Short Takes: News From All Over
April 6, 2006
April 2006
Staff Utne.com
Right Brain-Left Brain Conservation
By Nancy Bazilchuk, Conservation in Practice
Home to one of the National Science Foundation's Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) programs, H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest in Oregon's Cascade Mountain Range has helped advance the research of hundreds of scientists since the 1950s. One of Andrews' newest programs -- the Long-Term Ecological Reflections project -- opens the field of ecology research to writers and humanists. In this creative adaptation of the original LTER program, writers-in-residence take on the role of literary researchers -- taking contemplative nature hikes as 'field work' while they 'collect data' by penning their thoughts into journals. -- Evan Noetzel
http://www.conbio.org/cip/article71inltr.cfm
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Mail Order Chickens
By Staff, Pressureworks
Pressureworks, a Christian Aid online hub campaigning for 'peace, economic justice, and basic rights for all,' tackled trade injustice by creating 'Mail Order Chickens,' a tongue-in-cheek website pushing for the adoptions of 10 chickens from Ghana, where local farmers can't compete with cheap, imported birds. Each chicken on the site has a bio (Bertie is a Christopher Walken fan who creates art with his bodily fluids), celebrity advocate, and links to a 'live' webcast. But don't get too attached to your bird -- it's doomed from the get-go. Mrs. Yumbia, the African farmer who owns the fake chickens, ends up slaughtering her animated flock for food. -- Kristen Mueller
http://www.mailorderchickens.org/
The Pirate Party
By Staff, The Pirate Party
It may sound like a Halloween tradition, but the Pirate Party is quickly gaining credibility as a political movement in Sweden. The political party is based on three core principals: 'the need for protection of citizen's rights, the will to free our culture, and the insight that patents and private monopolies are damaging to society.' All other issues have been put aside to unite the party under a banner of digital freedom. -- Bennett Gordon
https://www.piratpartiet.se/English.aspx
Who Owns What
By Phil Howard, Cyber-Help for Organic Farmers
The word 'organic' may conjure up images of local farmers producing environmentally and socially responsible food, but that's not always the case. This illuminating flow chart pulls back the veil on the corporate ownership of many organic products. 'Back to Nature' may sound like a nice brand, but it's really just Kraft. (Thanks, Triple Pundit) -- Bennett Gordon
http://tinyurl.com/k2n4r