Environmental Programs
at Merritt College
Environmental Management and Technology at Merritt College in Oakland, California
|
David R. Brower, Ronald V. Dellums Institute for Sustainable
Policy Studies
HISTORY
In 1969 the Berkeley Creators Association Educational Foundation (BCAEF) was
formed to support independent artists, artisans, and the environment. BCAEF
operated a Sierra Backpacking Camp which inspired a series of feature articles,
"Conservation, a Matter of the Spirit"; and "Conversations About Peace"; in the Sierra
Club Yodeler. These led to BCAEF initiating the Nobel Peace Prize nomination by
Congressman Ron Dellums for the late environmental leader Dave Brower.
The Institute for Sustainable Policy Studies grew out of the 1980 Berkeley Lectures on
the Concepts of Peace. The Berkeley Lectures were conceived at BCAEF and hosted
by Vista College at the University of California. Prominent speakers from multiple social
sectors were invited to speak about their fields and notions of peace. This led to a
series of International Conferences on the Fate and Hope of the Earth, two films, and
numerous articles which had some effect on the formation of the Green Parties in
Europe and the lessening of the Cold War.
In 1987 BCAEF began to support the Environmental Program at Merritt College which
combined with the Energy Technology Program from Vista College. The Merritt
Environmental Program began in 1962 as an Interdisciplinary Field program. The Self
Reliant House Environmental Center was begun in about 1984.
In 1989, the Institute began as a series of informal lunch discussions which grew into a
"Think Tub" about the theory of Sustainability. Concepts developed here were applied
to the new Environmental Sciences Department at the Merritt Campus and regionally.
In 1995 the Institute was dedicated to Dave Brower and to Ron Dellums, a graduate of
Merritt. The current Infrastructure Project and the Multi-Cultural Environmental
Leadership Intern programs were initiated.
ACTIVITIES
A comprehensive curriculum on sustainability was developed and is being implemented
in phases. In April 2000, Dave Brower asked what he and Ron Dellums could do at the
Institute. This has initiated planning the Fifth Conference on the Fate and Hope for the
Earth to be hosted by the Institute at Merritt. The theme will be building a sustainable
infrastructure which can be measured biologically in the health of immune systems and
socially in the well being of children.
Currently the Environmental Program is partners in several funded projects involving
watershed restoration and fire hazard reduction planning, homeless design in parks,
environmental education in Alameda County, solar energy equipment and green
building materials installation as well as the development of Green Building curriculum.
A Permaculture class is making design suggestions for the Environmental Center site.
THEORY
The Infrastructure Project is based first on the hypothesis that the confluence of
human development and environmental crises some 5,000 years ago inadvertently
created empires and ultimately the social and environmental problems caused by the
modern Urban Military Industrial infrastructure.
Second, that we, as humans, have the evolutionary capacity to readapt our behavior
to correct these problems and have, in fact, recognized many of them and have
already developed a suite of solutions.
Third , these solutions are relatively isolated from one another and currently have only
a small net effect on the total impact of global human behavior.
Fourth, the integration of these diverse solutions into an infrastructure of their own will
allow their cumulative effects to become a full scale durable social compact which can
sustain appropriate environmental and social human behaviors.
Fifth, the mechanisms for initiating this scale change are available, iterative, and
developmental. (i.e. try it out, and if it doesn't work, change it) These conditions
suggests the strategy of :
a) modeling and displaying multiple benefit whole systems in available venues; (i.e.
trying it all out where you can and show it to whomever you can)
b) articulating the issues in diverse discussions (talk about it a lot) in order to
c) support the efforts of individuals and groups to integrate and apply them in the
manner and speed which is appropriate for their own character (we each learn and act
at our own speed and in our own ways).
--Robin Freeman, Director, Brower Dellums Institute for Sustainable Policy Studies
and Merritt College Environmental Program. Contact Robin Freeman at
rfreeman@peralta.edu
© Merritt College Environmental Program | 12500 Campus Drive, Oakland, CA 94619
Info at 510-434-3840 or email ecomerritt@peralta.edu.