Thursday, April 21, 2016

Prison Ecology Project as a New Direction for the Environmental Humanities


As many of you in ENST 490 know, I am part of the Prison Ecology Project, which looks at the intersection of mass incarceration and environmental degradation. I work as a research assistant, but my primary duties are conducting archival research and developing a story map of the project. The project is definitely in the beginning stages, but the team has some goals for the project that follow some of what Gomez’s deems directions for the environmental humanities. 

One of the directions Gomez’s talks about is transdisciplinary and postdisciplinarity. Innovative and appropriate methods, approaches, theories and dialogues are necessary to achieve transdisciplinary and postdiscplinarity, and the environmental humanities should be a laboratory to develop these innovations, according to Gomez. I would argue that the Prison Ecology Project is working towards this as it is using different bodies of knowledge to work towards policy and social change of the expanding prison industrial complex. It combines the prison abolition movement with the environmental justice movement and makes connections in the fields of political science, criminology, sociology, GIS, cartography, communications, and the environmental humanities. We are working with people of all different backgrounds, from incarcerated individuals, radical environmentalists, academics, and students, which aligns with transdisciplinary as it, “involves increasing collaboration between academic scholars and other publics” (Gomez). We are incorporating visual arts, though my role as a cartographer, to communicate a global environmental and human rights issue, and are bringing to question that there may not be a difference between the two. 

The other direction that we are incorporating into the project is developing “citizen humanities.” This concept emphasizes the importance of not only working across scholarly disciplines, but working from academia to other spheres of public engagement. When the Prison Ecology Project presented at the Public Interest Environmental Law Conference (PIELC) in March 2016, we opened up our project to the audience and the public, asking for participation in data collection and public records requests. Through this we are able to not only gather more data on the pollution in prisons, but also have thousands of people who live in communities near a prison participate in a global movement and feel a sense of liberation. Currently, this is a goal of the project but the foundation is there. As a part of this project, I hope to liberate communities through the use of GIS and cartography. 

Through my four years as an Environmental Studies major, I have come to find a passion in social justice GIS or counter/ critical cartography. The Prison Ecology Project has fallen into my lap, and I am very lucky to be involved with such wonderful people and work for such a powerful movement. Reading this article made my work and the project feel even more validated. I hope to incorporate all four of Gomez’s directions into further work. This is exciting but also daunting, as I am sure is a feeling many of us ENST seniors feel. Here we go. 

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