geography

winter '08–spring '09 issue 11

coverartname.jpg
THIS ISSUE: 

The nation's economy has taken a deep dive into a recession. It is becoming increasingly more vital to reevaluate every aspect of our lives. Afterall, what does your socioeconomic status offer? Can you afford a decent education? Can you afford to buy healthy, vitamin enriched food? Can you keep your electricity bill paid? Can you afford a healthcare plan? The last question normally draws a shudder. The dismal truth is that many citizens cannot financiallly invest in the future of their health. Yet, many citizens have never been able to managably pay for a healthcare plan. Trouble on Wallstreet will hopefully make us reevaluate our spending habits. However, the recession cannot take complete responsibility for the failures of the nation's healthcare system. In this issue of The Indypendent Reader, we take a closer look at public health. Now, more than ever, it is critical to ultimately focus our eyes on population heath. We look to productively analyze the social determinants of health in Baltimore City.

If you are reading this paper,chances are that you reside in Baltimore. This is your population group. Population health is chiefly concerned with the health of individual groups. To go further, population health studies the determinants of a group's health.What we must do is focus our attention on each determinant. What does this determinant mean considering the outcomes rendered to inequality in health across populations? For instance, Baltimore is home to a number of world-renowned medical institutions. Nevertheless, in the shadow of these mega-medical centers, an HIV/AIDS epidemic plagues Baltimore’s poorest communities. In order to define the systematic differences in population heath, we take a look at the absence of these institutions in the fight against HIV/AIDS here at home.

Health Care is a concern for all of us. For supporters of universal health care policy, the long uphill battle has often been plagued by politician supported reform policies that only maintain the nation's exclusory and privatized healthcare structure. Two of our articles explore the possibility of a nonexclusory, full-coverage, single payer healthcare system.While acquiring universal healthcare is doubtlessly at the forefront of the population health battle, there are still many other factors that make a healthy population. Afterall, what are we feeding our children at school? Baltimore is also a city deep in the throes of the influences and consequences of drugs. What does all of this mean? We, The Indypendent Reader, aim to explore all of these issues.

Take a look at our table of contents. It will lead you to your article of choice. Don't hesitate to read the issue from cover-to-cover. Cover-to-cover readings will fill you with excellent news articles, a cheeky cartoon, terrific images and particular pieces that, underneath all the statistics, assess the ethical basis for discussions on population health. Commuity leaders, activists, and journalists put their pens to paper (or rather their fingers to a keyboard) and give us the following discourses. Consider your health, turn the page....

--Nicholas Petr and Corey Reidy for the editors

cover: Teddy Johnson

East Baltimore Residents Keeping Development Project in Check – Nicholas Petr, (from Indy Reader issue 10)

image: 
SMEAC7.jpg

According to SMEAC director Nathan Soy, the fight is far from over, and residents will be setting up a picket at the EBDI offices on a regular basis until construction begins and the funding of “House for a House” is properly handled.

---

Sorry, you need to install flash to see this content.

Keeping it in the Community: Discussions with Miriam Avins and Jim Kelly on Land Trusts in Baltimore — Nick Petr

image: 
Mirriam Ivins Photo 2.jpg

Amidst the mega-gentrification of cities in the U.S. and around the world, community leaders are frantically searching for ways to put the brakes on development projects that don’t consider the needs of existing residents. Community land trusts may be a step in the right direction. A land trust is an agreement in which one party holds the ownership of a piece of land for the benefit of the other.

Summer—Fall 2008

cover9.jpg
THIS ISSUE: 

What has been a commonplace of ecology is now often said of the “global economy” too: everything in the world market is connected with everything else. The rapid decline in house prices in Baltimore can drive up the price of eggs in China. China strikes oil, and the price at the pump decreases; global warming follows, causing a hurricane, and (to reverse the proverb) a butterfly stops flapping somewhere over the Chesapeake Bay. On the one hand, the mass media, the mouthpiece of the singular Economy, describe the economy as something mechanical: it has “cycles,” it “grows,” it “shrinks,” and change in one part puts “pressure” on another. On the other hand, they present it to us as possessing intentions and emotions: it “calculates” and “predicts”; it is “happy” or “sad.” In any case, the picture drawn is one of a system that governs itself, regardless of circumstance or what any one of us might want from life.

It is curious, however, that as a system, the Economy never seems to be in balance, and, when portrayed as a consciousness, it seems to be bipolar and never content. These states of crisis contrast with what we have learned about most ecological systems. Rather, it appears to grow (“good”) or shrink (“bad”), when it does not seem to be undergoing some massive internal or (as is increasingly clear) externalized catastrophe. Indeed, one of the troublesome terms and concepts in discussion of the Economy as an all-inclusive system is that of “externality”—the unfortunate butterfly mentioned above, for example. At the same time, such rhetorical shorthand as “the market thinks …” reduces discussion of both human intentions and the appearance of commodities in the market to one of superficial differences, as distinct from one of different motives and practices.

The recent “food crisis” (and the related “fuel crisis”) illustrates well the ridiculousness of talking about the Economy with ecological turns of the phrase. Yes, there are, roughly speaking, “mechanical” effects, although not unconnected with human intervention. Global warming, for example, is driving the growing number of extreme environmental events, including the devastating floods in the Mississippi Valley last June. These floods destroyed millions of acres of wheat, corn, and soybeans—a few, hybridized species that are grown extensively as single crops, or “mono-crops.” Last June there was no margin of time left to replant these summer crops, nor were there alternatives not so susceptible to flooding.

So is mono-cropping in this way necessary? To begin to answer this question, we should consider how what is commonly thought of as “agriculture” these days has little or nothing to do with cultivation as it has been understood for millennia—nurturing innate tendencies of living things under certain conditions—let alone with crop gene and species diversification to buffer against disaster, or further cultivating sustainable human relationships with self-sustaining environmental systems. Instead, mono-cropping represents an effort to bring agriculture in line with the demands of industrial production, particularly capitalist: each plant is regarded as a little machine whose efficient output of consumable material must constantly be improved, and whose individual products (beans, kernels, etc.) must be identical to each other for all intents and purposes, so that monetary value and patent rights can be attached to them.

Furthermore, the extensive planting of such crops aims at increasing marginal surplus—translating into capital and profit—rather than being satisfied with the normal abundance of traditional sustainable agriculture. And, just as in the housing–credit crisis this year (see Indypendent Reader 7, Winter 2008), the profits are privatized, while the negative impact of risk is made a problem for society in general. It matters not that such “staple” crops are being diverted for processing into “green” fuels, packaging, and bio-fabrics; commodity diversification through further industrial processes does not change the fact of unsustainable industrialized agriculture.

As such the Global Economy is unsustainable and unjust. Yet “sustainability” has become a buzzword among politicians and businesspersons, and “environmental justice” is not far behind in overuse. In the present Indypendent Reader, our contributors have tried to keep these terms meaningful by illustrating local efforts toward solving economic and ecological problems, and providing a framework for thinking about them. Farooq examines Baltimore City’s new Office of Sustainability and interviews Dave O’Leary of the Sierra Club on the same. Petr interviews two representatives of Baltimore land trust projects. Hufnagel considers the question of whether “green industries” are really as economically and ecologically sound as their name suggests. Jones and Imhof explore Baltimore’s neighborhood food gardens. Finally, Hoeschele offers some perspective on long-term strategies for preventing “environmental justice” from being co-opted by the powers that be. As always, we hope this issue inspires you, perhaps literally, to try to build a new society on the vacant lots of the old.

—Michael Lane, for the editorial group

EPA's Troubled Waters

The state of the Chesapeake Bay and its tributaries is crucial to the well being of both our local ecosystem and public health, yet polluters dump about 240 million pounds of toxins into our waterways each year. The long-term effects on human health and the environment could be disastrous. Thirty five years after the Clean Water Act became law, this American News Project report explores why our fish are changing sex and our water contains rocket fuel, pesticides, and pharmaceuticals.

For more ANP reports visit http://newsproject.org/

Sorry, you need to install flash to see this content.

Rethinking West Baltimore's Highway to Nowhere

Ashley Milburn is a 2007 Open Society Institute Community Fellow. His work around the Highway to Nowhere began in 2007 while he was a student in the Masters of Community Arts at the Maryland Institute College of Art. With the assistance of the West Baltimore Coalition (WBC), he helped establish the first West Baltimore Committee on Arts & Culture as an extension of the WBC. Currently, stakeholders and representatives from both sides of the Highway are developing a cultural plan for the area called the Culture Works and West Baltimore Cultural Space Project.

Sorry, you need to install flash to see this content.
Add to calendar
Syndicate content