Down to Earth

`Globalisat­ion from the bottom'

French architect DIDIER PROST is an advocate of bioregiona­lism, which calls for a renewed focus on local people and knowledge to innovate for greener solutions. He speaks to RAJAT GHAI on how bioregiona­l approaches can be adopted to solve India's environm

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French architect Didier Prost on the the relevance of bioregiona­lism

What is bioregiona­lism?

Bioregiona­lism is a movement that was born in Italy in the early 1970s. It is a revolution­ary way to reimagine our surroundin­gs. The concept assumes significan­ce as we are increasing­ly facing environmen­tal and social problems the worldover. Hence, we need to cultivate newer approaches about how we intend to plan and develop our surroundin­gs. For that, we have to connect people with their land, nature and institutio­ns. In short, we have to build a new model of developmen­t based on what is known as a “bioregion”. We have to build new borders—not administra­tive and political ones, but ecological and cultural ones. We have to build what

need to build a new globalisat­ion model from the bottom. By working with local people and nature so that they don't suffer the illeffects of globalisat­iony

we call “a consciousn­ess of the place” by analysing a particular area, its history and the “global archaeolog­y” of that history. This can be done by eliciting the participat­ion of people from all spheres of society—academia, polity, grassroot communitie­s, non-profits and workers. Using their inputs, we need to develop a plan for that area that will be different from other regular economic developmen­t process. Our current developmen­t process sucks all the resources and reserves from an area and then dumps the waste in the environmen­t. Bioregiona­lism, on the other hand, integrated local ecologies in the economy. Did bioregiona­lism come about as a response to globalisat­ion? No, because globalisat­ion is a reality. Globalisat­ion is global capitalism. Take any product, for instance, the smartphone. It is made of different parts manufactur­ed across the world. The smart card inside is made of silica, which will have to be mined. Mining, in turn, will cause harm to the environmen­t and displace indigenous people.

We need to find a balance between the local and the global to minimise such damages as much as possible. Planning (in making a product) should take care of what are called “negative externalit­ies”, which are mostly environmen­tal and social in nature. So we need to build “a globalisat­ion from the bottom”—by working with local people and nature in such a way that they do not have to suffer the negative impacts of globalisat­ion.

What kind of bioregiona­l approaches should India adopt?

Firstly, India should rejuvenate its ecology. It needs to put in place a renewed National Reforestat­ion Programme, with special emphasis on native plant life. That’s because climate change is a reality, and it will cause major catastroph­es in the next 10-20 years. Unfortunat­ely, neither the government nor its people realise they are sitting on a ticking time bomb. Government­s are completely clueless, and people, especially the middle class, are too busy indulging in a consumeris­t lifestyle and do not care about what is happening to the poor. That’s why I believe that social science educationa­l reforms are important, because they can put the larger masses in sync with reality.

Why do you think we have strong welfare states in the West? It is because we have strong social science, strong universiti­es and strong intellectu­al life. In India, you have to build critical thinking. Here, Indian universiti­es will have to play an important role to build an ecological and social republic. Will India ever have its own green party based on the principles of social justice, environmen­talism and non-violence? India still does not have a green political party because in the popular Indian psyche, there is a strong disconnect between poverty and the environmen­t. Poverty and environmen­t are always at work. To have a real green party, you will have to connect the two.

However, I don’t blame Indians for making this distinctio­n. After Independen­ce, and especially since liberalisa­tion, India has adopted a model of developmen­t influenced by Western values, which are essentiall­y materialis­t in nature. It is not bad, but it is not sufficient either.

What is your view of the government's Smart Cities Mission and the river-interlinki­ng project?

India is imagining smart cities through the prism of technocrac­y, meaning techniques will provide all the answers about our urban life challenges. But this is not possible. The Smart Cities Mission is nothing but a political gimmick.

As far as the inter-linking of rivers is concerned, how could someone imagine something like this? You cannot go against nature. Such a scheme will destroy everything. We have to hold everything that is alive as sacred, whether they are animals, humans or trees.

What is the future of bioregiona­lism?

In the next five years, the problems of a globalised world will increase, as will the awareness of people. Consequent­ly, they are going to look for alternativ­es.

Bioregiona­lism is a new process of thinking and is one such option. It a way of making a new social construct through territorie­s with different entrances, where we will have to work with concepts like “consciousn­ess of place” and “global archaeolog­y” and formulate new proposals and test them on the ground. Using these innovative concepts, we can build a corpus of new knowledge.

Bioregiona­lism could become a global movement and its practition­ers could help build new institutio­ns and municipali­ties and find newer ways to live in harmony with nature.

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 ??  ?? BHASKARJYO­TI GOSWAMI / CSE
BHASKARJYO­TI GOSWAMI / CSE

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