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The Institute of Green Professionals
Following in the consilient footsteps of E. O. Wilson and Brian Milani
11 January 2009

IGP 2009
IGP 2009

As the fields opened out by pioneering social and environmental entrepreneurs begin to mainstream, we will see a secondary wave of professionalisation.  Although I have tended to shy away from the conventional professional institutes in these fields, because they have often struck me as pursuing the narrow self-interests of particular groups of professionals or as being obsessed with strapping letters after people's names, I do see a growing need to network across the hugely diverse disciplines and fields that social entrepreneurship, human rights, cleantech, sustainable development and so on now embrace.  Which is a key reason I was happy to accept this week the Honorary Fellowship offered by the Institute of Green Professionals, based in the USA.

As background, IGP is "an independent, professional, education, credentialing, research and philanthropic “social enterprise” organization for sustainable development professionals and academics.  Multi-disciplinary in its scope, the Institute of Green Professionals is the only credentialing and ethics code-based global organization that brings together individuals and organizations from diverse areas of sustainable development expertise. The IGP specialties currently include accounting, appraisal, architecture, engineering, land planning, landscape architecture, real property valuation, law, including participants in CSR capacities." 

What caught my interest, though, was IGP's Mission Statement, which referenced the thinking of both Harvard biologist E.O. Wilson and economist Brian Milani. Professor Wilson noted that: “A balanced perspective cannot be acquired by studying disciplines in pieces but through pursuit of the consilience among them.” As IGP points out, the term 'consilience' was used in Wilson’s 1998 book of the same name, Consilience: The Unity of Knowledge, and means “the joining together of knowledge and information across disciplines to create a unified framework of understanding.” 

Milani applied this concept to participants in the transition to a Green economy when he said: “The environmental movement in particular should put more emphasis on establishing an educational network that both formalizes its educational tasks and systematizes connections with the rest of the community.” 

These are sentiments, ambitions and pursuits that I wholly buy into.

Posted at 13:22:00 on 11 January 2009 by John Elkington.

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QuoteI agree with this sentiment. In my area, I deal mainly with commercial buildings.I think we need to educate everyone from consumer to operations and management people, as wells as janitors, and maintenance people. Here, in Chicago, I am involved with the Green business League who,s focus is to educate and implement Green Practices in all types of businesses that will continue for the long term.

Jim McSweeney
06 February 2009
at 16:38:00
Quotealternative energy, zero carbon, zero wastes, local food....things people can't do without...lets focus the results of consilience on providing unemployed people with jobs in these areas...

Ted Rouse
26 January 2009
at 04:47:00
QuoteTIMELY WORK

PADMAJEEVA LOKUGAMAGE
24 January 2009
at 23:02:00
QuoteAn area where there is a great deal of potential for exploring consiliency is ecopsychology, the study of our psychological relationship to our environment. When we study ecology we begin to appreciate the interrelationships of systems and the metadynamics of transfer of energy between those systems. By introducing the psychological dimension we become aware of the extent to which our sense of self is rooted in our relationship with our environment. This is a deep instinctual connection that has been submerged and subverted by the age of enlightenment. I encourage the Institute of Green Professionals to include this perspective in their on-going conversation regarding sustainability.

Vernon Woodworth
24 January 2009
at 15:00:00

 

 
 
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