User Info
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||
| My Groups: | Phoenix Conversation Network | SystemsChange | WEversity |
Network [List] · [Visualize]
Connected with 18 organizations
Connected with 7 people
Connected with 4 resources
Connected with 0 solutions
Connected with 0 jobs
Connected with 0 events
Connected with 5 wikipages
Areas of Focus
Ecolabeling and Certification
(1239 people) | Sustainable Materials
(2037 people) | Business Firm and Organization Sustainability
(3028 people) | Sustainable Building
(3012 people) | Energy Efficiency and Conservation
(2440 people) | Sustainable Urban and Regional Planning
(1929 people) | Sustainable Forestry
(1854 people) | Life Cycle Assessment
(1169 people) | Industrial Ecology
(781 people) | Natural Resource Management
(1319 people) | Sustainable Production
(2468 people) | Recycling and Reuse
(2590 people) | Natural Capitalism
(2463 people) | Indoor Air Quality
(772 people) | Art and Sculpture
(1688 people) | Ecological Economics
(2352 people) | Ecosystem Services
(1326 people) | Fiscal Policies, Institutions and Taxation
(532 people) | Sustainability and Technology
(2126 people) | Socially Responsible Investment
(2763 people) | Democracy and Civil Society
(1960 people) | Education, Government and Sustainability
(2057 people) | Energy Security and Sustainability
(1204 people) | Climate Change
(4730 people) | Emissions Trading
(1144 people) | Greenhouse Gases
(1332 people) | Transnational Corporations
(939 people) | Global Governance
(1138 people) | Consumption and Green Consumers
(2200 people) | Environmental Justice
(1981 people) | Indigenous Peoples and Cultures
(2794 people) | Environmental Law and Policy
(1172 people) | Toxic and Hazardous Substances
(686 people) | Pollution Prevention and Reduction
(1168 people) | Sustainability, Religious and Spiritual Issues
(2676 people) | Infrastructure
(993 people) | Sustainable Communities
(4076 people) | Sustainable Transportation
(1697 people) | Biomimicry
(1618 people) | Green Roofs
(1593 people)
About
Inquiry: The primary inquiry of my life (though not always
with these words) is how do we make the system changes needed so that
human and organizational creativity naturally lead toward sustainable
and restorative practices? My thoughts on this have changed
substantially over the years - and it's still a quest.
Work: I am research director at BuildingGreen, publisher of Environmental Building News (EBN), the GreenSpec Directory of green building products, and the online resource BuildingGreen Suite. I provide technical and research support, write the occasional EBN article, update criteria for GreenSpec’s product screening process, and collaborate on a variety of consulting projects - and I totally love what I do.
Path: As a child I had a direct and intensely personal connection to the natural world. This morphed into a stewardship commitment while thru-hiking the Appalachian Trail after high school. Studying environmental science at Brown led to the realization that demand for resources drove environmental degradation – and that supply/demand economics had more power than science in determining policy and market behavior and the resulting environmental impacts. So I went to work at an energy efficiency engineering consulting firm to focus on the demand side of the equation (learning engineering on the job). During that time it became obvious to me that efficiency would be overshadowed by increased production unless the underlying dynamic was changed so that industry was environmentally benign or even restorative. This led me to an internship at Rocky Mountain Institute, and then to MIT for a dual MS in technology policy and materials engineering. After MIT I dabbled in consulting/contracting work - for the Toxics Use Reduction Institute, and a few other places, before finding work at BuildingGreen in my hometown of Brattleboro, VT.
Process: The process has been one of traveling further into industrial/organizational/engineering realms to acquire the tools I felt I needed to do the work I feel called to – and a concurrent cycle of connection, loss, and reconnection to my spiritual and emotional center. I have now come full circle in many ways. I have rooted myself back in community, place (Brattleboro, VT), and spirit. Professionally and in my studies, I followed the line of power and impact only to discover (1) the extent to which it seems people at all ranks and positions can feel disempowered - or empowered, and (2) the extent to which today’s problems are system level issues which have to be addressed through people’s collective wise engagement in the face of radical uncertainty.
Interests: I tend to be obsessed with standards, certifications, infrastructure, taxation systems, and other behind-the-scenes rules that determine how we engage with the world, and in my own little way, I get to play with some of these at work. I'm also frequently amazed by how often, despite my engineering training and focus on ACTION, I tend to return to the need for - and transformational potential of - quality dialogue (my father's CII world). I have to get outdoors a lot to stay sane (hiking, kayaking, skiing, etc., etc.), and love to create (pottery, sculpture, murals, gardens, etc., etc.), The scope of my interests is limited primarily by time, and by self-imposed activity limits that provide both balance and time for reflection in my life.
Work: I am research director at BuildingGreen, publisher of Environmental Building News (EBN), the GreenSpec Directory of green building products, and the online resource BuildingGreen Suite. I provide technical and research support, write the occasional EBN article, update criteria for GreenSpec’s product screening process, and collaborate on a variety of consulting projects - and I totally love what I do.
Path: As a child I had a direct and intensely personal connection to the natural world. This morphed into a stewardship commitment while thru-hiking the Appalachian Trail after high school. Studying environmental science at Brown led to the realization that demand for resources drove environmental degradation – and that supply/demand economics had more power than science in determining policy and market behavior and the resulting environmental impacts. So I went to work at an energy efficiency engineering consulting firm to focus on the demand side of the equation (learning engineering on the job). During that time it became obvious to me that efficiency would be overshadowed by increased production unless the underlying dynamic was changed so that industry was environmentally benign or even restorative. This led me to an internship at Rocky Mountain Institute, and then to MIT for a dual MS in technology policy and materials engineering. After MIT I dabbled in consulting/contracting work - for the Toxics Use Reduction Institute, and a few other places, before finding work at BuildingGreen in my hometown of Brattleboro, VT.
Process: The process has been one of traveling further into industrial/organizational/engineering realms to acquire the tools I felt I needed to do the work I feel called to – and a concurrent cycle of connection, loss, and reconnection to my spiritual and emotional center. I have now come full circle in many ways. I have rooted myself back in community, place (Brattleboro, VT), and spirit. Professionally and in my studies, I followed the line of power and impact only to discover (1) the extent to which it seems people at all ranks and positions can feel disempowered - or empowered, and (2) the extent to which today’s problems are system level issues which have to be addressed through people’s collective wise engagement in the face of radical uncertainty.
Interests: I tend to be obsessed with standards, certifications, infrastructure, taxation systems, and other behind-the-scenes rules that determine how we engage with the world, and in my own little way, I get to play with some of these at work. I'm also frequently amazed by how often, despite my engineering training and focus on ACTION, I tend to return to the need for - and transformational potential of - quality dialogue (my father's CII world). I have to get outdoors a lot to stay sane (hiking, kayaking, skiing, etc., etc.), and love to create (pottery, sculpture, murals, gardens, etc., etc.), The scope of my interests is limited primarily by time, and by self-imposed activity limits that provide both balance and time for reflection in my life.
Comments (1 - 2 of 2)
Login to Post a Comment.
|
Remove MarkW 20 days ago
Hi Jennifer, I wondered if Tom was your Dad. Small world. Very cool. Wow, what movers and shakers in your family!
|
|
Check out "The Lost People of Mountain Village" on Wiser Earth:
http://www.wiserearth.org/resource/view/c95cb3ad93b81bf5a1010d3f32485159
"This film is not funny." - Steven Peabody, Colorado Board of Real Estate Professionals.
Grand Jury Prize, Earthdance Short Attention Span Environmental Film Festival, Best Short Comedy, Breckenridge Film Festival, Best Cultural Commentary, Boulder Adventure Film Festival, Jury Prize, Mountainfilm in Telluride, Audience Award, Ann Arbor Film Festival. 15 minutes in 2 parts. |
1 to 2 of 2 Comments


