19/05/2017

Sidelining God: Why Secular Climate Projects In The Pacific Islands Are Failing

The Conversation

Church and climate: two issues that are close to many Pacific Islanders’ hearts. Seaphotoart/Shutterstock.com
Unless you are cocooned in a tourist bubble, it is hardly possible to miss God when you visit the Pacific Islands. In every village and on every main street there seems to be a church or temple, packed to bursting point on holy days. It is testament to the considerable influence of spirituality on the way people live in the Pacific.
Yet almost every well-intentioned outside agency – including those of foreign governments such as Australia and the European Union – that seeks to help the region’s people adapt to the effects of future climate change is drawing up its plans in secular ways, and communicates using secular language.
Over some 30 years, most such interventions have failed, proving neither effective nor sustainable. The answer to the question “why” may in part lie in the sidelining of God.
At this point, conversations with representatives of donor organisations often become awkward. Why, they ask, should spirituality have any role in a problem like climate-change adaptation or disaster risk management, which is so clearly framed in human, secular terms?
The answer lies in who does the framing. Far fewer people in most donor programs are spiritually engaged than in the Pacific.
A recent survey of 1,226 students at the highly regarded University of the South Pacific found that more than 80% attended church at least weekly, 35% of them more often than that. Bear in mind that this is a sample of the region’s educated urban elite – its future leaders.
Among the wider population, churchgoing seems to be almost universal. For example, Fiji’s 2007 census and Tonga’s 2011 census both showed that less than 1% of the population stated they had no religion. That’s much lower than in donor countries like Australia, Europe and the United States, where at most around 40% of people are habitual churchgoers.
Besides being spiritually engaged, the student survey revealed significantly higher “connectedness to nature” among educated Pacific Islanders than among people in richer countries, as well as deep concerns about climate change and what it might mean for their future and that of their descendants.
The survey revealed widespread pessimism that not enough was being done about climate change in the Pacific. Yet within the responses were two interesting points. The first was “spatial optimism bias”, a widely expressed belief that familiar environments were in a better condition than less familiar ones. The other was a “psychological distancing” of environmental risk – the belief, often spiritually based, that other places were more vulnerable than places to which the respondent had ties.
Earlier this year, I attended Sunday church in a village in Fiji where I was conducting research. The village had escaped the fury of Severe Tropical Cyclone Winston the year before, despite being only 50km from the storm’s centre. The preacher told his congregation that it was their relationship with God that had saved them – because they were pious they had been spared the cyclone’s wrath.
It is easy to ridicule these views, but it would be a mistake to ignore them, given their prevalence among the communities that foreign agencies are trying to help.
Acts of God, such as Cyclone Winston, are a concept most Fijians take literally. AAP Image/Fijian Government
My research suggests that one reason for the failure of external interventions for climate-change adaptation in Pacific Island communities is the wholly secular nature of their messages. Among spiritually engaged communities, these secular messages can be met with indifference or even hostility if they clash with the community’s spiritual agenda.
There are examples from all around the world. In the colonial history of Africa, the spiritual value of land was dismissed by colonisers who saw it solely in economic terms. More recently, the Dakota Access Pipeline has become a political flashpoint, pursued by the US government in the name of economic development, but resisted by Native Americans because of the sacredness of the land.
For communities in many poorer countries, including in the Pacific Islands, the most influential messages are those that engage with people’s spiritual beliefs, and the most influential communication channels are often those that involve religious leaders.
In April 2009, the Pacific Conference of Churches (PCC) issued the Moana Declaration that presciently accepted that climate change and sea-level rise would force people from vulnerable coastal locations to less vulnerable areas elsewhere.
After this, the PCC set up a climate change unit and drove initiatives to put climate change into Sabbath sermons across this vast region.
But more needs to be done. My ongoing research, including projects with the PCC and the Asia-Pacific Network for Global Change Research, suggests that this lack of effective engagement with the religious community is still a key failing.
Church leaders can heavily influence practical discussions at every level of the community. That makes them an important potential target for agencies aiming to make a real difference in how Pacific Islanders cope with climate change.

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Pacific-Wide Study Aims To Understand How Journalists Cover Climate Change

Asia Pacific Report

Pacific-wide study of journalism culture ... spearheaded by University of the South Pacific's Dr Shailendra Singh. Image: Eliki Drugunalevu/Wansolwara
Climate change is at the heart of a unique regional study into journalism culture in the Pacific.
The study, focusing on journalism’s role in democracy amid cultural, economic, environmental, political and technological changes throughout the University of the South Pacific’s 12 member states, aims to assess journalists’ understanding and reportage of climate change.
“The goal is to assess journalists’ capacity for reporting climate change to help formulate approaches to training programmes in this area,” says USP’s senior journalism lecturer and programme leader Dr Shailendra Singh, the study’s project manager and one of its lead authors.

Climate change journalism
Researchers hope to learn how prepared journalists are in reporting climate change, which is one of the most imminent threats facing the Pacific.
Dr Singh says the media’s role in accurately conveying this threat will also be considered by the study.
“Journalists play a very important role in educating the population about the science of climate change, and how it may affect them in their daily lives.”
More importantly, the study is one of only a few to address the issue of climate change in the context of Pacific journalism, Dr Singh adds.
“This study will therefore contribute valuable knowledge about journalists’ understanding of climate change, allowing us to identify potential training requirements.”
The study, a partnership between the University of the South Pacific (USP), Pacific Islands’ News Association (PINA), Auckland University of Technology’s Pacific Media Centre and the Pacific Media Assistance Scheme (PACMAS), also aims to involve young researchers.
“Besides the lead researchers, we have a team of young USP tutors who are doing the field work and gathering data. This is part of their development. It’s part of capacity building for our upcoming academics and researchers.”

‘At our doorstep’
Eliki Drugunalevu, a teaching assistant in journalism at USP, is one of the researchers. He says having the opportunity to be involved in a project which focuses on climate change means a lot.
Research assistant and coordinator Eliki Drugunalevu … climate change “is at our doorstep”. Image: Wansolwara
“Climate change is at our doorstep. And reporting, highlighting it is critical in telling the stories of people who are affected by climate change.
“Not only in that, but helping people, particularly people in influential places, such as policy makers, fully understand that every decision that they make has consequences to those that are on the ground.”
Drugunalevu, who works as both a research assistant and research coordinator for the study, says the regional project is unique in its focus on climate change because it focuses on the issue from a media, rather than scientific, perspective.
“People have this perception that doing research on climate has to do with the sciences – measuring the rise of the sea level, rainfalls and so on – but this project is quite different by looking at it from the media’s perspective and how much attention the media gives to climate change in a vulnerable region like ours.”
Drugunalevu explains he and his fellow researchers are attempting to grasp journalists’ levels of understanding in what he says is “actually dissecting a story that deals with climate change rather than just looking at it as another climate change story”.
He says the current trend on climate change is reporting it “as it is and then moving onto the next story”, which is alarming.

Greater recognition needed
“Climate change means loss of land. It means loss of livelihood. It means potential loss of identity. We’ve heard of stories of people being relocated from a place where they have been settled for generations.
“While it may not mean much to the outside world, to us and to those who experience this, it means the world to them having to move from a place they have called home for generations to a new place. It can quite be an overwhelmingly emotional experience having to witness it and read it as well.”
Drugunalevu and his colleagues would like to see an understanding of how journalists’ report climate change come out of the project, but also hope their findings encourage greater recognition of climate change on the political scale.
“Getting policy makers and people in influential places to recognise the role of the media and see the bigger picture and the impact of the decisions they make on the people on the ground and with regards to climate change is important.”
The study is expected to be completed within the next two years, with research on Cook Islands, Fiji, Kiribati, Marshall Islands, Solomon Islands and Tuvalu carried out by the end of this year.
Research on Samoa and Tonga has already been completed.

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Marshall Islands President Hilda Heine Says Australia's Standing In Pacific 'At Risk' Over Climate Change Debate

ABC News - James Fettes

Marshall Islands President Hilda Heine. Photo: Jamila Toderas
The President of the Marshall Islands has questioned Australia's standing in the Pacific over its inaction on climate change.
Dr Hilda Heine delivered this year's ST Lee Lecture at the Australian National University in Canberra on the topic "Climate Change Crisis".
"It is hard to explain the feeling of being the President of a country reading a report that supposedly condemns your country to oblivion," she said.
Dr Heine said Australia is risking its reputation as the world looks to reduce carbon emissions.
"Now is not the time to be debating the science, trashing solar power, or building new coal mines," she said.
"I can assure you it does influence the way Australia is viewed in the Pacific."
Dr Heine also took aim at Australia's freezing of its foreign aid budget, comparing the country to an older sibling bullying its younger brothers and sisters.
"Imagine how you'd feel if your big brother or big sister was not only openly mocking the science but even occasionally mocking your very own plight," Dr Heine said.
"This not only does your country disservice, it openly weakens your ability to be a force for good on the world stage."

Paris Climate Accord 'last chance for the world'
The Marshall Islands has been a fierce defender of the Paris Climate Accord, which it says is critical to the very survival of the island nation.
US President Donald Trump is considering whether to withdraw from that agreement; something Dr Heine said would have serious consequences.
"Paris is the last chance for the world. We must hope the President sees that strong international cooperation based on climate science is the way to avert the catastrophic threat to our very existence," she said.
Dr Heine said the Marshallese people have already been displaced once, during Cold War-era US nuclear testing, and would do all they could to stop that happening again.
"It may well be too late for my country, but we simply do not know that yet. My country will not stand down from this fight and nor will my people," she said.
"We refuse to be the so-called climate refugees."

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