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Population & Environment: a Progressive, Feminist Approach

by: Laurie Mazur  |  On the Issues Magazine

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(Photo: TwOsE / flickr)

In "The 'New' Population Control Craze: Retro, Racist, Wrong Way to Go", Betsy Hartmann implies that everyone working on population-environment issues is part of a misogynistic plot to bring back "population control."

I'm here to tell you she is wrong. (See Betsy Hartmann article here)

I am a lifelong, card-carrying feminist and political progressive. I am passionately committed to sexual and reproductive health and rights, to environmental sustainability, and to closing the inequitable divide between men and women, rich and poor. And I believe that slowing population growth—by ensuring that all people have the means and the power to make their own decisions about childbearing—will contribute to those ends.

I'm not alone. Over the last couple of years, I have helped bring together feminists, environmentalists, and reproductive health activists to develop an approach to population and environment issues that is grounded in human rights and social justice. Our efforts culminated in a new book, A Pivotal Moment: Population, Justice and the Environmental Challenge.

We also helped launch a new campus movement. The "population justice" effort is a partnership of the Sierra Club, the International Women's Health Coalition, the Feminist Majority Foundation, and others. Our goals are to increase U.S. funding for family planning and reproductive health; to provide comprehensive sexuality education in the U.S.; and to pass the Global Poverty Act and implement the Millennium Development Goals. Population control is not on the agenda.

There are many, many points on which Betsy Hartmann and I are in complete agreement. For example, I agree that the relationship between population dynamics and environmental is best viewed through the prism of inequity.  It is the affluent countries' unsustainable systems of production and consumption—not population growth in the Global South—that have caused most of the environmental crises we face.

And we do face environmental crises. Human-induced climate change is threatening the very habitability of our planet. From acidifying oceans to depleted aquifers, the natural systems we depend upon are nearing "tipping points," beyond which they may not recover.
 
The United Nations Development Program says that for the world's most marginalized citizens, the consequences of environmental crises "could be apocalyptic." Women are on the front lines of the crisis —walking farther to collect water, working harder to coax crops from dry soil, coping with plagues of drought, flood and disease.

Against that backdrop, consider our demographic future. World population now stands at 6.8 billion. While the rate of growth has slowed in most parts of the world, our numbers still increase by 75 million to 80 million every year, the numerical equivalent of adding another U.S. to the world every four years or so. A certain amount of future growth is inevitable, but choices made today will determine whether world population reaches anywhere between 8 billion and 11 billion by the middle of the century.

If we take seriously the need to protect the planet and distribute its resources more equitably, it becomes clear that it would be easier to provide a good life—at less environmental cost—for 8 billion rather than 11 billion people.  This is especially true for climate change: an analysis by Brian O'Neill at the National Center for Atmospheric Research estimates that stabilizing world population at 8 billion, rather than 9 billion or more, would eliminate one billion tons of CO2 per year by 2050-- as much as completely ending deforestation.
 
Of course, slowing population growth is not all we must do. Continued reliance on fossil fuels could easily overwhelm any carbon emission reductions from slower growth. Still, slowing population growth is part of what we must do to avert catastrophic climate change.

Does that justify a new program of coercive population control? Absolutely not.

The last two decades have seen a seismic shift in thinking about population issues. Feminist reformers fought for—and won—a groundbreaking international agreement on population at a 1994 UN meeting in Cairo. The Cairo agreement says that the best way to achieve a sustainable world is by making sure that all people can make real choices about childbearing. That means access to voluntary family planning and other reproductive-health information and services. It means education and employment opportunities, especially for women. And it means tackling the deep inequities—gender and economic—that limit choices for many.

It is possible that growing concern about climate change and other environmental issues could help mobilize funds for sexual and reproductive health and rights, women's empowerment and other elements of the Cairo agreement.

But I agree with Hartmann that it could easily go the other way. As the connection between population growth and the environment becomes clear, we are hearing more unacceptable calls for "population control." For example, a book by an environmental journalist   proposes a mandatory "one child per human mother" policy.

How should we respond to these dangerous proposals—as feminists, as people who care about the environment and human well-being?

We can acknowledge that slowing population growth is one of many things we can do to build a sustainable, equitable future. And—most importantly—we can fight for population policies that are firmly grounded in human rights and social justice.

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Laurie Mazur is the director of the Population Justice Project. She is the editor of A Pivotal Moment: Population, Justice and the Environmental Challenge.

Comments

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I am sorry but the offensive

I am sorry but the offensive phrase "population control" is not as bad as it seems. What is wrong with offering tax cuts and other state/federal/social incentives to married couples who limit their childbearing to one baby per family? Why not encourage and reward those who, through education, with the explicit goal of population reduction, birth only one child per family? That would be intelligent, would it not? Let's take it one step further. Let's offer, to appropriate couples/ families even higher incentives for child adoption. Let's empty the foster homes with an aggressive program to create nuturing homes for abandoned children, especially focusing on the gay and lesbian population, who often make better parents than hardcore heteros like Six Pack Joe and Martini Mary. The phrase "population control" should be used explicitly, because that's what we want. While we're at it, let's have some legislation to ban at home schooling that is limited to the use of one book: the Bible. In that sort of education what is produced is the Mormon and Dominionist Christian strategy of reproducing for the sake of taking over societies, cultures, governments and ultimately the world. No child's mind should be up for grabs based on the religious ideology of the biological parents. We need a strong secular educational revival in our public schools, evolution taught early on. We need to begin attacking the "be fruitful and multiply" consciousness and do it soon because, that, my friends, is at the root of this problem.

We could start by

We could start by eliminating the child tax exemption in the US after two children. I do wonder a little about this writer's argument--I've read & thought for years that global family planning education (and literacy for women) was needed. I've read that at least since the 70's and I didn't think it was new then. I despaired at Reagan's & Bush II's imposition of gag rules & "abstinence" education as a substitute for education about planning & birth control devices. They were & are such incredibly stupid policies. The Bush administration also made China's one child policy a basis for granting refugee status in the US (violation of it). But what would she have us do? Her solution is rather vague & if she does not think that a limit on # of live children is reasonable, what specifically does she think is reasonable? And it's not just women who need to be educated--it's men.

If you ever traveled in an

If you ever traveled in an airplane over the Caribbean and looked down at the island chains, you'll see shapes that look like green cells with a brown cancer. The brown areas are the population centers. We can do nothing about a problem we won't acknowledge. Just like cancer sucks the nutrients that keep cells alive, population without responsibility is suicide.

The population of the earth

The population of the earth TRIPLED during my lifetime (and I'm not yet dead). The planet is finite. Infinite human reproduction cannot be sustained -- economic and terrestrial impoverishment will overtake us. We must quit the obeisance to religious doctrines composed by men in the name of God, that are based on the teeming earth of millenia long past, and hold women to be nothing more than incubators.

Population Control:

Population Control: Necessary Now. Let's face it, every human born requires a chunk of air, water, forests, space and lots of other stuff. The more humans, the more consumption and destruction of earth. And because earth is finite, and ecosystems are too, human population growth obviously destroys the earth. Combine that with capitalism, an economic cancer that sees all life and material as mere fodder for consumption, and you have the death of the planet. Beyond that, we humans need to stop being speciesist. We are not the only miracle of life on this planet, and we need to stop acting like we are the only life that counts. Humans are creating a dead earth that will eventually mean the death of humans. Encouraging people of all races, of all incomes, and in all countries to have less children or no children is ethical, necessary and logical.

The climate catastrophe now

The climate catastrophe now developing is likely to need "adaptation" by all the species on earth. One of the adaptations is going to be a much smaller human population. If every culture adopted Chinese targets we might reduce the death rate somewhat.

So what you're saying, Jade,

So what you're saying, Jade, is that being fruitful and multiplying is wrong only when straight white Christians do it, and when they do, the power of the state should be employed in all available forms to slap them down quick. After your "incentives" have been applied, that is -- incentives which, being targeted at those who are educated and who marry before birthing children, would have a disproportionate impact on whites. But that’s just what you want, isn’t it? Considering the success of homeschooled children as measured by standardized tests, I’ll take a competent, homeschooled, evangelical Christian electrical engineer over a miseducated, “progressive” liberal arts graduate any day.

I am in agreement with ms

I am in agreement with ms Mazur and with Jade. Why not offer cash incentives for voluntary sterilization to anyone who does not wish to bear anymore children. The amount of the incentive might be set initially at set at 10% of per capita income and could be reevaluated every several years with regard to the success of the program. Of course any incentives program should be totally democratic and not be based on sex or income. We in the rich western countries should have started such a program 30 years ago when we had strong economies--and some of us have been advocating such programs for over 30 years. The richer countries would have to first fund the program in their own countries and then in the poor countries through foreign aid. I believe ms Hartmann's heart is in the right place but I fail to see how it benefits a poor woman in a poor country to have large numbers of children. The people who benefit, at least temporarily, are the rich because a high population of poor desperate people are willing to work for low wages and provide cannon fodder for resource wars. WHM

Betsy Hartmann is yet

Betsy Hartmann is yet another absurd, misinformed journalist who has the gall to refer to herself as a "critical thinker" when she has only the most superficial command of the facts. The world's population has doubled since 1962, yet consumption of natural resources has more than quadrupled. We are destroying our own habitat at an unbelievable rate and yet people insist on having more kids. Although I agree that population control isn't necessarily a bad idea, we don't even need to go that far. All we need to do is convince people to (a) take a moment to THINK before they pop out babies and (b) reduce their output: have 2 kids instead of 3 or 4. Have 1 kid instead of 2. We can reduce the world's population back to a sustainable level of 1 to 2 billion people within a couple of generations, if we're willing to think about it and discuss it like adults.

choice not force When women

choice not force When women are able to choose how many children to have, the number dramatically drops. No woman wants to give birth to a child she cant care for. The best way to control over population is to make sure women have choice. It is a very, very simple solution.

I agree with most of the

I agree with most of the ideas -- and suggested remedial actions -- eloquently articulated in most of these posts. (However, I must admit, I am still waiting to meet a "competent, homeschooled, evangelical Christian electrical engineer.") It appears that our shared concerns are with the depletion of the earth's resources and the devaluation of individual lives accompanying inexorably increasing populations, http://www.truthout.org/1021098. As if that weren't enough, we might also start to worry about how humans will behave when the perceived value of another person's life begins to approach zero.

Laurie Mazur replies: Just

Laurie Mazur replies: Just to clarify--I am not in favor of any form of population control. That includes the obvious--like forced sterilization and abortion--as well as seemingly more benign forms of coercion, such as incentives and disincentives.
Why? First, coercing women to have fewer (or more) children is a violation of our fundamental human right to choose the number and timing of our children. Second, incentives and disincentives are often abused, and frequently wind up punishing vulnerable, marginalized women who already have few choices in life. For example, in the 1980s, Bangladeshi flood victims were denied food aid if they refused to be sterilized.
Third, and crucially: coercion is entirely unnecessary. The Rev. Unruh has it exactly right: "When women are able to choose how many children to have, the number dramatically drops." How to ensure that women can make real choices about childbearing? By ensuring universal access to family planning and reproductive health services; by educating girls and empowering women; and by promoting sustainable, equitable development.
Each of these measures is important in its own right, as a matter of human rights and social justice. Each will help slow population growth. Where all of these elements are in place, women have fewer and healthier children.

There is only 1 sane comment

There is only 1 sane comment in this whole list and that is Laurie Mazur's reply to them all. It is sad that so many people think that freedom is such a dangerous thing, and that everyone but them is an absolute moron. Just look at this list of stereotypes listed above: Mormon bible-mindcontrollers, poor women in the third world who are too stupid to know how many children are too many, imcompetent Christians, and others. When will people realize that coercion can never make the world a better place, and that includes taxation?

Poor Laurie Mazur and/or her

Poor Laurie Mazur and/or her father-protector--TruthOut. Ending the forum debate even before it gets started - isn't that progressive of both of you! If I wrote such a stupid article I'd run and hide too! TruthOut, don't ever ask us for money when you act as a suppressive agent for creative debate on your forums. Of course, you could change your mind and publish my two banned comments. But I'm not naive enough to pretend I don't know the smell of fear when someone's world view comes crashing to the ground.

I am commenting here on

I am commenting here on Betty Hartmann, not on Laurie Mazur: "Betty Hartmann, in her article, shoots at everybody in sight. Let's look at some of the arguments: 1) Is family planning good? According to her: if bad people (capitalists, industrialized countries etc.) are in favor: then family planning must be bad. 2) Admittedly: there were badly, poorly organized and executed programs; but that does not mean that the idea is bad. 3) Betsy Hartmann speaks about health risks of longlasting contraceptives. True; but there are health risks in pregnancy, in child birth. There are even health risks in being admitted in a US hospital: 100.000 deaths by infection per year BECAUSE of hospitalization. 4) No reasonable person calls family planning "population control". Full disclosure: I was a Director of the United Nations Population Fund, and willingly take responsibility for the 1994 Cairo Conference.

Please read the chapter on

Please read the chapter on Malthusian theory of overpopulation in Progress and Poverty. Overpopulation never existed and never will. The monopoly of the Earth and its resources maintains high birth/death rates and gives the illusion of overpopulation. Fact: the entire US population could be housed comfortably in the state of Texas, leaving the all the rest of the country as their living resources. Land monopoly and speculation is the evil we must come to grips with.

One last thing... Check out

One last thing... Check out any world almanac and separate the countries with high and low and you will see that richer countries have lower rates than high. THat means that if development and real progress were SHARED then population growth would indeed stabalize at a sustainable level. Once you see that fact, it seems so obvious. Why do people have such a hard time seeing it? Because "overpopulation" is a another "terrorism" style lie to get us all to stay on the monopolism program. Read Progress and Poverty and reason it for yourself.

I couldn't agree more with

I couldn't agree more with HG's comments. The population debate is purely about inequality. You cannot persuade poor people, especially the males who suffer less consequences, to reduce their fertility when this is the only insurance they have against destitution in old age or ill health.