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SANITY, THE PSYCHE, AND THE SPOTTED OWL |
| How often do we come across reports like this? |
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Reviving a lawsuit over the Northwestern spotted owl, a Federal Appeals Court cleared the way yesterday for a new timber industry challenge to logging reductions that President Clinton ordered three years ago. Clinton's plan was intended to protect old-growth forests inhabited by the spotted owl, which was declared an endangered species in 1990. |
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Another
hard-fought struggle to preserve a threatened natural beauty from
destruction. The environmentalists involved are of course
fighting with whatever they have, in this case the Endangered
Species Act, the workhorse of the movement. But perhaps it is
time to admit that the spotted owl has served the environmental
cause beyond the call of duty -- and not always in ways the
public can appreciate. How many Americans understand that the
species listed in the
Endangered Species Act are not there as isolated animals, but as
guardians of entire ecosystems? How well have environmentalists
done the job of showing that assaults upon the remotest
wilderness endanger human beings as much as any other species?
Physically, morally, and emotionally we are woven into the web of
life with old-growth redwoods and rainforests and dying lakes and
polluted rivers. We need them, not simply as a matter of
intelligent resource management, but for the good of our souls.
The same toxins that kill them run in our blood, the ugliness of
their suffering afflicts our eye, for all we know images of their
dire fate haunt our dreams. And surely children who grow into
life without knowing wild nature will be less than fully
human. |
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While
ecopsychology certainly has its place in the practice of private
therapy, some of us in this movement are also working toward a
more public and political objective. What we seek is to
integrate ecologists, psychologists, and therapists into a new
profession that has a clear environmental purpose. When we say
that we are out to redefine sanity, that goal may seem abstruse.
It isn't. "Sanity" is a hard legal term. It is used
in courts of law to prosecute, fine, issue injunctions,
incarcerate or let free. If environmentalists are to use the
term with legal effect, we must have a professional consensus as
powerful as the consensus that has grown up around the
realization that "dysfunctional families" can damage
the mental health of their members. That conclusion can now be
taken into a court of law to warrant official intervention in
families, even to the point of removing children from abusive
parents. Thirty years ago, when the Scottish psychiatrist R. D. Laing was insisting that the corrupted "politics of the family" was driving people crazy, he was considered a maverick. Now his ideas and those of other family therapists are being used in court rooms across America -- and can even be heard echoing through most of what the television talk-shows are telling the nation every day about abusive families. As tawdry and sensational as such tabloid material can become, it nevertheless represents a widely-shared insight into the broader, interpersonal context of mental health. |
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Can the concept
of dysfunctional environmental relations become similarly
familiar? Can we develop an environmentally-based definition of
mental health tight enough to find a place in the Diagnostic
and Statistical Manual -- the American Psychiatric
Association's official listing of neuroses? If so, we might make such a definition available to environmental activists and lawyers as a basis for legal action and to government as the basis for policy. For example, ecopsychologists might be able to argue persuasively that any institution, practice, or policy that diminishes ecological biodiversity is a direct assault upon the mental health of a neighborhood, community, bioregion, or the human species as a whole -- and for that reason the activity must be stopped and an alternative found. The project could be made very specific. It would mean amending the Wilderness Act of 1964 to include the word "psychological" in the definition of "wilderness" as any area that contains "ecological, geological, or other features of scientific, educational, scenic, or historical value." |
Here is an excerpt from the Dedication of Clearcut:
This book is in memory of the plantlife, birds, insects, animals, and indigenous cultures that have been driven to extinction by the greed and delusion of human arrogance. All of us in the Industrial Growth Society must take the responsibility for this condition ... We must try to visualize extinction and learn to understand accurately how certain patterns of human behavior lead to the extinction of species. We do have the ability to enrich, not impoverish, our lives and the planet wherein we dwell. greed, delusion and arrogance ... What are these but emotions that work at that secret level of the mind which is the special province of psychotherapy? to understand patterns of human behavior ... Is that not what psychology was invented to do? The Ecopsychology Institute has been in touch with environmental lawyers who believe that having a hard, psychological consensus behind such legal categories as "behavioral evidence" would be an invaluable contribution to their cause. It might be a better legal strategy than relying so exclusively on the Endangered Species Act. There is reason to believe that the endangered species approach is proving to be less and less persuasive with the public, which often cannot see its stake in the issue. Offering the environmental lawyers a body of well-researched, behavioral evidence would be the work of the academic psychologists; offering them a useful connection with the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual would be the work of the therapists. Making an environmentally-based definition of mental health work in the policy-making arena is the task of environmental activists and scientists. Getting the whole job done involves creating a profession that commands respect when it speaks to both environmental and psychological issues. That profession is called ecopsychology. The contributions below are a small sample of the effort we have made to inspire a dialogue between ecopsychology and environmental law. They include a magisterial paper by James Thornton, former senior attorney for the Natural Resources Defense Council, that comes close to being a definitive survey of the legal issues surrounding environmental sanity. We hope it will lead to further discussion. Theodore Roszak |
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| Wild Nature, Sanity and the Law | by James Thornton
| "Imagine that an environmentally-based definition of
mental health becomes widely accepted. What are the legal
implications of that change?" | Letters on the Law: | by Christopher Stone, Christina Desser, Peter Kelsey, Norman Meade, Jay Bremyer |
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© 1997 The Ecopsychology Institute |