spiralsheep: Flowers (skywardprodigal Cog Flowers)
[personal profile] spiralsheep
Source: evidence that humans had farms 30,000 years earlier than previously thought (@ arstechnica)

More: Amazon forest is the result of an 8,000 year experiment (@ arstechnica).

Evidence that humans had farms 30,000 years earlier than previously thought

Dramatic new hypothesis could change the way we understand human history.

by Annalee Newitz - 8/3/2017

It's an idea that could transform our understanding of how humans went from small bands of hunter-gatherers to farmers and urbanites. Until recently, anthropologists believed cities and farms emerged about 9,000 years ago in the Mediterranean and Middle East. But now a team of interdisciplinary researchers has gathered evidence showing how civilization as we know it may have emerged at the equator, in tropical forests. Not only that, but people started farming about 30,000 years earlier than we thought.

Full text of article for archiving purposes. )

film rec

Jan. 22nd, 2011 09:05 pm
buria_q: (Default)
[personal profile] buria_q

A Drop of Life by Shalini Kantayya



ETA: Trailer http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LZSCDnNn478

Synopsis:

"Set in the near future, A DROP OF LIFE is the story of two women, a village teacher in rural India and an African American corporate executive, whose disparate lives intersect when they are both confronted with lack of access to clean drinking water.

Mirabai, an impassioned schoolteacher, has left her urban lifestyle to teach in Kutch, Gujurat. When Mira witnesses growing illness among the village children after a pre-paid water meter is installed, she decides to take action.

Nia, an ambitious young African-American executive, represents the interests of Hydron, a Manhattan-based water corporation. Nia goes to this Indian village to demonstrate Hydron's new pilot project water pump that dispenses water with a swipe from a pre-paid credit card. When Nia finds herself in need of drinking water without a pre-paid card, both women must confront the horror of this system."


"The more I researched and read about water, the more I became convinced of the vice president of the World Bank's Ismail Serageldin's statement on the future of war. "If the wars of the twentieth century were fought over oil, the wars of the next century will be fought over water." I found the statistics alarming; between one-half and two-thirds of the world's population will not have access to drinking water by the year 2027.

The water meter in A DROP OF LIFE was originally created to illustrate a frightening future where water is the planet's most scarce natural resource. But then I learned that this frightening future, a world in which water is reserved for only those who can afford it, exists today. The science-fiction water meters I had imagined already exist in ten countries including South Africa, Brazil, and impoverished areas of the United States.

This "coincidence" has affirmed my belief that this story has the power to move, inspire, and mobilize people to act on this vital issue."

the_future_modernes: a yellow train making a turn on a bridge (Default)
[personal profile] the_future_modernes
via : racialicious:

The Earth is a Mosque: Ibrahim Abdul Matin in conversation with Imam Khalid Latif, December 2010

Two New York City Muslims discuss the Islamic imperative to care for the earth“In the midst of the drama around the mosque that’s being erected two blocks from Ground Zero,” wrote Ibrahim Abdul-Matin in the Daily Beast in August, “a few details have been left out that provide some clarity as to the purpose of this project. Specifically, the project will be the country’s first certified ‘green mosque,’ in full compliance with stringent LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) standards, which is why organizers have named the project Park51, rather than the oft-cited ‘Cordoba House.’”

If “green Islam”—or “green Any Religion”—sounds like an oxymoron, meet Ibrahim Abdul-Matin, author of Green Deen: What Islam Teaches About Protecting the Planet. Ibrahim is an environmental policy consultant who has worked with Green for All, Green City Force, Interfaith Leaders for Environmental Justice, the Prospect Park Alliance, and the New York City Mayor’s Office of Long Term Planning & Sustainability. And he believes that Islam calls on its followers to protect the earth, and always has.

To explore this, he spoke in November with Khalid Latif, Executive Director and Imam of the Islamic Center at NYU. In 2007, Mayor Bloomberg appointed Imam Latif to become the youngest chaplain of the New York City Police Department. He was named one of the world’s 500 most influential Muslims in 2010.

This conversation took place in New York City at Housing Works, a nonprofit bookstore, cafe, and event space that raises money to fight AIDS and homelessness. It has been edited for clarity and length


MORE


Read more... ) Got any more books, blogs, articles?
the_future_modernes: a yellow train making a turn on a bridge (Default)
[personal profile] the_future_modernes
ETA: Tell us in comments the books that you feel would blow our minds!!!


Alternet has 28 books that they aver will change the way you see the world, environmentally, at least. Most of which seem to be written economically privileged cis het white men. There is 1 possibly two white women in the bunch. And thats it. Fuck this shit. Honestly? The only book I want to read out of that bunch is the book about the Gaviotas community in Colombia. Here are a couple of articles and a book review: Gaviotas, Gaviotas: Village of Hope, Alan Weisman: Gaviotas: A Village to Reinvent the World.

But seriously. Where is Vandana Shiva, for instance? The woman is famous and prolific, and is a wellknown activist against food monoculture and various other environmental ills, so why the black out? Why are there no books about the environmental justice movement?

Repost from ecominded poc lj version: None of these resources have mind changing abilities?


Articles:

A Selection of African-American Environmental Heroes



Indigenous Environmental Justice Issues Enter the Global Ring





Books:




African American Environmental Thought: Foundations
To Love the Wind and the Rain:


African Americans and Environmental History



The Quest for Environmental Justice: Human Rights and the Politics of Pollution


New Perspectives on Environmental Justice: Gender, Sexuality, and Activism


All Our Relations: Native Struggles for Land and Life



Ecocide of Native America: Environmental Destruction of Indian Lands and Peoples



The Quest for Environmental Justice: Human Rights and the Politics of Pollution



Confronting Environmental Racism: Voices From the Grassroots



Just Transportation: Dismantling Race and Class Barriers to Mobility




How about the The Revolution will not be funded: Beyond the Non profit Induatrial Complex? That sure as hell blew my mind?

!Cochabamba!: Water War in Bolivia

How about Sistah Vegan, a look at how veganism can be considered in light of class and race? Then again, that might expose issues that could be just a little too uncomfortable for some!


Or Dam Nation Which sure as hell ripped my beliefs about dams and waterways and how waste is dealt with completely to bits.


And this stuff is just what came into my mind, you know? Its US-centric, I haven't read all of the stuff here unfortunately and I haven't been keeping up with enviro books so I am sure I missed a ton. But my argument is this, can we PLEASE stop having the enviro movement pretend that its only readers are middle to upper class white people? Cause they are actually the damn minority on this planet, and other stories need to be told, thank you very much!

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