O.A.T.H.

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"To Truly Love" Creator And His Diversly Fashioned Human Creations Is An Assurance Unto Eternal Blessed Life; to love not "This Truth" assures certain death both physically and spiritually, and upon the higher ideals of This Precept "O.A.T.H." was formed as a common open forum of hope. We are "a not for profeit " web community seeking the truth in all things ...learn more

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Created: Oct 12, 2008

Updated: Aug 11, 2009

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Created: Nov 06, 2008
Updated: Nov 13, 2009
Viewed: 84 times

Andrea Berardi

AndreaBerardi
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User Info 

Address: TW20 United Kingdom
 
I Speak: English, Italian, Portuguese, French
 
I Am: Academic
 
Member Since: November 06, 2008
 
Local Time: Wed Nov 25 23:28:00
 

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Areas of Focus 

Environmental Education (3382 people)  |  Natural Resource Education (1212 people)  |  Sustainability Education (4206 people)  |  Green Schools (2366 people)  |  Landscape Ecology (954 people)  |  Culture and Sustainability (2703 people)  |  Traditional Culture (1636 people)  |  Natural Resource Conservation (1630 people)  |  Wilderness (1761 people)  |  Practical Conservation (962 people)  |  Community Participation (3635 people)  |  Dialogue, Deliberation and Consensus-Building (1939 people)  |  Ecological Economics (2349 people)  |  Environmental Accounting (867 people)  |  Natural Capitalism (2462 people)  |  Socially Responsible Investment (2761 people)  |  Biocultural Diversity (1750 people)  |  Biodiversity Conservation (3181 people)  |  Domesticated Plant Conservation (441 people)  |  Arts Activism (2148 people)  |  Wildlife Ecology (1653 people)  |  Wildlife Management (827 people)  |  Wildlife Habitat Conservation (2374 people)  |  Gardening (3093 people)  |  Organic Farming (3643 people)  |  Permaculture (3260 people)  |  Sustainable Agriculture (4016 people)  |  Fire Ecology (381 people)  |  Energy Efficiency and Conservation (2439 people)  |  Energy Flow in Ecosystems (869 people)  |  Sustainable Energy Development (3889 people)  |  Sustainable Fishing (980 people)  |  Global Food Supply and Sustainability (2442 people)  |  Hunger and Food Security (1327 people)  |  Local Food Systems (2859 people)  |  Sustainable Forestry (1853 people)  |  Globalization Impacts (2072 people)  |  Transnational Corporations (939 people)  |  Fair Trade (2546 people)  |  Global Governance (1137 people)  |  Good Governance (1195 people)  |  Consumption and Green Consumers (2200 people)  |  Ecological Footprint (2223 people)  |  Environmental Monitoring (980 people)  |  Life Cycle Assessment (1169 people)  |  Recycling and Reuse (2590 people)  |  Natural Resource Management (1319 people)  |  Sustainable Production (2468 people)  |  Ecological Change and Emerging Diseases (671 people)  |  Environmental Health (1495 people)  |  Malaria (320 people)  |  Climate Justice (1201 people)  |  Distributive and Economic Justice (1018 people)  |  Environmental Justice (1980 people)  |  Ethnic Equality (964 people)  |  Human Rights Education (1031 people)  |  Social Justice Education (1717 people)  |  Indigenous Lands (1199 people)  |  Indigenous Peoples and Cultures (2793 people)  |  Indigenous Rights (1680 people)  |  Inland Aquatic Ecosystems (596 people)  |  Riparian Ecology and Conservation (683 people)  |  Wetlands (914 people)  |  Environmental Law and Policy (1171 people)  |  Land Tenure (282 people)  |  Precautionary Principle (459 people)  |  Property Rights (421 people)  |  Internet (2557 people)  |  Video (1197 people)  |  Men and Violence (344 people)  |  Sustainable Minerals Industry (588 people)  |  Arms Trading (372 people)  |  Conflict Resolution (1848 people)  |  Militarism and Violence (527 people)  |  Military Disarmament (460 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people)  |  Poverty Alleviation (1732 people)  |  Squatter Communities (528 people)  |  Sustainable Livelihoods (2711 people)  |  Ecopsychology (1283 people)  |  Environmental Ethics (1652 people)  |  Religion and Ecology (1197 people)  |  Sustainability, Religious and Spiritual Issues (2672 people)  |  Sustainable Living (3474 people)  |  EcoVillages (2798 people)  |  Infrastructure (993 people)  |  Sustainable Communities (4072 people)  |  Sustainable Transportation (1697 people)  |  Sustainable Urban and Regional Planning (1928 people)  |  Sustainable Urban Environmental Services (1054 people)  |  Sustainable Urban Power (1004 people)  |  Urban Communications (660 people)  |  Urban Ecology (1648 people)  |  Urban Revitalization (1184 people)  |  Waste Management (1255 people)  |  Biomimicry (1616 people)  |  Green Roofs (1593 people)  |  Sustainable Building (3011 people)  |  Sustainable Materials (2035 people)  |  Biological Development (672 people)  |  Economic Development (1763 people)  |  Rural Development (1494 people)  |  Social Development (1977 people)  |  Sustainability and Technology (2123 people)  |  Appropriate Technology (1551 people)  |  Living Wages (1213 people)  |  Worker Rights (920 people)  |  Gender Equality (1676 people)  |  Women's Rights (1302 people)  |  Grasslands and Savannas (385 people)  |  Water and Sustainable Development (1911 people)  |  Water Quality and Health (1106 people)  |  Women's Empowerment (1839 people)  |  Water Supply and Conservation (1555 people)  |  Water Rights (906 people)  |  Information and Communication Technology (1770 people)  |  Women and the Environment (1180 people)  |  Women's Economic Development (915 people)  |  Women's Education (1074 people)  |  Women's Safety from Violence (969 people)  |  Watershed Management (1247 people)  |  Technology Transfer (755 people)  |  Biotechnology (603 people)  

About

My Bio

1971-1989....
Born in Naples, Italy in 1971. Lived in Ireland (1971-72), Ethiopia
(1972-78?), Italy (1978?-79?), Saudi Arabia (1979?-85), UK (1985-87) and Italy (1987-1989). I think I'm Italian, well, that is what it says on my passport, but I'm not sure.....as you can see, I have grown up in lots of different countries and during that time engaged with cultures in many more during my various travels. I do not really identify with the culture of any particular country or locality -- which probably has strengthened my "oneworld" aspirations.

1989-1999....
Met Jay (my partner) on the second week of a BSc in Ecology at King's, London (1989-92). Worked as Outward-Bound Instructor in Sabah, Malaysia (1992-93). Conservation MSc (1993-4) and PhD at UCL (1994-99). During the PhD I was also Jay's unpaid (!) field-assistant studying fire ecology in the Brazilian cerrado.

1999-May 2002....
Lectured at London School of Economics, University College London and Royal Holloway, and was a Research Associate at the Royal Holloway Institute for Environmental Research until April 2002. In 2001 and 2002 I was principal investigator on Earthwatch's "Italy's Volcanic Park Survey". Manu Tejasvin was born on the 9th of November 2001. Have also been collaborating with Jay on a study of Amerindian Fire Culture in the Brazilian cerrado. Manu was six months old when we took him to live with the Kraho!

June 2002 - December 2003
Got the lecturership in Environmental Information Systems in the Systems Discipline, Centre for Complexity and Change, Open University, UK. Anju Lakshmi was born on the 24th of June 2003. Jay and I also got Darwin Initiative funding for a project to develop an ecologically sustainable and socially just management plan for the North Rupununi wetlands in Guyana.

I also convened with Jay, a session at the International Conference on Tropical Savannas and Seasonally Dry Forests, Edinburgh, September 2003. The resulting book was published by Ashgate and is called "Savannas And Dry Forests: Linking People with Nature" (it is not recommended as an easy read! :-)

January 2004-December 2005
As part of my lecturership, I contributed to the production of T863 "Environmental Decision Making: A Systems Approach"-- a postgraduate part-time course delivered by the Open University. I was also awarded a grant from the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) to research Virtual Team Working for Natural Resource Management.

Since January 2006
The new course - T863 "Environmental Decision Making: A Systems Approach" was presented for the first time in May 2006. The latest figures (for the course starting in November 2007) shows that we have more than 100 students! We were also awarded a further £106,000 to continue the Rupununi Project for another 18 months starting August 2006.

During this period, what I thought was repetitive strain injury got significantly worse and developed into myofascial pain syndrome. This has been extremely debilitating but I have found ways to keep working by using voice recognition software and doing lots of yoga!

Have just finished writing my bit for the new second level course "Understanding Systems: Making Sense of Complexity". This course is now live!

Ways I would change the world

Where do I start?!?
I guess the simplest and most basic step would be to guarantee every single family enough space to grow vegetables and fruit for personal consumption. At the moment, my family of two adults and two young children, can grow all of our vegetables and a significant proportion of fruits on just an area 10 m by 30 m in size. This has significantly reduced our ecological/carbon footprint while providing a wonderful excuse for exercise. This has also made us virtually independent from supermarkets since we can source most of the other things we need from ethical/fair trade/organic producers via the web. But most importantly, my children learn the value and effort of food and have a fantastic first hand experience of ecology.

The next step would be to design communities which are self-sufficient in energy and other resources such as water: well insulated homes with plenty of natural light; solar water heating; ability to work from home using ICTs; rainwater collection/grey water recycling; etc.

Then a significant boost in holistic education so that we can manage most of the challenges we face within the community: health; crime; ecosystem conservation; entertainment; etc

I could go on and on..........

Favorite Quote

"The Civilisation of the Dialogue is the only civilisation worth having and the only civilisation in which the whole world can unite. It is, therefore, the only civilisation we can hope for, because the world must unite or be blown to bits. The Civilisation of the Dialogue requires communication. It requires a common language and a common stock of ideas. It assumes that every man has reason and that every man can use it. It preserves to every man his independence and judgement and, since it does so, it deprives any man or any group of men of the privilege of forcing their judgement upon any other man or group of men. The Civilisation of the Dialogue is the negation of force. We have reached the point, in any event, when force cannot unite the world; it can merely destroy it. Through continuing and enriching the Great Conversation, higher education not only does its duty by morals and religion, it not only performs its proper intellectual task; it also support and symbolises the highest hopes and the highest aspirations of mankind."

Robert Maynard Hutchins (1952)
The Great Conversation: The Substance of a Liberal Education, Vol. 1: The Great Books of the Western World. Chicago, Encyclopaedia Britannica.

Places I've been

These are some of the most memorable places I have had the privilege to explore:
Lake Langano, Ethiopia.
Mount Kinabalu, Sabah, Borneo.
Chapada Diamantina, Brazil.
Campi Flegrei, Italy.
Temburong, Brunei, Borneo.
Rupununi wetlands, Guyana.
Farasan Islands, Saudi Arabia.
Brecon Beacons, Wales.
Mekong Delta, Vietnam.
Merja Zerga, Marocco.

People I'd like to meet

Fritjof Capra
David Orr
Joanna Macy

Interests

Self-sufficiency: growing my own food; sourcing second-hand/recycle/local/natural materials: renewable energy home heating, etc

low impact entertainment: books; music; yoga; swimming; trecking; cycling; cooking; dancing; drumming!

Languages Spoken

English
Italian
Portuguese (basic)
French (rudimentary)

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sallylever about 1 month ago

Hi Andrea,

 

Saw you on the UK group and thought it would be nice to drop by and say hello. Very much enjoyed reading your profile and all about your travels and fascinating experiences. It sounds like your children are very fortunate to have you and Jay as parents.

 

Hope to speak soon.

 

Kind regards,

 

Sally

 

 

 

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