Mar 072009

This is part of a comment that turned up on another part of Harmless Sky:

Robin Guenier says:

March 6th, 2009 at 8:55 am

Here an interesting story: this weekend, the University of the West of England is holding a conference on “Climate Change Denial”, organised by (wait for it) the Centre for Psycho-Social Studies. It will be “bringing together a group of people – climate change activists, eco-psychologists [!!], psychotherapists and social researchers – who are uniquely qualified to assess the human dimensions of this human-made problem”. Professor Hoggett, who is helping to organise the conference, says:

We will examine denial from a variety of different perspectives – as the product of addiction to consumption, as the outcome of diffusion of responsibility and the idea that someone else will sort it out and as the consequence of living in a perverse culture which encourages collusion, complacency, irresponsibility.

http://ccgi.newbery1.plus.com/blog/?p=63&cp=31#comment-12166

Robin goes on to make the point that the usual cause of scepticism is a lack of convincing evidence; a perfectly rational response to uncertainty.

Apparently this has not occurred to the organisers of this conference, who seem intent on treating climate scepticism as a pathological condition. Perhaps they have never wondered whether likening anyone who just happens not to share their convictions to holocaust deniers is altogether normal? And what might they think about Christian fundamentalists who refer to the followers of other faiths as heathens?

But it was the reference to eco-psychologists that really caught my eye. What on earth could that be about? A vegan shrink who rides a solar powered bicycle perhaps?

I had to go no further than the Daily Green website to find out:

Therapists come in handy for all sorts of emotional problems, and worrying about the state of the environment can definitely cause distress. Meet the eco-psychologist, a new form of therapy, according to a recent NY Times article.

Here’s one happy client. Catherine McLendon and her husband went to an eco-psychologist, Dr. Shulmire, to talk about Ms. McLendon’s increasing worry over the family’s consumption habits and Mr. McLendon’s worry about the disappearance of green space.

“Treatments” can include fasts from shopping, emailing and the news, while increasing time spent meditating or gardening or generally hanging out outside.

Some psychologists are skeptical about the approach. Scott O. Lilienfeld at Emory cautions that “there is a fine line between therapy and advocacy.” Lilenfeld also cautions that some worrying about the environment may be due to larger issues like general anxiety disorders, where one may worry about everything.

http://www.greendaily.com/2008/02/16/do-you-need-an-eco-psychologist/

So it seems that even the Daily Green is a little cautious about this new branch of medicine. No doubt Dr. Shulmire is a perfectly respectable practitioner who wouldn’t dream of preying on gullible people, and I suppose that someone has to deal with the casualties of environmental propaganda. It must get pretty depressing if you really believe everthing you’re told about the plight of planet Earth.

I wondered whether Dr Shulmire might be flying over for the conference, so my next stop was the organisers web page:

Keynote Speakers include George Marshall Director of Climate Outreach and Information Centre, Mary-Jane Rust, Ecopsychologist and Jungian Analyst and Paul Hoggett, Professor of Politics, UWE.

Workshops will be led by Zita Cox (Environmental Constellations), Ro Randall (Cambridge Carbon Footprints), Dr Chris Johnstone (The Great Turning Times); Nick Totton (editor Psychotherapy and Politics International) Renee Lertzman (Cardiff University) and Jim Wilson (psychotherapist and consultant).

http://www.hero.ac.uk/media_relations/21869.cfm

Now that sounds like a pretty strong team, although I was rather surprised that it did not include an eco-aromatherapist.. Anyway, I thought I better have a look at the eco-psychologist’s website:

Mary-Jayne Rust

How can we live more sustainably, both socially and environmentally? This seems to me the most pressing issue of our times. The changes we need to make are more than practical ones. I hope for a paradigm shift, which encompasses the personal, the political, the spiritual and the ecological, spanning local to global, challenging our western cultural values.

As a psychotherapist (I have trained as an art therapist and Jungian Analyst) I am particularly interested in two areas:

  • How the ‘big picture’ affects the personal (and vice versa)
  • How a psychological understanding can contribute to making the sea change towards respecting ourselves, in all our diversity, and our whole earth community.

These are the broad themes of an emerging field called Ecopsychology. It is about acknowledging and valuing our relationship with the whole of life.

To find out more about the courses and writing I offer on these issues please click on any of the side bars.

http://www.mjrust.net/

Well I expect that she explains what all this is about in her courses and her writings. Perhaps she just didn’t have enough time to do so on her website. But I do wonder if she has made up her mind whether she is a medical practitioner or an environmental activist?

Moving on to a site called ecopsychology.org  I discovered that what until then I had thought of as a branch of medicine is nothing of the kind:

Ecopsychology, or eco-psychology as it is sometimes called, is situated at the intersection of a number of fields of enquiry, including environmental philosophy, psychology, and ecology, but is not limited by any disciplinary boundaries. At its core, ecopsychology suggests that there is a synergistic relation between planetary and personal well being; that the needs of the one are relevant to the other.

Their website “enthusiastically endorses the Earth Charter” so here are a couple of recommendations from that website:

a. Take action to avoid the possibility of serious or irreversible environmental harm even when scientific knowledge is incomplete or inconclusive.

b. Place the burden of proof on those who argue that a proposed activity will not cause significant harm …

Which I take to mean that, for the committed environmentalist,  activism takes priority over scientific evidence of actual environmental harm, and that everyone who claims that their activities are harmless is guilty of planet destruction unless  they can prove, to the activist’s satisfaction, that they are innocent.

For a moment I thought that I had taken a wrong turning here, and drifted rather a long way from a conference on the therapeutic treatment of climate denial, but of course I hadn’t. The idea that everyone is guilty until proved innocent, and that those who dissent from the current political orthodoxy must be suffering from some kind of mental problem, have a common sinister antecedence. And this is not unrelated to the Holocaust, Stalin’s purges and the tribulations of people like Solzhenitsyn and so many others citizens of the Soviet block countries.

Robin Guenier’s comment, which I quoted from at the beginning of this post, concludes with this observation:

There’s a serious issue here. There appears to be an attempt to move from labelling those sceptical of the orthodoxy as “deniers” to accusing them of having a psychological disorder. It may be noted that a common practice of authoritarian governments is to categorise dissidents as being mentally ill.

It seemed unlikely that the University of the West of England’s professor of politics would have totalitarian leanings, but I thought that I better check up on that anyway. Here is a sentence from his Staff Profile:

Throughout the 1980’s he worked with radical Labour local authorities interested in decentralising and democratising local government.

http://www.uwe.ac.uk/hlss/politics/staff_pHoggett.shtml

So there seems to be no doubt that this is a man with a strong commitment to democracy, or at least he thinks that he has. And he has a BA in Social Psychology from the University of Sussex too I wonder if that means that he is a sociologist?. But wouldn’t you expect a libertarian who teaches politics to know something about the authoritarian regimes that have used spurious diagnoses of mental disorder to suppress dissent? And I always thought that freedom of speech and diversity of opinions had something to do with democracy.

Perhaps I’ve got all this completely wrong, and all that Professor Hoggett and his colleagues at the conference want to do is explore the possibility for using eco-aromatherapy as a cure for the mental aberration of climate scepticism. But how would you treat the ‘patients’; as much as sixty percent of the population according to some opinion polls? You would certainly have to process them on an industrial scale. Some kind of gas chamber perhaps?

Hat tip to Robin Guenier for contributions gratefully received.

4 Responses to “Eco-psychologists and a very strange conference”

  1. Wikipedia’s article on ecopsychology has this to say: “Mental health or unhealth cannot be understood simply in the narrow context of only intrapsychic phenomena or social relations. One also has to include the relationship of humans to other species and ecosystems.”

    Not sure where the quote comes from: Theodore Roszak, maybe? But deciphering the above, the article is saying that I might feel perfectly healthy and sane in myself (intrapsychic phenomena) and society might think I’m sane too (social relations); however, because I live in an urban area, work in an air-conditioned office building and buy my food in a supermarket, I might therefore be suffering from a form of mental illness. Interesting.

    “Addiction to consumption”. Would that be due to the fact I buy a box of cereal at Tesco, rather than grow a range of assorted grains and fruit in my back garden and make it myself? Hmm.

    So far, most psychologists appear to be still talking in terms of persuasion rather than outright coercion. Here‘s an article by the American Psychological Association last year, which quotes Arizona State University’s Prof. Robert Cialdini as saying: “By manipulating what people perceive as social norms… you can achieve remarkable behavioral changes.”

    The implication being that if they show us that everyone else is concerned about reducing their carbon footprints, we “deniers” will be the odd ones out if we don’t, and will thus hasten to conform.

    That’s not going to work, really, is it. Especially if we’re not the odd ones out.

    (There’s also a discussion going on here at Climate Resistance re this interesting ecopsychological event.)

  2. Alex

    Thanks for taking this a bit further.

    What really disturbs me is the ability of minor academics and their hangers on to close their minds to so much of what we have learned over the past century about the dangers of state manipulation of what people think. They have access to young and impressionable people who may become the opinion formers of tomorrow.

    “By manipulating what people perceive as social norms… you can achieve remarkable behavioral changes.”
    Arizona State University’s Prof. Robert Cialdini

    This fits in with the deplorable Warm Words report from the IPPR, here. There is an inbuilt assumption that the majority will behave like sheep, conforming without thinking or feeling free to dissent.

    I thought that we had left this kind of intellectual coercion behind when The Wall came down and one would expect universities, of all places, to be bastions against its return.

  3. I think we are at the stage where we have to be more robust and start talking openly of ‘Thought police’ and ‘re-education camps’and ‘manuipulation’ and ‘eco-zealots’as this is getting even more sinister.

    When people query these phrases we need to be able to refer them to one source where these links and highlighted quotes are readily available, but without the comment, as the statements already make the case for us.

    You have several of these articles here

    splicegate
    the conference and this reference-how about linking it all together?

    TonyB

  4. This is certainly a situation that will bear watching. I find it extraordinary (although maybe I shouldn’t) that psychologists and psychiatrists such as Robert Cialdini, the APA’s Alan Kazdin and Yale’s Steven Moffic are openly talking about manipulating us to fulfil an agenda. I’m not an expert on psychology but this seems to be a reversal and a perversion of the normal aims of therapy.

    Also, I just had a look at the Warm Words report (thanks for posting it) – disturbing stuff. We definitely need to keep an eye on these people.

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