Maybe two generations aren鈥檛 enough.
at the Aspen Institute champions two-generation solutions, supporting the educational and career goals of children and their caregivers. Through the , among other programs, Ascend engages systems, and policy and social impact leaders, to embrace these solutions.
Ascend recognizes that climate change and its consequences demand approaches that go beyond just two generations. With the recently launched Early Years Climate Action Task Force, Joe Waters, 2021 Ascend Fellow, aims to mobilize thinking and action for the next century and beyond. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a huge need to rethink systems, and that鈥檚 why there鈥檚 a huge opportunity,鈥 says Waters, cofounder and CEO of the think tank , and a to Early Learning Nation.
The Task Force is dedicated to forging new connections between the early education sectors (including allied fields such as pediatrics) and the growing movement to tackle the climate crisis. It is co-chaired by Diana Rauner, president of ; and Antwanye Ford, president and CEO of Enlightened, Inc.
After a series of listening sessions beginning this fall, the Task Force will issue an Early Years Climate Action Plan featuring recommendations that encompass child-serving systems, businesses, nonprofits and philanthropy, and all levels of government. For example, foundations might be encouraged to target place-based grantmaking in regions that are particularly vulnerable to extreme weather and other manifestations of climate change.
Waters鈥 organization, founded in 2018, has consistently focused on climate. For example, Katherine Prince, vice president of Strategic Foresight at KnowledgeWorks, has 聽that southeastern states are 鈥減rone to severe storms and have relatively high poverty levels.鈥 : 鈥淧olicy-makers need to start to address issues related to climate displacement and housing systemically and inclusively. Without their coordinated and concerted action, young children鈥檚 flourishing will falter.鈥
Waters credits Aspen Institute senior fellow Laura Schifter for spearheading climate action at the school level and laying the groundwork for viewing child development through a climate lens. , the magazine of the Harvard Graduate School of Education, where she is a lecturer, Schifter captures the moment when she saw the overlap between education and climate. Watching her daughters play while reading a brought the urgency home for her.
Schifter鈥檚 identity as a mother reinforced her realization that climate change isn鈥檛 a 鈥渢omorrow problem,鈥 telling me, 鈥淚 kept thinking about the world that my daughters were going to inherit, and it鈥檚 not some apocalyptic climate disaster world that I picture but all the fights our country is having about migrants crossing our southern border.鈥 Food and water scarcity puts pressure on all our geopolitical systems. Participation in the founded by Al Gore helped her frame her vision of equity-focused action prioritizing the communities most impacted by climate change as well as education inequities.
as 鈥渁 natural and necessary focus for early childhood philanthropists, policy and systems leaders, providers and advocates.鈥 He had his climate moment while reading David Wallace-Wells鈥檚 2019 book . 鈥淭hat book,鈥 he says, 鈥渦nderscored the degree to which the crisis is transforming the world of our grandchildren 鈥 and their grandchildren, and so on.鈥
Wallace-Wells uses the phrase 鈥渃limate caste system鈥 to describe the poorest, living 鈥渋n the marshes, the swamps, the floodplains, the inadequately irrigated places with the most vulnerable infrastructure,鈥 and Waters sees evidence of this system across the country. He cites about Louisiana鈥檚 Birthmark Doula Collective that trains emergency responders in best practices, filling a crucial gap in disaster response. The doulas distribute lifesaving kits and train emergency response professionals, advancing perinatal health but also building community resilience.
Waters points to the leadership of fellow Ascend Fellow Atiya Weiss, who leads the Burke Foundation in New Jersey, as an example of philanthropic efforts to .
鈥淚n partnership with community doulas,鈥 Weiss explains, 鈥淲e are creating new systems of support for expecting families through trusted messengers and community support. is critical in laying the groundwork for the resilience needed as climate change becomes even more dire.鈥
鈥淐limate change,鈥 Weiss continues, 鈥渋s one of the greatest threats to all future generations and we know its impact is worse for children living in communities of color. Joe understands the importance of safe, stable, nurturing relationships in these communities.鈥
While Schifter鈥檚 work in the education sector represents a novel approach to climate change, at least the K-12 sector has systems to build on. The far less cohesive early learning sector provides the Task Force with less infrastructure, but also less bureaucracy to navigate. 鈥淲e have so much to learn about what’s going on across the country,鈥 Waters says. 鈥淧eople on the ground are already doing the work.鈥
This story originally published on Early Learning Nation and is now archived on 社区黑料. Learn more here.