The video "The Last Drop?" on water scarcity issues (current & future)
focuses quite a bit on issues of environmental security and conflict.
It includes interviews with Homer-Dixon, as well as the
Israeli-Palestine conflict through the lens of water shortage.  Best,
Jane

 

________________________________

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Phillip
Stalley
Sent: Thursday, May 01, 2008 12:00 PM
To: gep-ed@listserve1.allegheny.edu
Subject: [SPAM] Re: GEP videos
Importance: Low

 

A few months back there was a discussion on the listserve about the GEP
videos.  I looked through the list that Paul compiled of recommended
videos, but did not come across anything related to ecological conflict/
environmental security/ resource wars.  Can anyone recommend something
in that general area?

Best,

On Tue, Aug 14, 2007 at 9:58 PM, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Dear All,

Here are the results of my request for information on GEP videos, for
the record.

All best,

Paul

GEP video suggestions (see also Miranda Schreurs's extensive list):

Ancient Futures:  Learning from Ladakh
Helena Norberg-Hodge looks at how globalization is affecting this
exquisitely beautiful place and its Tibetan people and how some are
responding to preserve their culture and sustainable traditions. She
considers what the affluent can learn from the radical interdependence
that informs Buddhist teachings.

The Bomb Under the World
Graphically demonstrates that consumerist lifestyles are not
sustainable; highlights the convergence of population growth and the
global advertisement of consumer culture.  Not exactly fun, but
hardhitting & effective.

I didn't notice The Ecological Footprint: Accounting for a Small Planet,
about 30 min., on anybody's list. It's a good place to start. It's a tad
sanguine about what can be achieved through ecological modernization
"win-win" policies, but the graphics & examples are clear & dramatic
enough to be excellent teaching tools for undergrads & grads getting
started. You can probably get it free from www.footprintnetwork.org.

I recommend Oasis of the Pacific http://www.oasisofthepacific.com/ which
deals with damage to Pacific ecosystems. It is centered on the fate of
Hawaii's reefs but is applicable well beyond that.

Also, IISD's "Inuit Observations on Climate Change" is good at showing
how climate change is happening now and what effect it is having in
northern Canada. http://www.iisd.org/casl/projects/inuitobs.htm

Finally, while I haven't seen this one, I have heard good things about
it. The Basel Action Network has a film called The Digital Dump about
e-waste. http://ban.org/films/TheDigitalDump.html

IMO's Invaders from the Sea
http://www.imo.org/home.asp?topic_id=1472&doc_id=7970

One More Dead Fish It's about the clash between bottom trawlers and
handline fishing
in Nova Scotia. Wonderful look at both the environmental and social
issues involved in globalization...The Canadian film makers got
an award for it.

I heartily recommend the CBC animated version of Jean Giono's "The
Man Who Planted Trees." It's about 30 minutes long.

PBS' Journey to Planet Earth series has some good ones...
http://www.pbs.org/journeytoplanetearth/stateoftheplanet/ecosystems.html

I found this one to be particularly interesting:
http://www.pbs.org/journeytoplanetearth/about/onthebrink.html

There was another series PBS did last year on the Oceans that was really
good, too... covered coral reefs, exotic species, food web imbalances,
etc... but I can't remember what it was called.

Shipbreakers
Michael Kot, 42 min, Canada
Since 1983, a 10-km beach in Alang, Gujarat, India, has become the
largest
ship graveyard in the world, employing 40,000 to destroy the hulls of
300
ocean freighters annually. Dismantled with bare hands, the ships'
environmental and health hazards are ignored for fear of losing the
business to less stringent nations. This is a story of survival long
after
a ship has been retired.

BLACK GOLD about the global coffee commodity chain and transnational
networks to improve the environmental and social sustainability of small
farmers in Ethiopia.

Darwin's Nightmare

The Future of Food, on industrial agro and GMOS, very powerful.
www.thefutureoffood.com

I have enjoyed using old black and white U.S. propaganda films from the
waybackmachine website.

One featured the United States' strategic dependence on Honduras and
bananas during WWII. A bit campy (good for mid-semester attention
deficits) and can be used to demonstrate that GEP has an official
history in consumption, war, deforestation, empire, etc.

debate between Herman Daly and Paul Portney on growth and the
environment.  Students seemed to really enjoy it.  While I might not use
it for the shake-up purpose that Paul mentions, it does get accross a
wake up call on how much uncertainty we hinge on when it comes to
environmental sustainability: Can Economic Growth Solve Our
Environmental Problems?: A Debate with Herman Daly and Paul Portney.
March 2, 2004.  World Bank B-SPAN,
http://info.worldbank.org/etools/bSPAN/PresentationView.asp?PID=1054&EID
=543

"Banking on Disaster"
Bullfrog Films 1986
About the effects of World Bank lending and Brazilian gov't settlement
policies on Rondonia; includes scenes with Chico Mendes; very good for
sparking discussions on the interplay of IFIs, national and regional
governments and grassroots orgs.; and as a platform for talking about
what
has changed and what hasn't.

"In Our Own Backyards"
Bullfrog 1982
Love Canal; fine documentary on how a tenacious grassroots movement
confronted gov't and industry.

Your first video suggestion ("Banking on Disaster") and the point about
what has changed (envtl policy) and what has not (social structure)
reminds me that there is an excellent 20-year update by the same
director: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/this_world/4429612.stm
or http://www.cbc.ca/correspondent/060115.html

"The Jungle Beat"
Nomad Films Ltd. for the BBC, 2005/2006
Unfortunately, it does not seem like this "happy news" environmental
film is being marketed--I could only find its transcript with the
producers' contact info:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/shared/spl/hi/programmes/this_world/transcripts/
jungle_beat_17_11_05.txt

USC CALIS (Center for Active Learning in International Studies) / TIRP
Teaching International Relations Program web link.
http://www.usc.edu/dept/LAS/ir/calis/
I do know that CALIS/TIRP did a wonderful interactive workshop based on
Hotel Rwanda -- I know it isn't GEP oriented, but again, the model can
be adapted regardless of the theme.
Teresa Huddock is the CALIS director. I believe they developed
interesting study guides to use with Black Gold (coffee movie on
Ethiopia). In general, even though this is geared toward high school
teachers and students, the model of critical thinking, multiple worlds,
case based analysis is one of the best I've ever adopted/facilitated.
Additionally, while it is geared toward perhaps a younger crowd, the
Australian study guide on An Inconvenient Truth has some helpful items
in it:
www.metromagazine.com.au or www.theeducationshop.com.au.
I cannot remember if I had to pay for it or not -- I think it is free
PDF.

****************************************
P.G. Harris
International & Environmental Studies
Department of Political Science
Lingnan University
Tuen Mun, HONG KONG
Tel: +852-2616-7199
Fax: +852-2891-7940
Email: pharris [at] LN.edu.hk
http://www.ln.edu.hk/polsci/
http://www.ln.edu.hk/projects/ecfp/Home
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Assistant Professor, Political Science
DePaul University 

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