provided an opportunity for environmental justice activists and indigenous groups in the Northwest to network and discuss tools for creating environmental justice in their communities.
Earth Care Congregations: A Guide to Greening Presbyterian Churches Z2P
This document provides information and guidelines for Presbyterian churches seeking to become certified as Earth Care Congregations through the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.). It outlines the background and call to care for God's creation in the Presbyterian Church. To become certified, congregations must commit to an Earth Care Pledge and complete actions in four categories: worship, education, facilities, and outreach. Completing these actions earns points and certification is achieved with 25 points in each category. Certified congregations are honored and encouraged to continue earth care efforts annually. Appendices provide details on certification steps, example activities, and resources for the four categories.
The document introduces a curriculum called "Covenanting for Justice Online Curriculum" that was developed by the North American Working Group for Covenanting for Justice/Accra Confession. It contains five workshop modules that examine the challenges of globalization and the witness of the prophetic church. Each module contains videos, Bible studies, and discussion questions to engage participants on issues of global economic injustice and environmental degradation. The goal is for participants to work with communities to bring about a just global community through solidarity with neighbors near and far.
Building Partnerships with the Faith Community: A Resource Guide for Environm...Z2P
This document provides a guide for environmental groups to build partnerships with faith communities. It discusses the value of such partnerships, including that faith communities have a long history of environmental stewardship. It also notes that policymakers are inclined to listen to faith voices, and the public sees links between religion and the environment. The guide offers tips on tone and outreach approaches in partnering with faith groups. It provides examples of partnership activities and introduces some major US faith traditions and organizations. The guide aims to help environmental groups understand faith perspectives and find opportunities for collaborative work.
What We Eat And Why It Matters: Exploring A Theology Of Food Z2P
This document provides suggestions for facilitating a study group exploring the theology of food. The study uses a 5-part DVD series examining how food intersects with faith through topics like the Eucharist, biblical passages, and the church's mission. Suggestions include showing a DVD segment followed by discussion, incorporating meals to enhance reflection, and exploring key biblical passages. The goal is to inspire deeper thought on how what we eat relates to our spiritual lives and God's vision for creation.
The document outlines the Green Church Initiative of the Virginia Conference of the United Methodist Church. It discusses the church's responsibility to care for God's creation and calls churches to make commitments in four areas: worship, learning and teaching, lifestyle, and community involvement. The church signs a covenant pledging to implement ideas in each category such as incorporating creation care themes into worship, education programs, reducing energy and waste in church facilities, and advocating on environmental issues.
Food Sovereignty for All: Overhauling the Food System with Faith-Based Initia...ElisaMendelsohn
This document provides guidance for faith-based organizations seeking to establish effective community food projects. It emphasizes the importance of setting realistic goals, carefully planning projects to fit available resources, and partnering with local farmers and low-income communities. By understanding challenges faced by the poor and building relationships across groups, faith communities can work for systemic change while increasing access to healthy, local food. Starting small and growing projects over time helps ensure long-term sustainability and participation from the faith community.
Community-Based Solutions for Environmental & Economic Justice - Magnuson Hea...Z2P
The document summarizes the 4th annual Community-Based Solutions for Environmental & Economic Justice conference organized by the Community Coalition for Environmental Justice. The one-day conference was held on May 7th, 2005 at the University of Washington and included keynote speeches, workshops, and presentations on topics related to indigenous peoples, rural and urban communities, youth, globalization, and brownfields. The conference provided an opportunity for environmental justice activists and indigenous groups in the Northwest to network and discuss tools for creating environmental justice in their communities.
Earth Care Congregations: A Guide to Greening Presbyterian Churches Z2P
This document provides information and guidelines for Presbyterian churches seeking to become certified as Earth Care Congregations through the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.). It outlines the background and call to care for God's creation in the Presbyterian Church. To become certified, congregations must commit to an Earth Care Pledge and complete actions in four categories: worship, education, facilities, and outreach. Completing these actions earns points and certification is achieved with 25 points in each category. Certified congregations are honored and encouraged to continue earth care efforts annually. Appendices provide details on certification steps, example activities, and resources for the four categories.
The document introduces a curriculum called "Covenanting for Justice Online Curriculum" that was developed by the North American Working Group for Covenanting for Justice/Accra Confession. It contains five workshop modules that examine the challenges of globalization and the witness of the prophetic church. Each module contains videos, Bible studies, and discussion questions to engage participants on issues of global economic injustice and environmental degradation. The goal is for participants to work with communities to bring about a just global community through solidarity with neighbors near and far.
Christian Aid Tsunami Evaluation Synthesis Study October 2007 Z2P
This document provides a summary of an evaluation of Christian Aid's response to the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami.
1. The evaluation found Christian Aid's partnership approach allowed for a more locally relevant response and facilitated transition from relief to recovery. Housing programs were particularly successful at helping marginalized groups.
2. While livelihood programs had mixed success, shelter programs across countries generally performed well. Psychosocial support programs require more evidence of impact.
3. The evaluation provides several recommendations, including being cautious about long-term psychosocial funding and documenting lessons from disaster risk reduction work.
It's God's World: Christians, Care for Creation, and Global Warming Z8Y
Human activities like burning fossil fuels are releasing carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases into the atmosphere at an accelerated rate. This is disrupting the natural balance of Earth's climate system and causing global warming. The effects of climate change include more extreme weather events, shifting wildlife habitats, threats to agriculture, and increased spread of diseases. While nature has mechanisms to adapt to gradual climate shifts, current changes are occurring too rapidly for many species to keep pace. Christians are called to be good stewards of God's creation, but human actions are undermining the sustainability of the planet.
This sermon discusses how humanity has come to see itself as the most important part of creation according to messages spread through mass media. However, the biblical story of Job challenges this view, reminding humanity that we are but a small part of God's larger creation. The sermon then discusses how climate change poses an existential threat, disproportionately harming the world's poorest people, and calls for urgent action to curb its causes and impacts.
This document provides an overview of a resource titled "To Serve and Guard the Earth" which connects the biblical creation story in Genesis with modern environmental concerns. The resource contains 6 sessions that correspond to the 6 days of creation in Genesis and relate each day to a contemporary environmental issue. Each session includes materials for leaders and participants to explore scripture passages, background on the environmental topic, and suggestions for individual and community action. The goal is to encourage Christians to care for God's creation through understanding their role based on the creation accounts and by making practical lifestyle changes.
The ELCA addresses environmental concerns through education, advocacy, and earth care. It provides information to congregations on topics like consumption, recycling, and nature. Congregations are encouraged to take actions that respect the earth, like using fewer materials. The ELCA also advocates for environmental policies and works with organizations on issues. Through its publishing house and seminaries, the ELCA educates people on caring for God's creation.
1. This document outlines the Church of England's 7-year plan on climate change and the environment from 2009-2016.
2. Some key goals of the plan are to reduce the Church's carbon footprint by 80% by 2050, establish annual carbon footprint measurement and reporting for all dioceses by 2016, and reduce the ecological footprint to a "one planet" level by 2050.
3. The plan highlights the Church of England's long history of environmental action and outlines ongoing and planned initiatives through its Shrinking the Footprint campaign to cut emissions from church buildings and operations.
This plan, written under the guidance of the Model Forest Policy Program's Climate Solutions University (CSU), aims to analyze and address climate related threats to forests, water and people in the Nisqually Watershed. The over-arching goal is to increase resiliency of the watershed against current and future climate impacts.
The document summarizes an invitation from AIAA to OurEarth magazine to participate in an Australia-Indonesia forum on the environment, agriculture, and business. It lists several pressing global issues related to the climate crisis and environmental degradation. It then outlines business opportunities in sustainable development sectors that could create new jobs and total over $12 trillion by 2030. The document promotes OurEarth's efforts to connect experts and solutions for building community resilience through training, media platforms, and working towards an global Earth repair summit in 2020.
The CEO provided a year-end report summarizing 2021 accomplishments and initiatives at the JCC. Key points included expanding the early learning center, membership and camp attendance growth, securing over $2 million in grants, strengthening Jewish cultural and wellness programming through community partnerships, and planning upcoming fundraising events and programs for 2022. Overall it was a productive year despite challenges, with positive financial variances and progress on strategic priorities.
Parks and open spaces provide important health, social, and environmental benefits to communities. They allow for recreation, preserve natural environments, and provide green space in urban areas. However, open spaces are under threat from development. It is important to strategically plan open space networks that are well-distributed and accessible to residents. In Mumbai specifically, there is very little open space per person compared to international standards, and over 45% of existing open space is encroached upon. Efforts must be made to protect existing green spaces from future development through zoning and community involvement.
Solar cooker project_best_practices_manualmechvignesan
This document provides a best practices manual for solar cooker projects. It discusses the goals of introducing solar cooking technology in refugee camps in Chad, which are to reduce fuel consumption, empower women, and provide a safer environment. It then covers the basics of solar cooking, describing the main types of solar cookers as panel, box, and parabolic, and how they work. Key points for initiating a solar cooker project are also outlined.
This document summarizes Rob Pike's presentation on concurrency in Go. It introduces goroutines as lightweight threads that execute concurrently. Channels are used to synchronize goroutines and pass data between them. Select statements allow goroutines to wait on multiple communication operations. Examples demonstrate using goroutines, channels, and select to implement patterns like timeouts, multiplexing, and asynchronous communication.
This document provides an overview of social network analysis and the Sylva software. It begins with key concepts in social network analysis including social structure, social networks, nodes, linkages, and additional terminology. It then discusses what makes social network analysis unique and provides examples of ego-centered and community-centered network analysis. Finally, it describes the features and capabilities of the Sylva software for collecting, storing, visualizing, and analyzing social network data.
The document discusses conventions used in thriller films. It provides examples of conventions like false endings, innocent victims, escaped convicts, and villains/victims. False endings purpose is to keep audiences thinking with a cliffhanger. Innocent victims make audiences feel sympathy and shock when the victim kills the villain. Escaped convicts show how smart and cunning they are in planning their escape. Villains/victims keep the villain a mystery while showing victims get hurt to disturb audiences.
The document discusses the common order and elements included in opening credits sequences for films. It provides examples of the opening titles for four films - Gattaca, The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo, Casino Royale, and Seven - analyzing the production companies and individuals credited, timing of the titles, color and style of text used, and how the titles are displayed on screen. The purpose is to understand what information is typically conveyed in opening credits and how different creative choices can reflect elements of the story being told.
This document provides an overview of the Go programming language. It discusses who created Go, the course outline, and motivations for creating a new language. Some key points include:
- Go was created by a small team at Google plus outside contributors to make programming fun again by combining the safety of static types with the feel of dynamic languages.
- The course covers language basics, types, methods, interfaces, concurrency, and communication over 3 days.
- Motivations for a new language include helping speed up software construction, improving type safety and support for garbage collection and concurrency.
This interim report profiles policies and programs from around the world where legislators have incorporated the value of natural capital into decision making. Natural capital refers to nature's goods and services like fresh water and fisheries that support the economy. While the true economic value of natural capital is often ignored, the report highlights examples where recognizing this value has helped achieve public policy goals in areas like jobs, agriculture, energy, and climate change. The report aims to demonstrate for legislators how innovative environmental management can deliver both long-term sustainability and short-term economic and social benefits.
Urban Agriculture: Theory and Practice of Community GardeningElisaMendelsohn
This document provides an overview of urban agriculture and community gardening practices. It defines urban agriculture and discusses its history. Community gardening has social, cultural, environmental, and economic benefits, such as building community pride, empowering individuals, providing green space, and increasing food security. The document examines the Nottoway Park community garden in Fairfax County as a case study and provides recommendations to encourage community gardening in the county, such as partnering with schools and non-profits. It discusses challenges but concludes that community gardening provides benefits to urban areas.
FINAL ALL ARTICLES ProJourno-Report-2016-FINAL-interactive_redstrela92
This document describes a journalism incubator program hosted by Pro Journo in Nairobi, Kenya in 2016. Seven environmental science and journalism students from Europe and Russia reported on topics related to environmental economics, business, and technology at the World Resources Forum conference in Davos, Switzerland. The program aimed to train students in business journalism and cover topics related to the environment and economics that often rely too heavily on classical economic thinking. The students produced several articles on issues like the circular economy, waste management, and environmental auditing.
This document summarizes the benefits, barriers, and opportunities for increasing the use of green roofs and vertical gardens in Canada. It finds that green roofs provide significant environmental, social and economic benefits, including improved air and water quality, climate change mitigation, energy savings, and increased biodiversity and amenity space. However, barriers like lack of awareness, high upfront costs and technical uncertainties are preventing more widespread adoption. The report recommends developing demonstration projects, providing incentives and direct policy support, improving technical guidance and generating further research to help overcome these barriers and realize the opportunities of green roof technology diffusion across Canada.
Urban Agriculture: Theory and Practice of Community Gardening
`
For more information, Please see websites below:
`
Organic Edible Schoolyards & Gardening with Children
http://scribd.com/doc/239851214
`
Double Food Production from your School Garden with Organic Tech
http://scribd.com/doc/239851079
`
Free School Gardening Art Posters
http://scribd.com/doc/239851159`
`
Increase Food Production with Companion Planting in your School Garden
http://scribd.com/doc/239851159
`
Healthy Foods Dramatically Improves Student Academic Success
http://scribd.com/doc/239851348
`
City Chickens for your Organic School Garden
http://scribd.com/doc/239850440
`
Simple Square Foot Gardening for Schools - Teacher Guide
http://scribd.com/doc/239851110
Christian Aid Tsunami Evaluation Synthesis Study October 2007 Z2P
This document provides a summary of an evaluation of Christian Aid's response to the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami.
1. The evaluation found Christian Aid's partnership approach allowed for a more locally relevant response and facilitated transition from relief to recovery. Housing programs were particularly successful at helping marginalized groups.
2. While livelihood programs had mixed success, shelter programs across countries generally performed well. Psychosocial support programs require more evidence of impact.
3. The evaluation provides several recommendations, including being cautious about long-term psychosocial funding and documenting lessons from disaster risk reduction work.
It's God's World: Christians, Care for Creation, and Global Warming Z8Y
Human activities like burning fossil fuels are releasing carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases into the atmosphere at an accelerated rate. This is disrupting the natural balance of Earth's climate system and causing global warming. The effects of climate change include more extreme weather events, shifting wildlife habitats, threats to agriculture, and increased spread of diseases. While nature has mechanisms to adapt to gradual climate shifts, current changes are occurring too rapidly for many species to keep pace. Christians are called to be good stewards of God's creation, but human actions are undermining the sustainability of the planet.
This sermon discusses how humanity has come to see itself as the most important part of creation according to messages spread through mass media. However, the biblical story of Job challenges this view, reminding humanity that we are but a small part of God's larger creation. The sermon then discusses how climate change poses an existential threat, disproportionately harming the world's poorest people, and calls for urgent action to curb its causes and impacts.
This document provides an overview of a resource titled "To Serve and Guard the Earth" which connects the biblical creation story in Genesis with modern environmental concerns. The resource contains 6 sessions that correspond to the 6 days of creation in Genesis and relate each day to a contemporary environmental issue. Each session includes materials for leaders and participants to explore scripture passages, background on the environmental topic, and suggestions for individual and community action. The goal is to encourage Christians to care for God's creation through understanding their role based on the creation accounts and by making practical lifestyle changes.
The ELCA addresses environmental concerns through education, advocacy, and earth care. It provides information to congregations on topics like consumption, recycling, and nature. Congregations are encouraged to take actions that respect the earth, like using fewer materials. The ELCA also advocates for environmental policies and works with organizations on issues. Through its publishing house and seminaries, the ELCA educates people on caring for God's creation.
1. This document outlines the Church of England's 7-year plan on climate change and the environment from 2009-2016.
2. Some key goals of the plan are to reduce the Church's carbon footprint by 80% by 2050, establish annual carbon footprint measurement and reporting for all dioceses by 2016, and reduce the ecological footprint to a "one planet" level by 2050.
3. The plan highlights the Church of England's long history of environmental action and outlines ongoing and planned initiatives through its Shrinking the Footprint campaign to cut emissions from church buildings and operations.
This plan, written under the guidance of the Model Forest Policy Program's Climate Solutions University (CSU), aims to analyze and address climate related threats to forests, water and people in the Nisqually Watershed. The over-arching goal is to increase resiliency of the watershed against current and future climate impacts.
The document summarizes an invitation from AIAA to OurEarth magazine to participate in an Australia-Indonesia forum on the environment, agriculture, and business. It lists several pressing global issues related to the climate crisis and environmental degradation. It then outlines business opportunities in sustainable development sectors that could create new jobs and total over $12 trillion by 2030. The document promotes OurEarth's efforts to connect experts and solutions for building community resilience through training, media platforms, and working towards an global Earth repair summit in 2020.
The CEO provided a year-end report summarizing 2021 accomplishments and initiatives at the JCC. Key points included expanding the early learning center, membership and camp attendance growth, securing over $2 million in grants, strengthening Jewish cultural and wellness programming through community partnerships, and planning upcoming fundraising events and programs for 2022. Overall it was a productive year despite challenges, with positive financial variances and progress on strategic priorities.
Parks and open spaces provide important health, social, and environmental benefits to communities. They allow for recreation, preserve natural environments, and provide green space in urban areas. However, open spaces are under threat from development. It is important to strategically plan open space networks that are well-distributed and accessible to residents. In Mumbai specifically, there is very little open space per person compared to international standards, and over 45% of existing open space is encroached upon. Efforts must be made to protect existing green spaces from future development through zoning and community involvement.
Solar cooker project_best_practices_manualmechvignesan
This document provides a best practices manual for solar cooker projects. It discusses the goals of introducing solar cooking technology in refugee camps in Chad, which are to reduce fuel consumption, empower women, and provide a safer environment. It then covers the basics of solar cooking, describing the main types of solar cookers as panel, box, and parabolic, and how they work. Key points for initiating a solar cooker project are also outlined.
This document summarizes Rob Pike's presentation on concurrency in Go. It introduces goroutines as lightweight threads that execute concurrently. Channels are used to synchronize goroutines and pass data between them. Select statements allow goroutines to wait on multiple communication operations. Examples demonstrate using goroutines, channels, and select to implement patterns like timeouts, multiplexing, and asynchronous communication.
This document provides an overview of social network analysis and the Sylva software. It begins with key concepts in social network analysis including social structure, social networks, nodes, linkages, and additional terminology. It then discusses what makes social network analysis unique and provides examples of ego-centered and community-centered network analysis. Finally, it describes the features and capabilities of the Sylva software for collecting, storing, visualizing, and analyzing social network data.
The document discusses conventions used in thriller films. It provides examples of conventions like false endings, innocent victims, escaped convicts, and villains/victims. False endings purpose is to keep audiences thinking with a cliffhanger. Innocent victims make audiences feel sympathy and shock when the victim kills the villain. Escaped convicts show how smart and cunning they are in planning their escape. Villains/victims keep the villain a mystery while showing victims get hurt to disturb audiences.
The document discusses the common order and elements included in opening credits sequences for films. It provides examples of the opening titles for four films - Gattaca, The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo, Casino Royale, and Seven - analyzing the production companies and individuals credited, timing of the titles, color and style of text used, and how the titles are displayed on screen. The purpose is to understand what information is typically conveyed in opening credits and how different creative choices can reflect elements of the story being told.
This document provides an overview of the Go programming language. It discusses who created Go, the course outline, and motivations for creating a new language. Some key points include:
- Go was created by a small team at Google plus outside contributors to make programming fun again by combining the safety of static types with the feel of dynamic languages.
- The course covers language basics, types, methods, interfaces, concurrency, and communication over 3 days.
- Motivations for a new language include helping speed up software construction, improving type safety and support for garbage collection and concurrency.
This interim report profiles policies and programs from around the world where legislators have incorporated the value of natural capital into decision making. Natural capital refers to nature's goods and services like fresh water and fisheries that support the economy. While the true economic value of natural capital is often ignored, the report highlights examples where recognizing this value has helped achieve public policy goals in areas like jobs, agriculture, energy, and climate change. The report aims to demonstrate for legislators how innovative environmental management can deliver both long-term sustainability and short-term economic and social benefits.
Urban Agriculture: Theory and Practice of Community GardeningElisaMendelsohn
This document provides an overview of urban agriculture and community gardening practices. It defines urban agriculture and discusses its history. Community gardening has social, cultural, environmental, and economic benefits, such as building community pride, empowering individuals, providing green space, and increasing food security. The document examines the Nottoway Park community garden in Fairfax County as a case study and provides recommendations to encourage community gardening in the county, such as partnering with schools and non-profits. It discusses challenges but concludes that community gardening provides benefits to urban areas.
FINAL ALL ARTICLES ProJourno-Report-2016-FINAL-interactive_redstrela92
This document describes a journalism incubator program hosted by Pro Journo in Nairobi, Kenya in 2016. Seven environmental science and journalism students from Europe and Russia reported on topics related to environmental economics, business, and technology at the World Resources Forum conference in Davos, Switzerland. The program aimed to train students in business journalism and cover topics related to the environment and economics that often rely too heavily on classical economic thinking. The students produced several articles on issues like the circular economy, waste management, and environmental auditing.
This document summarizes the benefits, barriers, and opportunities for increasing the use of green roofs and vertical gardens in Canada. It finds that green roofs provide significant environmental, social and economic benefits, including improved air and water quality, climate change mitigation, energy savings, and increased biodiversity and amenity space. However, barriers like lack of awareness, high upfront costs and technical uncertainties are preventing more widespread adoption. The report recommends developing demonstration projects, providing incentives and direct policy support, improving technical guidance and generating further research to help overcome these barriers and realize the opportunities of green roof technology diffusion across Canada.
Urban Agriculture: Theory and Practice of Community Gardening
`
For more information, Please see websites below:
`
Organic Edible Schoolyards & Gardening with Children
http://scribd.com/doc/239851214
`
Double Food Production from your School Garden with Organic Tech
http://scribd.com/doc/239851079
`
Free School Gardening Art Posters
http://scribd.com/doc/239851159`
`
Increase Food Production with Companion Planting in your School Garden
http://scribd.com/doc/239851159
`
Healthy Foods Dramatically Improves Student Academic Success
http://scribd.com/doc/239851348
`
City Chickens for your Organic School Garden
http://scribd.com/doc/239850440
`
Simple Square Foot Gardening for Schools - Teacher Guide
http://scribd.com/doc/239851110
Practice Note Environment and Climate Change 2011Dr Lendy Spires
This document discusses the role of volunteerism in natural resource management, climate change adaptation, and community-based approaches. It provides background on these topics and presents five case studies of volunteer programs. The case studies demonstrate how volunteers build local capacity, encourage knowledge sharing, and promote social inclusion of women and youth. Volunteers can make important contributions through advocacy, awareness raising, technical assistance, training, and research to support environmental and climate change programs.
This document discusses the challenges facing agriculture and opportunities for greening agriculture. It finds that conventional industrial agriculture has led to environmental degradation while small farms are important for food security and poverty reduction. Greening agriculture through investments in soil, water and biodiversity management can generate economic and environmental benefits. The costs of environmental degradation from agriculture are high, so increased investment in natural capital in the agriculture sector is needed. Global, national and economic policies can help create an enabling environment for green agriculture.
This document provides an overview of greening agriculture. It discusses the challenges facing conventional agriculture systems and the opportunities that green agriculture presents. Key points include:
- Agriculture faces challenges from environmental degradation, resource scarcity, and climate change impacts that threaten food security.
- Greening agriculture through investments in soil, water, and biodiversity management can help address these challenges in a cost-effective manner while providing benefits like increased yields and resilience.
- Global policies, economic instruments, capacity building and other enabling conditions are needed to support the transition to more sustainable agricultural practices worldwide.
This document is a handbook published by UNICEF on water programming and sustainable development. It provides guidance on improving water supply projects through community participation, cost-effective solutions, appropriate technologies, and long-term maintenance. The handbook emphasizes managing water resources at a local level, addressing both water supply and sanitation, and ensuring access to water improves health and livelihoods. It also stresses the importance of involving communities in project design, implementation, and management to achieve sustainable services.
Healthy Food, Healthy Community: A Community Action Guide
`
For more information, Please see websites below:
`
Organic Edible Schoolyards & Gardening with Children =
http://scribd.com/doc/239851214 ~
`
Double Food Production from your School Garden with Organic Tech =
http://scribd.com/doc/239851079 ~
`
Free School Gardening Art Posters =
http://scribd.com/doc/239851159 ~
`
Increase Food Production with Companion Planting in your School Garden =
http://scribd.com/doc/239851159 ~
`
Healthy Foods Dramatically Improves Student Academic Success =
http://scribd.com/doc/239851348 ~
`
City Chickens for your Organic School Garden =
http://scribd.com/doc/239850440 ~
`
Simple Square Foot Gardening for Schools - Teacher Guide =
http://scribd.com/doc/239851110 ~
Community Food Project How to Guide
`
For more information, Please see websites below:
`
Organic Edible Schoolyards & Gardening with Children
http://scribd.com/doc/239851214
`
Double Food Production from your School Garden with Organic Tech
http://scribd.com/doc/239851079
`
Free School Gardening Art Posters
http://scribd.com/doc/239851159`
`
Companion Planting Increases Food Production from School Gardens
http://scribd.com/doc/239851159
`
Healthy Foods Dramatically Improves Student Academic Success
http://scribd.com/doc/239851348
`
City Chickens for your Organic School Garden
http://scribd.com/doc/239850440
`
Simple Square Foot Gardening for Schools - Teacher Guide
http://scribd.com/doc/239851110
The document is a community gardening manual created by Toronto Community Housing. It provides information and guidance for starting and maintaining community gardens on Toronto Community Housing properties. It covers topics such as the basic steps for starting a garden, garden tools, protecting the garden, harvest calendars, and obtaining support from Toronto Community Housing and external partners. The manual aims to promote community gardening and its associated benefits, such as bringing people together, providing healthy food, and engaging youth.
Growing in Confidence - The Organic Centre
`
For more information, Please see websites below:
`
Organic Edible Schoolyards & Gardening with Children
http://scribd.com/doc/239851214
`
Double Food Production from your School Garden with Organic Tech
http://scribd.com/doc/239851079
`
Free School Gardening Art Posters
http://scribd.com/doc/239851159`
`
Increase Food Production with Companion Planting in your School Garden
http://scribd.com/doc/239851159
`
Healthy Foods Dramatically Improves Student Academic Success
http://scribd.com/doc/239851348
`
City Chickens for your Organic School Garden
http://scribd.com/doc/239850440
`
Simple Square Foot Gardening for Schools - Teacher Guide
http://scribd.com/doc/239851110
Pishin - Integrated Development Visionzubeditufail
The document summarizes Pishin District's Integrated District Development Vision, which was developed through extensive consultation with local stakeholders to outline a development strategy. The vision addresses key issues like education, health, natural resource management, agriculture, poverty alleviation, and disaster risk reduction. It found that while enrollment has increased, education quality and infrastructure need improvement. Health indicators are below provincial averages and health infrastructure and staffing are insufficient. Natural resources require improved management and conservation efforts. The strategy proposes integrated actions across sectors to achieve equitable and sustainable development in the district by 2030.
Ziarat - Integrated Development Visionzubeditufail
The document presents an integrated development vision for Ziarat district in Pakistan that was developed through extensive consultation. It outlines priorities and strategies for social sectors like education and health, natural resource management, agriculture, livelihoods, and poverty reduction over the long term. The vision aims to guide sustainable development, equity, participation, transparency, and responsiveness to citizens in line with national development goals.
Healthy Families Healthy Forests_CI's PHE end of project report articleMarcelino Jr. Viernes
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Listening to the Earth: An Environmental Audit For Benedictine Communities
1. LISTENING
TO THE EARTH
An Environmental Audit
For Benedictine Communities
by
Benedictine Sisters of Erie, Pennsylvania
at Lake Erie-Allegheny Earth Force
2. About the authors:
This Environmental Audit for Benedictine Communities in Central and South
America was prepared under the direction of members of the Benedictine Sisters
of Erie, PA whose work with Earth Force, Inc. gives expression to the
Community’s commitment to Ecological Stewardship.
Principal author, William L. Bartlett, graduated from Edinboro University of
Pennsylvania with Bachelor’s degrees in Philosophy and Mathematics; he has
been an advocate for environmental protection and human rights through his
work with various non-profit making organisations. Presently he is preparing to
spend a year serving as an Americorps volunteer working with Lake Erie-
Allegheny Earth Force, where he will continue to work with groups of youth
trying to implement sustainable changes in their communities. He remains very
grateful for the Benedictine community of Erie, and for his beautiful son who
was born during the preparation of this manual.
Annette Marshall, OSB has served as Director of Administration for the
Western Pennsylvania (USA) branch of Earth Force* since 1997. After twenty-
five years as teacher and school administrator in Catholic elementary and high
schools, she now enjoys sharing her love for nature and her commitment to
developing the next generation of civic leaders with school teachers
and youth leaders.
Pat Lupo, OSB has served as Program Director for the Western Pennsylvania
(USA) branch of Earth Force since 1997. Daily through the education of
teachers and students and in her personal commitment to local, state, national
and bi-national boards, Pat models responsible citizenship
and environmental stewardship.
Margarita Dangel, OSB has served as Education Director for the Western
Pennsylvania (USA) branch of Earth Force since 1997. Her position as a
summer camp director and assistant for environmental education at the
Benedictine owned center prepared her in many ways to guide youth and
educators to become actively involved in their community. Her goal is to help
young people realize that they are really needed in their community and that
they can contribute to finding solutions to environmental problems.
* www.earthforce.org/section/offices/lea
Cover image: “Web of Life” painting by Daniel Fallshaw
www.artofcreation.co.uk.
3. LISTENING
TO THE EARTH
An Environmental Audit
for Benedictine Communities
by
William L Bartlett
Margarita Dangel OSB
Pat Lupo OSB
Annette Marshall OSB
Lake Erie-Allegheny Earth Force, Erie, PA, USA
11. Foreword
A Benedictine Consciousness
Whose Time Has Come—Again
by Joan D. Chittister OSB
f you are wondering why you are even considering such a thing as an ‘environmental audit’ in
I a life that seems so removed from such processes, consider the time in which you live.
There are two moments in history when Benedictinism has been needed in a very special way:
the first was in the 6th century; the second is now.
In the 6th century, Europe was reeling from the loss of civil order and the breakdown of
agrarian communities. Farm lands lay in ruin from the movement of foreign invaders across
Europe, trade routes were unsafe with the loss of the Roman Legions and the countryside was left
overgrown and in ruins.
To that sorry state, Benedictinism brought a new system of order, a new pattern of life, a new
commitment to the land and to life. Almost 700 years later, Cistercian groups again devoted
themselves to the reforestation, the replanting and the reclamation of some of the worst land in
Europe.
As a result of those conscious efforts, Europe became a garden again. Life thrived. People
organized themselves into productive communities. Agriculture flourished everywhere.
Now, in this last century, our own century, after over 100 years of erosion, pollution, and the
diminishment of natural resources by most unnatural means, the whole world is becoming alert
to the relationship between the gift of creation and sins against creation again.
The garden we were given to live in as a people, we have failed to tend. The solemn
commitment we made as a species to steward the fruits of the earth we have failed to honor.
On the contrary. We have all taken it for granted, even while it was being plundered right in
front of our eyes.
The industrial revolution that made the robber barons rich also made the globe poor: We
poisoned our fresh waters and drowned them in tin cans and coffee cups. We wasted our forests
and drained the world of their medicinal herbs. We turned farmland into grazing land to make
cheap hamburgers and so denied the people of the land, the very land they needed to live. We
belched gasses into the atmosphere till people died from the lack of fresh air. We saturated our
farmlands with chemicals which, in the end, ironically, bled them dry of nutrients. We stripped
the globe of whole species of animals. We dealt carelessly, recklessly, heedlessly and arrogantly
with the very resources that sustained us.
Now, we find ourselves locked in mortal struggle between those who are trying to redeem those
resources and those who are simply committed to making even more quick money on what’s left
of them. We find ourselves faced with those whose philosophy of life is “after me the deluge,”—
who use what’s available without restraint and leave the problem of scarcity to generations to
come—and those who simply fail to understand the magnitude of the problem and so go on
blindly, using what we should be saving, destroying what we cannot do without.
Time is of the essence; the future is at stake. We are choosing between a philosophy of
consumption that gobbles up the world for its own satisfaction and a philosophy of co-creation
that is committed to preserving natural resources for the sake of those to come.
vii
12. Listening To The Earth
We are choosing now between those who are willing to drain the present for the sake of
personal gratification and those who, loving the present, love it enough to preserve its richness
for the sake of the future, as well.
Clearly the whole world needs Benedictinism again, needs a mindset that cares for the tools of
life “as if they were vessels of the altar.” We need a sense of balance, of enoughness, of
stewardship and a sense of the eternal presence of God. We need a life lived in harmony with the
seasons, the sun, the self and the other.
For Benedictines, an environmental audit is not a fad. It is not a social nicety. It is certainly
not an option. It is simply a contemporary manifestation of an ancient commitment to the
rhythm of the earth, the needs of the community and the God of Creation.
Congratulations to those who see its sacramental value, its claim to the Benedictine heart.
They shall be called blessed for centuries to come, just as our ancestors before us.
viii
13. Preface
About This Manual
Intentions municipality, or town is implied, the word
“community” will be qualified with adjectives such
his manual was assembled specifically for as “larger” or “greater.”
T Benedictine religious communities in the
Latin American and Caribbean (LAC)
region. Nevertheless, the majority of the manual’s
Premises
content can easily be applied to any population, The following controversial presumptions underlie
especially those living in the LAC region. While the content of this manual:
most of the explanatory text focuses on the
conditions of the LAC region, the main 1) That a respect for Creation, or reverence for
environmental principles that underlie the the environment to which we are
regional—specific information are applicable to intrinsically connected, is an essential
any region of the world. It was intended that this spiritual attitude.
manual be as broad as possible, give attention to 2) That industries, governments, and
both rural and urban environments, but address municipal operations (like water suppliers,
only those issues that can be affected by the trash haulers, etc) should be operated in a
actions of ordinary citizens. transparent and democratic manner; that is,
The main intentions of this manual are to (1) that citizens should both be able to know
educate the reader about environmental problems how a system is operating and be able to
and crises being faced by the world’s populations directly influence the operation.
today, (2) to provide the communities that utilize 3) Best practices are those that minimize or
the manual with a means of assessing how their eliminate adverse environmental impacts.
daily practices may contribute to these problems, 4) That despite the enormity of the
and (3) offer ideas and resources regarding better environmental problems being faced—
practices. which are often large enough and serious
Thus, each subject area consists of three enough to be called crises—there is still
segments: an introduction, an inventory, and an hope that future generations may still live
evaluation. The introductions provide background on this earth, and thus that actions we take
information about the subjects at hand, including today can make a difference.
the scope and importance of the problems, and
how individuals’ actions contribute to the Guidance for using this manual
problems. The inventories, then, are series of
questions which are suggested approaches to For ease of understanding, it is recommended that
inventorying the behaviors of community the introductory material—contained in the
members. Lastly, each suggested inventory is Preface and Introduction—is read in its entirety
followed by an evaluation section that provides before reading the main text. It should be noted
more information specific to the questions asked in that the chapters in the main text are not
the inventory sections. organized in a chronological or methodological
order; that is to say that the chapters may be used
Terminology in any order. The last chapter, “Developing an
Action Plan,” is intended to help guide
Since this manual was written specifically for communities into a decision making and action
religious communities, throughout the work, the planning process after conducting one or more
word “community” will often be used. When the inventories. Thus, this chapter can be read as soon
word is left unqualified, it may be assumed that the as the community is ready to take action. The
referent of the word is your religious, or intentional resources found in the appendix can be used
community. If the larger population of a barrio, throughout the process. It is recommended that
ix
14. Listening To The Earth
you review the appendix before beginning the work thus the entirety of available Spanish
of the audit so that you may be familiar with the literature was not utilized, with very few
resources available to you in your work. exceptions.
As mentioned before, each chapter begins with 2) The inventories are intended to analyze the
an introduction section that provides background practices that are shared in a general way
information about the subject at hand. Following by the population of the LAC region. As
the introduction are one or more assessments such, they do not adequately account for
which focus upon a particular set of practices. The the vast diversity of living conditions
assessments will vary in their applicability to an encountered throughout this region. Thus,
individual community’s characteristics, and a each inventory can at best be considered a
community can choose which assessments it will suggested list of questions to ask. This work
perform. Nevertheless, it is recommended that an in no way can make a claim to provide a
entire chapter be read over completely before thorough analysis of a community’s total
making the decision, as some parts of an contribution to environmental pollution.
assessment may be found to apply even when most 3) The majority of entries provided in the
of it does not. appendix unfortunately assume that
internet connectivity is available. As well,
Content sources and acknowledgements there is an overabundance of English
resources.
This manual was mainly edited in the United
States by an English speaking editor. It was Nevertheless, the amount of information
composed primarily with resources publicly provided by numerous citizens, agencies,
available on the Internet, and all attempts have industries, and governments around the world that
been made to acknowledge the actual sources used. is pertinent to the environment of LAC is truly
(See the Endnotes.) amazing and beautiful. Much gratitude is given by
Given these characteristics, there are several the authors of this manual to all those working
weaknesses to the manual which suggest possible towards a sustainable future, especially those that
improvements. The three most important publish their material for the benefit of all
weaknesses, in the authors opinion are: humanity.
1) The resources used were written in English, Un otro mundo es posible!
x
15. Introduction
Steps to a Successful Environmental Program
ongratulations for your environmental Guidelines for Establishing a Successful
C stewardship! The very fact that you are
reading this publication is evidence that
your community has within it a seed for improving
Environmental Program
1. Create a team or committee to take charge
your community’s environmental practices. of the work of the Environmental Program.
Hopefully, like you, your religious community has In general, the best way to approach the
the will to live sustainably; nevertheless it takes implementation of an Environmental Program in
more than just will-power to achieve this, and the your community is to form a team that is
intention of this publication is to help you go responsible for carrying out the work of the audit,
further. assessing the results, producing ecological
In our present world, it is becoming ever more alternatives, and then helping the community to
important that communities adopt a sustainable implement the changes. Perhaps this work may
manner of life that is in harmony with nature and begin with one or more motivated individuals in
not opposed to it. Today, in all countries, we are your community who would like to increase the
facing the grievous effects of atmospheric environmental stewardship of your community, or
degradation, water pollution, and soil depletion. maybe it begins with a directive from above; but
Aside from upsetting the intricate balances found whatever provides the initial impetus for the
within God’s creation, we are now finding that project, it is important that there is an identifiable
chronic, debilitating, and often fatal, human head or executive member of the project. Besides
diseases are on the rise. And it is our day-to-day the executive member, it is important that
habits that make the greatest contribution to the representatives from each department or service
ongoing ecological devastation. branch of your community serve on the committee
To get the most out of this manual, it is (e.g. housekeeping, administration, grounds-
recommended that your community establish an keeping, ministries, etc…) Beyond this, any other
ongoing Environmental Program. An interested members of the community can
Environmental Program implies that there is a volunteer to serve on the committee.
team of people that are charged with the oversight
of community environmental practices. This team, Characteristics of an Environmental Program Team
or committee, ensures that your community’s • Leadership: Someone in charge and
practices are continually moving towards accountable for the Program
improving the relationship between your • Regular Communication: Hold regularly
community and the Earth. Hopefully, with the scheduled meetings to discuss progress and
resources found herein, you will be able to assess share new information or ideas
your community’s ecological impact, find policies • Recordkeeping: Record meetings,
and practices that need to be changed, and gain discussions, and progress
ideas for more sustainable alternatives. The goal of • Shared vision: Develop and share a vision
a successful Environmental Program is to change of what your community will look like at
your community’s practices in a permanent the height of ecological stewardship.
manner. This requires thoughtful analysis, • Consensus: Cooperative decision-making to
evaluation, and planning by a dedicated ensure a unified orientation
committee. • Longevity: Maintain the Program’s team to
continue progress
1
16. Listening To The Earth
The committee should begin by establishing present your findings to the community at large for
common ground by agreeing to fundamental their input in prioritizing. Practices that were
principles that will guide the work of the program found to be critically important or dangerous
(e.g. a respect for Creation), and then extrapolating should, of course, be addressed first if possible.
these principles into a shared vision of what your
community could achieve someday if it were to Once your team has assessed your community’s
realize all these principles in everyday practices. present practices, has established relationships
with people or agencies that can further your
2. Community Environmental Inventory understanding of issues and alternatives, and has
The next major task of the team is to identify your established priorities, you are ready to give serious
community’s environmental problems or threats consideration to alternative courses of action and
and related community information, including its their potential consequences. Your team should
strengths. This is the step where your team gains develop a list of alternatives solutions to any one
awareness and creates visions: i.e. seeing “what is” problem. In creating this list, the rationale,
and “what can be” more clearly, in terms of beneficial impacts, expected difficulties, costs, and
environmental risks and sustainable development. measurability of each alternative should be
This is the step in which the chapters that follow included for analysis. Once this list is generated
can be utilized most effectively. your team may wish to consult with the entire
In addition, it is recommended that you community and/or outside experts, for help in
identify and analyze relevant public and private deciding which alternative to choose.
policies in addition to your community’s policies
and practices. Examine who makes policy and how, Characteristics of a Reasonable Option for Action
and strive to understand different perspectives on • Compatible with the overall program goals
issues. • Acceptable to those who will work to
In using this manual, it may be helpful to achieve them
choose to work on only one section, or • Understandable by everyone
environmental topic, at a time. Several of the • Motivational to encourage participation of
assessments included in this manual are fairly entire community
involved, and so several problems may be • Achievable with a reasonable amount of
identified within one assessment. Thus, to prevent effort
being overwhelmed by data, problems, and • Measurable over time
options, it may be a good idea to limit your team’s
focus to one area until your team feels that it has 5. Taking Action
the capacity to move onward. Once your team has decided what it needs to do,
an action plan needs be developed and
3. Forging partnerships implemented. This plan should include the
As you conduct your inventory, you will have specifics regarding how to acquire and mobilize the
several opportunities to create relationships with resources necessary for success, and a deadline
experts, industries, and government officials. It is established. A budget may need to be created, and
important to establish productive relationships funding secured. The plan should include how to
and working alliances with these people whenever effectively communicate the change to other
possible. These relationships provide a means of community members. As well, the means of
increasing your team’s knowledge, experience, and assessing the action’s success should be developed.
power. Thus, these partnerships can enhance your With all this accomplished, the action plan should
ability to effect change not only within your be executed and the results measured over time.
religious community, but also throughout the
larger community. 6. Looking Back and Ahead
Periodically, especially after an action plan has
4. Setting Priorities and Evaluating Options been executed, the Environmental Program team
Generally, the results of your audit identify several should reflect upon and assess the Program itself.
areas that could be improved, but changing them Identify successes and failures, strengths and
all at once is impractical. Thus, it is important to weaknesses, difficulties and examples of efficient
prioritize your findings, and possibly even to functioning. The overall progress and effectiveness
2
17. Introduction
of actions taken should be assessed. It is important
to address the problems identified with the
Program, but it is equally important to celebrate its
successes!
The goal of this reflection period is to update
the Program with your learned experiences, and to
identify the next steps to take to continue moving
your community toward sustainability.
3
19. Chapter 1
Benedictine Life and Ministries
Environmental Stewardship in are telling us is that our planetary life-support
system is in danger—and that it needn’t be, if we
Benedictine Life: Assessment take perfectly feasible steps to protect it.”
n the past 1500 years, Benedictines have held Environmentalists around the globe are calling for
I Environmental Stewardship as an essential,
defining value. It is an explicit policy of most
Benedictine monasteries and communities
action on behalf of the planet. As earth citizens we
have a responsibility to respond. As Benedictines
we have a responsibility to help create a new vision
worldwide to apply environmental stewardship for our planet by applying 1500 years of lived
principles to their land, buildings and work. This community experience to the new realities facing
section of the Environmental Inventory is designed us. “When looking back at Benedict of Nursia and
to examine the extent to which your community his legacy,” McCarthy, OSB, offers, “humility
embraces this core value, grows in its emerges as the primary gift that Benedictines can
understanding of environmental responsibility, and offer a new millennium: a gift that will give
expresses it in prayer, ministry and community life. positive shape to the human relationship with all
The Earth Charter, forged at The Council for a the cosmos.” Humility helps us recognize that as
Parliament of the World’s Religions in 1993, human beings we are not outside or above the
challenges all of us: “We stand at a critical moment community of life. As spoken by Native American
in Earth’s history, a time when humanity must choose Chief Seattle, “We have not woven the web of life;
its future. As the world becomes increasingly we are but a strand within it.” We depend on the
interdependent and fragile, the future at once holds whole for our very existence.
great peril and great promise… The choice is ours: Today, we are challenged to extend the
form a global partnership to care for the Earth and one traditional Benedictine value of stewardship by
another or risk the destruction of ourselves and the abandoning dominance and embracing inter-
diversity of life. Fundamental changes are needed in dependence. We must recognize that our care for
our values, institutions, and ways of living.” the earth extends far beyond this time and place.
Just as our understanding of the universe in Native peoples of the Americas have long taught us
which we live and the interrelatedness of all of to evaluate all that we do in light of “the seventh
nature has been stretched and deepened by recent generation.” That is, our actions today must be
cosmological discoveries, stewardship needs to be viewed in terms of how they will affect those to be
stretched to recognize the co-dependence that we born seven generations from now.
share with the rest of the natural world. Anne Sustainability, meeting the needs of the present
McCarthy, OSB, writes, “Stewardship assumes a without compromising the ability of future
relationship in which the human is dominant: generations to meet their own needs, is a call to
primary, central, the superior species responsible justice. Sustainable living is an approach to social
for all other lesser species. This essential and economic, indeed, all activities, for all
dominance, even if a very benevolent, responsible societies, rich and poor, which is compatible with
dominance is being critiqued in our day as the preservation of the environment. It is based on
troubling at best and destructive at worst.” a philosophy of interdependence, of respect for life
Humans were not placed on the earth to dominate. as well as non-living parts of Nature, and of
Rather, humans are one of many species sharing responsibility for future generations.
this earth, part of a vast web. If humans are to
prosper, so must the entire web. Principles for sustainable living include:
We are living in a time when the ability of the • respect and care for the community of life
earth to support future generations has been called • improve the quality of human life
into serious question. Donnella Meadows explains, • conserve the Earth’s vitality and diversity
“What the scientists and now also the economists • minimize the depletion of non-renewable resources
5
20. Listening To The Earth
• keep within the Earth’s carrying capacity community ministry locations?
• change personal attitudes and practices 123456789
• enable communities to care for their own
environments To what extent does the community include an
• provide a national framework for integrating understanding of sustainable living practices as part of
environment and conservation its education/expectation of employees working in its
• create a global alliance ministries?
Caring for the Earth: A Strategy for Sustainable Living, 123456789
WCU/UNEP/WWF
If your community offers retreats, to what extent is
As we look to this section of the audit, we do so attention given to the relationship between humans and
knowing that today’s call to Benedictine the cosmos, between humanity and the earth?
Stewardship is a call to sustainable living. If we 123456789
hold stewardship as a core value in our lives, it will
not be assigned to a segment of life; it will Is your community involved in teaching?
permeate what we think and how we pray, minister Yes / No
and live together in community.
If so, to what extent does it recognize the need for
ongoing environmental education and training for itself
and all those engaged in religious instruction?
Environmental Stewardship in 123456789
Benedictine Life: Inventory
To what extent does it promote environmental education
(please answer where relevant according to the following within its schools/ organizations, especially among youth
numerical gradation: 1 = not at all, 9 = to a great and children?
extent) 123456789
To what extent does it pursue peacemaking as an
1. Prayer and Liturgy essential component of conservation action?
123456789
To what extent does the community use songs/hymns,
readings, and/or symbols during Community Prayer In its ministry of hospitality, to what extent does the
that call attention to creation? community model the use of sustainable practices and
123456789 promote these for guests?
123456789
To what extent does the community include reflection on
stewardship, sustainability, creation, responsible living, 3. Community Policy
etc. in its communal prayer?
123456789 To what extent does the Community believe that
sustaining environmental life systems is a religious
To what extent does the community celebrate special duty?
days/ observances that give attention to the universal 123456789
call to care for the earth? (i.e. Earth Day)
123456789 To what extent do community members implement
individual and communal actions on behalf of
To what extent does the community promote the use of sustainable living?
reflection materials that encourage ongoing development 123456789
of ecological values?
123456789 Has the community committed itself to sustainable
practices through the development of a community
2. Ministries policy, expression in a corporate commitment or mission
statement, and/or publication of a position paper?
To what extent are sustainability practices promoted in Yes / No
6
21. Chapter 1: Benedictine Life and Ministries
4. Community Leadership Environmental Stewardship in
Benedictine Life: Evaluation
To what extent does the Community Leadership
emphasize env-ironmental issues in teaching and At the end of each discussion section, there will be
guidance to the community? statements and a list of numbers from which to choose.
123456789 Choose a number from 1-9 to indicate your assessment
of how well your community represents the statement
To what extent does the Community Leadership given. (1 = disagree, community practices unhealthy; 9
recognize the need for ongoing environmental education = agree completely, no change needed)
and training for themselves and for community
members? 1. Prayer and Liturgy
123456789
As prayer and liturgy are the central expression of
Has the Community Leadership called for a self-review a religious community’s intentionality, these
and auditing process on conservation issues and its elements can be the most powerful means of
renewal on a regular basis? expressing and reinforcing your community’s core
Yes / No values. The content of your community’s liturgical
life serves as a profound teaching opportunity, as it
5. Community Resource Management raises the awareness of the praying community and
helps to strengthen the members’ commitment to
If the community sponsors events/gatherings, to what the values expressed. Hence, if environmental
extent does the planning include attention to sustainable sustainability is indeed a core value of your
practices such as purchasing locally grown food, avoiding community, it should find expression in prayer and
excessive use of paper products, recycling, use of green liturgy.
products or services, mass transportation? If, on the other hand, your community does not
123456789 include environmental consciousness in its prayer
life, you should determine why. Is it the case that
To what extent is the community involved in sustainable environmental stewardship is not a shared value of
food production and consumption? your community? Is it a value that is simply
123456789 unexpressed for lack of knowledge or resources? Or
does the absence of inclusion reveal a division
To what extent does the community encourage within your community regarding this value? Each
sustainable land use practices such as organic food reason has its own set of possible solutions, and
production, pesticide/herbicide reduction, habitat God’s inspiration should be sought to help guide
protection, maintaining green zones and/or use of land your efforts in uniting your community to accept
for the poor? and express the importance of environmental
123456789 sustainability in this most important aspect of
your community life.
6. Investments Consult the references listed at the end of this
chapter for resources on incorporating
To what extent does the community use investment environmental consciousness into your
criteria that promote ecological principals? community’s prayer life.
123456789
To what extent does the Community incorporate
To what extent does the community use fair trade environmental consciousness into its prayer life?
practices devoid of financial, economic and political 123456789
exploitation?
123456789 2. Ministries
Ministries are the most direct way that your
community can express its commitments and
values to the greater community. As such, they can
be the most powerful means of demonstrating
7
22. Listening To The Earth
leadership through example. Whether your greater chance that the policies may not be realized
community expresses its service through in everyday practice. Leaders play a tremendous
education, spirituality programs, providing food or role in unifying and influencing the actions of the
other alms to the poor, or other ministry, the community since they are ultimately responsible
deeply held values of your community are for executing community decisions. Thus it is
naturally expressed both by the content and important that your community’s commitment to
structure of the ministry itself, and by the actions environmental stewardship be reflected in the
of the individuals delivering the ministry. Thus, it communications and decisions made by the
is important that your community ministries are community leadership. The leader(s) of the
informed by agreed upon principles, including community should see to it that sustainable
environmental stewardship. Environmental principles are realized in ministries, liturgy, and
stewardship can be expressed in any ministry. educational activities, as well as in the
Your community’s ministries should exemplify administrative, fiscal, and domestic affairs of the
environmentally sustainable practices and respect community. It is suggested that a permanent
for Creation to the greatest extent possible. All committee should exist to continually review the
those engaged in ministerial activities should be sustainable practices of all community affairs, to be
educated about both the importance of sustainable responsible for educating the rest of the
practices, as well as ways in which they can community regarding environmentally conscious
exemplify these in their ministry. A deep respect practices, and to regularly update the leadership on
for Creation should be modeled in all activities. developments.
The resources found at the end of this chapter
may be helpful in improving the Earth- To what extent does the Community’s leadership give
centeredness of your ministries. expression to environmental consciousness?
123456789
To what extent does the Community incorporate
environmental consciousness into its ministries? 5. Resource Management
123456789
The keystone to environmental sustainability is
3. Community Policy the proper management of resources. Thus, to
express its commitment to sustainable principles,
The practices of individual members of your your community should definitely manage its own
community are ultimately the true expression of resources in the most sustainable manner possible.
your community’s environmental stewardship; Community resources include the property,
however, having policies in place which inform and buildings, equipment, and other commodities
guide the actions of community members helps to owned by the community. Buildings, properties,
unify and clarify the community intentions and and community events should be managed in a
values. Furthermore, having policies in place way that minimizes the impact on the
provides the opportunity to hold community environment.
members accountable for their actions. Thus, it is The following chapters of this manual were
important that your community adopt policies to designed to more closely examine how well your
strengthen and inform each member’s community incorporates sustainable practices into
commitment to environmental stewardship. its resource management.
To what extent does the Community incorporate To what extent does the Community incorporate
environmental consciousness into its community policy? environmental consciousness into resource management?
123456789 123456789
4. Leadership 6. Investments
Even if your community has policies regarding While it is certainly the intention of investment to
environmental stewardship and/or sustainability maximize the return, doing so without regard to
practices, without the support and espousal of what or who is being invested in is nothing short of
these by the community leadership, there is a irresponsible. Investments should be made in line
8
23. Chapter 1: Benedictine Life and Ministries
with community principles. Investing money is If you found areas of your community life that could be
simply a way of encouraging those who receive your improved in regard to environmental stewardship and
investment to succeed so that you can profit as sustainability, list them below:
well. Hence to realize your community’s
commitment to environmental sustainability, the Category (I-III)
environmental record of potential investments Issue 1
(companies and funds) should be reviewed before
your community makes the decision to invest. Or,
if there are already standing investments, these
should be audited in the same way and adjustments
made if deemed necessary. In addition, if your
community does own stock in a company with
questionable practices, you can exercise your rights Issue 2
as stockholders to bring attention to these issues at
stockholder meetings, or directly influence
company decisions if the company is small enough
or your position large enough.
To what extent does the Community incorporate Issue 3
environmental consciousness into its investments?
123456789
Conclusions
Issue 4
Now enter the scores from each section in the
column on the right:
score
1 Prayer and Liturgy
2 Ministries
Now categorize each issue listed above into one of
3 Community Policy the following three categories:
4 Community Leadership I = Most important. Should be addressed immediately
II = Important, but does not demand immediate
5 Community Resource Management attention. Must be addressed
III = Current practice should be improved, but is not
6 Investments immediately important
9
24. Listening To The Earth
Acknowledgements for Chapter 1 Berry, 1999, Bell Tower NY. Dedicated to all children,
the book calls us to experience creation as a source of
The information contained in this chapter has been adapted from the wonder and delight. We are urged to move into the
following sources: future making use of the four-fold wisdom available (of
Caring for the Earth: A Strategy for Sustainable Living,
indigenous peoples, of women, of classical traditions
World Conservation Union, United Nations and of science), using this moment of grace to
Environmental Program and World Wildlife Fund, transform this cenozoic era into the ecozoic.
Geneva, Switzerland, 1980 Voices of Hope in the Struggle to Save the Planet, by
The Earth Charter: A Religious perspective, in A Source
Marjorie Hope and James Young, 2000, ApexPress,
Book for the Community of Religions, Joel Beversluis, Council on International and Public Affairs, Inc., 777
International Coordinating Committee on Religion and United Nations Plaza, Ste. 3C, New York NY 10017;
the Earth, ed. Chicago: The Council for a Parliament of 800/316-2739. Beginning with the prophetic voice of
the World’s Religions. 1993, Preamble. Thomas Berry, the book continues with the lives and
ideas of key spiritual leaders in Judaism, western and
A Humble Stance: Benedictines’ Gift to the eastern Christianity, Islam, Buddhism, Taoism, Shinto,
Cosmos, McCarthy, Anne, OSB. American Benedictine and faiths of Native Americans and two other
Review, Volume 58, 2nd edition. p. 52. indigenous peoples.
Expert Statements Worth Paying Attention To, The Environmental Books for Children. All available from
Global Citizen, Meadows, Donella, www.sustainer.org, Wordsworth, a publishing service. Write for catalogue
Sustainability Institute, Hartland, VT to Wordsworth, 702 NE 24th St. Newton KS 67114,
(316) 283-6708.
Resources for Chapter 1 Ecology and the Jewish Spirit: Where Nature and the
Sacred Meet, edited by Ellen Bernstein, Jewish Lights
Internet Resources Publishing, Sunset Farm Offices, Rte.4, PO Box 237,
Woodstock, VT 05091; 800-962-4544. The first book
Alliance of Religions and Conservation: in the emerging field of religion and environment to
www.arcworld.org. ARC is a secular body that helps the reflect a Jewish ecological perspective.
major religions of the world to develop their own
environmental programs, based on their own core Ecology and Religion: Scientists Speak, John E. Carroll
teachings, beliefs and practices. The web site contains and Keith Warner, OFM, editors, 2000, Franciscan
several resources, both online and available in print. Press, Quincy University, Quincy IL 62301; 217/228-
5670; www.quincy.edu/press. An interfaith group of
Catholic Conservation Center: religious scientists articulate their understanding of the
http://conservation.catholic.org/ Available en español. relationship between religion and ecology. The book
This site contains several resources on incorporating challenges the various faith communities to address the
environmental consciousness into Catholic life. environment as a legitimate religious concern.
National Catholic Rural Life Conference: Peace with God the Creator, Peace with All Creation, a
http://www.ncrlc.com/ The NCRLC is is a membership resource packet of the US Catholic bishops’ Renewing
organization grounded in a spiritual tradition that the Earth program, includes homily helps; articles on
brings together the Church, care of community and ecological spirituality, environmental hazards, the good
care of creation. Their website contains a variety of life and the problem of consumption; guidelines to
information on environmental topics, particularly of integrate environmental education into responsibilities
interest to agricultural congregations. of parish committees; environmental justice resources,
Earth Ministry/ Caring for Creation: and much more. Available from Environmental Justice
http://www.earthministry.org/ The mission of Earth Program, US Catholic Conference, 3211 Fourth St.
Ministry is to inspire and mobilize the Christian NE, Washington DC 20078, 800/235-8722.
Community to play a leadership role in building a just Love of Nature and Environmental Activism: Danger or
and sustainable future. (In English only.) There are Duty for Christians, by Paul Hansen, available from
several resources available here, including a 225 page Hansen, 2899 Agoura Rd., West Lake Village CA
handbook of their own. 91361; 805/498-6066. A helpful booklet for Christians
EcoCongregation: working with Christians who are new to, or opposed to,
www.ecocongregation.org/ Based in Europe, earthkeeping.
EcoCongregation offers an ecumenical toolkit that Discovering Your Life-Place: A First Bioregional
encourages churches to weave creation care into their Workbook, by Peter Berg, Planet Drum Foundation,
life and mission. They also provide an environmental 1998. Leads readers to a new appreciation of their
audit manual with several modules. bioregion through practical, hands-on map-making
Print Resources (in English) exercises, for rural or urban areas, all ages. Order from
Embracing Earth: Catholic Approaches to Ecology, by Planet Drum Foundation, PO Box 31251, San
Albert J. LaChance and John E. Carroll,editors, Francisco CA 94131; 415/ 285-6556;
1994,Orbis Books, Maryknoll NY, 800/258-5838. planetdrum@igc.org.
Collection of seminal contributions by contemporary Ministering with the Earth, by Mary Elizabeth Moore
Catholic writers. Besides the editors, authors include: ($20), 1998, Chalice Press, St. Louis MO. Stories and
Thomas Berry CP; Miriam Therese MacGillis, theological discussion view the Earth as a sacred
Frederich G. Levine, David Toolan SJ, Mary Rosera creation of God in which we participate in a covenantal
Joyce, and more. relationship. Using the metaphor of quilt making, the
The Great Work: Our Way into the Future, by Thomas author challenges us to orient our spiritual life and
ministry in partnership with (rather than caring for)
10
25. Chapter 1: Benedictine Life and Ministries
the Earth. Appendix includes a retreat design “Quilting different religious perspectives, explore ways to respond
a life in Relation to God and to God’s Creation.” to the environment as the spiritual issue of our time.
Holy Ground: A Resource on Faith and the Ecotherapy: Healing Ourselves, Healing the Earth, by
Environment ($5) 1997, by Sojourners, 2401 15th St. Howard Clinebell, Ph D, The Haworth Press, 1996; 10
NW, Washington DC 20009; 800/714-7474. Study Alice St., Binghamton NY 13904. Clinebell brings
guide for four sessions – Covenant with Creation; together long overlooked issues at the boundary
Systems of Environmental Degradation; Environmental between human health and the health of the natural
Racism; Justice and Living Rightly with the Earth; environment; plus theories and methods of ecological
writings, resources, activities and discussion questions. diagnosis, treatment and education.
Forty Nights; Creation Centered Night Prayer, by Divided Planet: The Ecology of Rich and Poor, by Tom
Daniel J. McGill, Paulist Press, 997 Macarthur Blvd., Athanasiou ($24.95), Little Brown, New York, 1996. A
Mahwah NJ 07430, (201/ 825-7300) 1994. Blending challenging analysis of social and economic conditions
ecology and ecumenism, these prayers are the author’s of the ecological crisis. A call to institute the radical
personal response to the spiritual and intellectual social and economic changes required to shift the
transformation of our age. Each of the 40 prayer priorities of the New World Order with its ever
services may be used alone or with responses from a widening gap between rich and poor.
community. Women and the Environment, by Annabel Rodda,
Celebrating the Earth, by Scott McCarthy, 1998 1991, United Nations Publications, 2 UN Plaza, Room
Resource Publications, Inc., 160 E. Virginia St., San DC2-853, Dept.COO3, New York NY 10017, 800/253-
Jose CA 95112; 408/286-8505. An earth-centered 9646. Focusing on women’s roles as users, producers
theology of worship with blessings, prayers and rituals and managers of the earth’s resources, the book
that link Christian spirituality with the natural cycles explains all the major environmental issues and reveals
and patterns of earth. how women can be a major force for environmental
Ponderings From the Precipice: Soulwork for the New change. Includes a glossary of environmental terms, a
Millennium, by James Conlon,1998 Forest of Peace guide to education and action, bibliography and
Publishing, 251 Muncie Rd., Leavenworth KS 66048; resource guide.
800/659-3227. Forty-eight short reflections intended as Your Health and the Environment: A Christian
companions for moments of meditation. Perspective, by Shantilal P. Bhagat, 1998, Eco-Justice
Nature, God and Pulpit by Elizabeth Achtemeier, 1992, Working Group of the National Council of Churches.
paperback, Eerdmans. Intended primarily for preachers, Each of 13 chapters provides a biblical anchor,
this book draws together and interprets all the biblical information, suggestions and. discussion questions.
materials dealing with the natural world and God’s Order from NCC Environmental Justice Resources,
relation to it. It also relates the materials to findings of 800/762-0968.
modern science. Caring for Creation: Reflections on the Biblical Basis of
The Greening of Faith: God, the Environment, and the Earthcare, by Lisa Lofland Gould, 1999, Friends
Good Life, John E. Carroll, Paul Brockelman, and Mary Committee on Unity with Nature, Burlington VT. Five
Westfall, editors, 1996, University Press of New chapters focus on Celebration, Humility, Connections,
England, University of New Hampshire 1995. Fifteen Right Relationship and Stewardship; study guide
philosophers, theologians and environmentalists, from included.802/658-0308
11
27. Chapter 2
Air Quality Assessment
Overview of Chapter: process efficiency and fuel type. Generally,
combustion results in the emission of complex
Air Pollution, Indoor and mixtures of gases, organic pollutants, metals, and
Outdoor fine particles.
As a result of our practices, indoor and outdoor
Air, Earth’s Sacred Gift environments are widely contaminated by
complex mixtures of combustion-derived gases
ir is our most precious resource, even and particles, and these pollutants create both
A though it is often taken for granted. All
living things need air to survive. Without
water a person cannot live for more than a couple
local and global human and environmental health
problems.
days, but without the oxygen found in air a person Definitions
would die within minutes. In fact, all animals and
even plants need air to survive. Unfortunately, In order to understand and communicate about
poor air quality, or polluted air, can be dangerous air pollution, it is quite helpful to know a little bit
to life. Air that contains human-produced about the most common air pollutants. These are
pollutants can and does kill plants, trees, and particulate matter (PM), oxides of nitrogen (NOX), oxides of
small organisms, and can cause extreme illness in sulpher (SOX), volatile organic compounds (VOCs), carbon
humans. It is up to us to become aware of and monoxide (CO), ozone (O3), carbon dioxide (CO2) and
change those practices of ours which contribute to chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs). These are not by any
the poisoning of the Earth’s atmosphere. means the only pollutants, but they are the most
common. Each is described below.
Combustion Particulate matter, or PM, is the term for particles
found in the air, including dust, dirt, soot, smoke,
The most common way that humans affect air and liquid droplets. Particles can be suspended in
quality is by burning different materials and fuels. the air for long periods of time. Some particles are
The process of burning is called combustion. large or dark enough to be seen as soot or smoke.
Combustion in its various forms is probably the Others are so small that individually they can only
main source of both indoor and outdoor air be detected with an electron microscope. They
pollution, and thus it will be mentioned come from a variety of sources such as cars, trucks,
frequently in this assessment. For this reason, it buses, factories, construction sites, tilled fields,
may be helpful to briefly describe combustion. unpaved roads, stone crushing, and burning of
The most obvious example of combustion is a wood. PM is usually categorized by the size of the
simple fire like those used for cooking or heating, particles; e.g. PM10= less than 10 microns,
burning refuse or cropland. However, internal PM2.5= particles up to 2.5 microns, etc.) In
combustion engines, like those used in general, the smaller the particles the more
automobiles, trucks, generators, tractors, as well dangerous they are to living tissue.
as other engines like those used in airplanes, or Carbon monoxide, or CO, is a colorless, odorless
those used in lawn care equipment also use gas that is formed when carbon in fuel is not
combustion for energy, and are very important burned completely. It is a component of motor
sources of pollution. Combustion of fuels (usually vehicle exhaust, and so higher levels of CO
oil, coal, or natural gas) is also used for the generally occur in areas with heavy traffic
production of electricity, as well as other industrial congestion. In cities, 85% to 95% of all CO
processes that require heat. emissions may come from motor vehicle exhaust.
Not only are combustion processes diverse, but Other sources of CO emissions include industrial
the by-products emitted by them vary with processes (such as metals processing and chemical
13
28. Listening To The Earth
manufacturing), residential wood burning, and dissolves in water vapor to form acid, and
natural sources such as forest fires. Woodstoves, precipitates as acid rain. SO2 interacts with other
gas stoves, cigarette smoke, unvented gas and gases and particles in the air to form sulfates and
kerosene space heaters are sources of CO indoors. other products that can be harmful to people and
The highest levels of CO in the outside air their environment.
typically occur during the colder months of the Over 65% of SO2 released to the air, or more
year when the air pollution becomes trapped near than 13 million tons per year, comes from electric
the ground beneath a layer of warm air (a process utilities, especially those that burn coal. Other
called inversion). sources of SO2 are industrial facilities that derive
Carbon dioxide (CO2) is also a pollutant, even their products from raw materials like metallic ore,
though it is an important natural component of coal, and crude oil, or that burn coal or oil to
the atmosphere. Plants need it to grow; thus, produce process heat. Examples are petroleum
vegetation removes CO2 from the air, and in turn refineries, cement manufacturing, and metal
provides us with the oxygen we need. CO2 is also processing facilities. Also, locomotives, large ships,
a product of all combustion reactions. Carbon and some nonroad diesel equipment currently
dioxide is not directly harmful to our health; burn high sulfur fuel and release SO2 emissions to
however, one important characteristic of CO2 is the air in large quantities.
that it is able to reflect heat back towards the Volatile Organic Compounds, or VOCs, is a general
earth. This process is called the ‘greenhouse term that covers a wide range of organic (i.e.
effect,’ and consequently, CO2 is called a carbon-containing) compounds. VOCs may result
‘greenhouse gas.’ When too much greenhouse gas from combustion processes, or from the
exists in the atmosphere, the temperature of the evaporation of gasoline, solvent, and other organic
earth begins to rise, and this can cause many compound vapors. VOCs (especially methane)
severe problems. Since this is occurring, CO2 is an contribute to global warming, and they react with
important pollutant to consider. (The greenhouse other pollutants to form ground level ozone. Some
effect and global warming will be discussed more VOCs are in and of themselves toxic and
fully below in the Outdoor Air Pollution section.) hazardous to human health. Sources of VOCs
Nitrogen oxides, or NOX, is the generic term for a include: paints, paint strippers, and other
group of highly reactive gases, all of which contain solvents; wood preservatives; aerosol sprays;
nitrogen and oxygen in varying amounts. Many of cleansers and disinfectants; moth repellents and
the nitrogen oxides are colorless and odorless. air fresheners; stored fuels and automotive
However, one common pollutant, nitrogen dioxide products.
(NO2) along with particles in the air can often be Finally, Chlorofluorocarbons, or CFCs are pollutants
seen as a reddish-brown layer over many urban that affect the amount of ozone found in the
areas. NOX gases can also dissolve in water; when upper levels of the atmosphere—called the ‘ozone
this occurs in the atmosphere, the NOX causes layer.’ The ozone layer is the important
acid rain. Furthermore, NOX react with other component of the Earth’s atmosphere that blocks
pollutants to create smog. Nitrogen oxides form dangerous radiation from hitting us on the
when fuel is burned at high temperatures, as in a ground. CFCs have been used extensively as
combustion process. The primary manmade refrigerants, aerosol propellants, and solvents, and
sources of NOX are motor vehicles, electric are also used in some industrial processes. Once
utilities, and other industrial, commercial, and CFCs enter the atmosphere, it takes a very long
residential sources that burn fuels. NOX can also time before they stop affecting the ozone layer.
be formed naturally. Thus, although their use and production has
Sulfur dioxide, or SO2, belongs to the family of dramatically declined on account of a successful
sulfur oxide gases (SOX). These gases dissolve international agreement, called the Montreal
easily in water. Sulfur is prevalent in all raw Protocol, it will be at least 100 years before their
materials, including crude oil, coal, and ore that effects on the ozone layer disappear because of
contains common metals like aluminum, copper, their long atmospheric lifetimes.
zinc, lead, and iron. SOX gases are formed when Opposite is a table which summarizes the
fuel containing sulfur, such as coal and oil, is information about these pollutants.
burned, and when gasoline is extracted from oil, or
metals are extracted from ore. Like NOX, SO2
14