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C ONNECTING E NVIRONMENTALISM TO D EMOCRACY THROUGH E NVIRONMENTAL S TEWARDSHIP Dana R. Fisher Director, Program for Society and the Environment Professor.

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Presentation on theme: "C ONNECTING E NVIRONMENTALISM TO D EMOCRACY THROUGH E NVIRONMENTAL S TEWARDSHIP Dana R. Fisher Director, Program for Society and the Environment Professor."— Presentation transcript:

1 C ONNECTING E NVIRONMENTALISM TO D EMOCRACY THROUGH E NVIRONMENTAL S TEWARDSHIP Dana R. Fisher Director, Program for Society and the Environment Professor of Sociology, University of Maryland drfisher@umd.edu www.drfisher.umd.edu www.drfisher.umd.edu @Fisher_DanaR FUNDED BY: USDA FOREST SERVICE NORTHERN RESEARCH STATION AND US NSF ULTRA-EX GRANT DEB-0948451 1

2 How does participating in environmental stewardship (like helping to plant a million trees) strengthen the roots of democracy? Who participates in volunteer stewardship in our nation’s cities? Are these types of activities related to other kinds of environmental and civic participation? How does the organizational structure of the activity relate to the nature of civic participation? 2

3 Studying Urban Initiatives  Aim to plant trees and increase the canopy  Involves Public/private partnerships  NYC and NY Restoration Project: Million Trees NYC  DC and Casey Trees  Philadelphia and Pennsylvania Horticulturalist Society: Plant One Million Campaign  Explicit role for citizen volunteers to plant the trees and steward them in different capacities 3

4 Varied Organizational Structures  Central coordination in New York City  NGO Management through Casey Trees and citizen foresters in DC  Indigenous structure of local groups in Philadelphia 4

5 Studying Volunteer Stewardship  In person survey of volunteers  Random selection from among the eligible adult volunteers in NYC (Philadelphia and Washington DC)  Response rate was very high  92.7% in NYC  98.7% in DC  ?? In Philadelphia  Follow-up telephone interview with stratified sample 5

6 Geography of Survey Respondents (Home Zip Codes) 6

7 Civic Action Percent of Philly Stewards Percent D.C. Stewards Percent NYC Steward Percent US Pop Signed a petition 71.1%64%54.9%35.2% Contacted an elected government representative 44.6%44%36.1%22.3% Attended a public, town, community board, or school meeting 57.8%41%39.5%24% Participated in a protest 7.2%20%12.8% *6.1% Contacted the Media to Express Views 24.1%25.2%19.0%5.1% Gave a speech 18.1%26%21.7%4.4% Held or ran for public office 2.4%*1%*6.5%.7% Engaged in political discussion on the Internet 13.3%28%13.5%5.4% Worked for a political party 13.3%11%6.5%18.7% Comparison of Civic Engagement for Survey Respondents and National Sample Data * Indicates NOT statistically significant. 6

8 What Comes First??  Excluding voting and religious activities, environmental stewardship precedes the development of democratic citizenship  There is a reciprocal relationship between stewardship and civic engagement  Those who were active stewards for longer have also been more civically engaged for longer 8

9 Why do they do it? “It’s always been important to me because I feel better, I feel healthier. I feel like I contribute something….I grew up on the Lower East Side where so many buildings were burned out or abandoned …that’s why I got involved with community gardens. So, that’s where it all started” (Maria, 52 years-old). 9

10 Digging in the Dirt Strengthens the Roots of Democracy In an era of financial strain, these hybrid arrangements are playing a significant role in re-greening urban areas. Environmental stewardship serves as a gateway into democratic practice Environmental stewardship and civic engagement are deeply intertwined—in terms of individuals personal identities and associational lives. Organizational form of mobilizing structure may contribute to longer term differences in both civic participation and environmental outcomes (urban tree canopy etc.) 10

11 Selected Resources Fisher, Dana R., Erika S. Svendsen, and James J.T. Connolly. 2015. Urban Environmental Stewardship and Civic Engagement: How Planting Trees Strengthens the Roots of Democracy. Routledge Press. http://www.routledge.com/books/details/9780415723633/ http://www.routledge.com/books/details/9780415723633/ Fisher, Dana R., Erika S. Svendsen, Joseph Waggle, Anya M. Galli, Sarah Low. 2015. “ Under the Green Umbrella: A Census of Civic Environmental Stewardship Organizations in the City of Philadelphia.” PSE Whitepaper. Spring. Fisher, Dana R. and Erika S. Svendsen. (2013). “Hybrid Arrangements within the Environmental State.” Routledge International Handbook of Social and Environmental Change. Lockie, Sonnenfeld and Fisher (eds). Routledge Press. 179- 189. Connolly, J. J., Svendsen, E. S., Fisher, D. R., & Campbell, L. K. (2012). Organizing urban ecosystem services through environmental stewardship governance in New York City. Landscape and Urban Planning, 1–9. Fisher, D. R., Campbell, L. K., & Svendsen, E. S. (2012). The organisational structure of urban environmental stewardship. Environmental Politics, 37-41. 11


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