I’m not the only one who’s noticed that men are taking over the environmental discussion. An eco-event in Bryant Park in New York City tomorrow is just one example that recently crossed my desk. There will be five speakers and not one woman! If there was a panel of five women, and no men, would people see it as a ‘woman’s event’? I think so. So why does this get to be an eco-discussion and not a men’s roundtable on the environment?
A great piece over at Grist questions whether the ‘new’ environmentalism isn’t just all about making ‘green’ more appealing to men, since women are already on the bandwagon, and most importantly, what that means for how we make changes in the future.
“[Thomas Friedman] wrote that America should redefine green to make it more “muscular” and transform its characterization by opponents as “sissy,” “girlie-man,” and “vaguely French.” Elsewhere, he has summed it up this way: “Green isn’t some ‘wussy’ tree-hugging thing. Green is patriotic. Green is strategic. Green is the new red, white, and blue.” Wussy being derogatory slang for “especially unmanly,” consider Friedman’s view to be the opposite. Call it “manly green.”
Do we need ‘manly green’ to keep environmental discussions on the table as a serious issue? Why are women’s issues (typically thought of as healthcare, reproductive rights, education, the environment) always pigeon-holed as such? I mean, doesn’t everyone go to school, get sick, decide to have kids or not, and breathe air and drink water? Why are these issues feminized? And relegated to second-class status because of it?
Surveys — from sources including the Yale School of Forestry, Center for American Progress Action Fund, Institute for Women’s Policy Research, and American National Election Studies — consistently show that women feel a stronger connection to the environment than men do:
-Women are up to 15 percent more likely than men to rate the environment a high priority.
-Women comprise up to two-thirds of voters who cast their ballots around environmental issues.
-Women are more likely than men to volunteer for and give money to environmental causes, especially related to public health.
-Women report both more support for environmental activists and more concern that government isn’t doing enough.
-Women support increased government spending for the environment, while men favor spending cuts.Polls also show that about 68 percent of American consumers have gone green, preferring health-conscious and environmentally responsible products. Since 90 percent of women identify themselves as the primary shoppers for their households, and women sign 80 percent of all personal checks, it’s safe to say that women are leading a quiet revolution in green consumerism.
These trends suggest more than simply stronger support for the environment — they reveal a completely different attitude about it. Prevailing masculine views see environmentalism in terms of energy independence, as a political or military tactic. In the speech quoted above, President Bush pointed to alternative fuels such as hydrogen as a way for America to wean itself off foreign oil. A few years earlier, the CIA called the environment “the national-security issue of the early 21st century” and “the core foreign-policy challenge from which most others will ultimately emanate.”
If making the environment more of a manly issue means relying on technology, how does that impact what decisions are made and what to focus on? Instead of relying on innovation to solve our problems, what about the more prosaic ideas of cutting down on consumption, recycling, and conservation? Are those too girly? Not exciting enough? I think this argument takes a lot of liberties about what is ‘male’ and what is ‘female’; the writers are making pretty huge generalizations here. I think in the end, whether and idea is ‘masculine’ or ‘feminine’ is irrelevant, but I hate to see one sex dominating the discussion and having a bigger voice on any subject as important as the future of the environmental movement.














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great post, thanks.
August 7th, 2007 at 10:46 amWhether this is true or not, like so many things, it is possible that women have started the discussion and men have taken it over. This can certainly be seen as either a positive or a negative. It would be infuriating if women’s voices were lost once a topic became “muscular.” It seems as if it’s so often our (women’s) job to get humans thinking and then step back while men make decisions regarding the issues we brought to light. Unfortunately, this has not always led to the best decisions in the past. That is not to say that men aren’t intelligent, sensible creatures; it’s just that having both genders represented in a conversation is likely to bring about the most options and better choices. I’m thankful to live in an era where women don’t just completely have to back down and remain quiet, even if there are still major discrpencies in representation of ideas.
August 7th, 2007 at 10:58 amLorna,
Well put! I think your idea of women starting the discussion as right on, I hadn’t thought of it that way.
August 7th, 2007 at 11:40 amWhy is it that women always feel the need to compare themselves to men? They don’t compare themselves to us.
It’s hard enough to fight against people who aren’t simply recycling, against big polluting businesses, against people driving carbon-emitting cars every day, male or female without having to fight against each other on, “Anything you can do I can do better.”
Seriously.
It is nice to fine a female friendly environment where I am comfortable, but ragging on men is not my pink cup of organic tea.
August 7th, 2007 at 6:20 pmAdmittedly, I am male, so I’m probably not the best equipped (no pun intended) to judge, but I have to say it comes down to a common problem.
Men are dumb. Seriously. It’s not manly to read, or save money, or refrain from doing stupid and/or dangerous things (drinking yourself into a coma, jumping off of bridges, snowboarding, etc). In order to get said males to accept it, you have to ‘butch’ it up. Women don’t need the prompting to feel inclined to do smart things, so it’s best to gear it to the guys.
This is being felt in education, particularly, where male enrollment and graduation at the university level is dropping precipitously. Male literacy and secondary school graduation is down, too.
August 8th, 2007 at 2:49 amNot sure if you are aware of the game of blog tag going around…
So, Tag! Your it!
Here’s how it works: Players list 8 facts/habits about themselves. At the end of the post, players then tag 8 other bloggers by posting their names and making sure they know they’ve been tagged by leaving a comment at the tagee’s blog.
August 9th, 2007 at 2:52 pmI couldn’t agree more with your point — was going to blog this myself. I’ve observed that mags geared toward men, when publishing articles on the environment, focus on techno stuff (WIRED, e.g.) and those geared toward women focus on “this chemical/global warming/whatever is harming our babies!” (Elle, etc.) I’d like to see more techno in women’s mags and more harming-our-babies in men’s — people need to see the other angles on the issues.
Interestingly, in Grist’s interviews this past week with all the Dem candidates on their environmental platforms, Hillary Clinton’s positions are some of the butchest I’ve seen. BUT she also seems to be the only one they interviewed that brought up environmental health issues– after all, women and children take a bigger hit from toxic chemicals than men. So good for her, even though she’s not my candidate of choice.
August 9th, 2007 at 3:40 pmStarre,
I think the problem may be less in redefining “green” and more in redefining values. If we continue to focus on making environmentalism fit into our lifestyles, we will accomplish very little for the good of the environment. After all, much of the recent green trend in marketing is the same old companies trying to sell the same old products to the same old market, using a fresh coat of paint. If instead, we elevate environmental values to be central, integral ambitions, like the desire to raise a family or to be successful in ones career, positive change will be broad and lasting.
For this to happen, I think we have to reassert the value of community. When people value their families, their neighbors, their common resources, and their shared future, it will matter less and less who feeds the children and who decides which car to buy.
Justin,
I think you’re spending time with the wrong men.
-ERD
August 10th, 2007 at 7:53 amI agree with Sophie. I am very much a pro-men feminist. My issues are with the patriarchy, of which both men and women suffer equally. Men love technology, and that’s great, and they can do their thing. Women bring their own sensibility, that complement men’s approach to problem solve.
marguerite
August 10th, 2007 at 12:10 pmhttp://lamarguerite.wordpress.com
“The Daily Sins of a Green Girl Wannabe”
Excellent post. I certainly don’t want to see discussions “taken over” by men, but I am hoping that getting men on board will enrich the possibility for change.
Ummm….not to sound sexist…..but men seem to have been so concerned with the business and economy end. I think the opportunity to create new green business markets and reinvent industries will help sell them about making serious and immediate changes. Business 2.0 just ran an excellent article on it. It we need to “package” environmentalism differently in order to garner
August 10th, 2007 at 7:12 pmFantastic post, Starre. Keep truckin.
August 10th, 2007 at 9:58 pmGreat, thoughtful post. As a man and environmentalist, I have long wondered why environmental issues are seen by many as feminine. As long as men breathe the air, drink the water, and live on the planet alongside women, the environment should be both a masculine and feminine issue.
August 14th, 2007 at 8:00 amHugg and Digg Starre’s Posts Here:
http://www.hugg.com/storylink/7803
August 24th, 2007 at 10:27 amhttp://digg.com/users/danitygo/news/dugg