A Pathway To Peace: Ideas For A New And More Resilient Reality – Honolulu Civil Beat

Just as the current global health crisis has exposed the cracks in federal and state leadership and infrastructure, so too has it accentuated warnings about environmental challenges ahead.

As author Naomi Klein recently pointed out during a Fridays for Future webinar, our normal was grim to begin with. Headlines about the reduction of air pollution and the return of wildlife to Venetian canals while giving false hope about the climate crisis demonstrate changes that, according to a recent study, are likely to be temporary as they do not reflect structural changes in the economic, transport or energy systems.

Whats needed, therefore, is not a return to our old ways, but a recalibration of policy and economic models that will serve the interests of our communities and prioritize the local quality of life and environment over offshore profits in the post-COVID rebuild.

The Institute for Climate and Peace, for which I serve as Senior Advisor and Co-Founder with Maya Soetoro and Research Assistant, Naima Moore, advances a peaceful, climate-resilient future by embracing the inherent wisdom, power, ingenuity, and voices of the communities that we serve. ICP is guided by the belief that environmental shocks must be met with innovative and transformative solutions that conjoin peacebuilding problem-solving methods with rigorous research of climate change to respond to climate crises, reduce friction, and build social cohesion through locally-based and culturally-appropriate responses. Our theory of change depends on the understanding that climate awareness is needed to build and maintain peace, and peace is needed to be resilient to the powerful storms on the horizon.

So, how do we build peace?

By turning to the positive peace framework, we can understand climate resilience and resilience to shocks in general in a new way. Research from the Institute of Economics and Peace identifies positive peace as a framework that shifts the focus away from the negative to the positive aspects that create the conditions for a society to flourish. Their eight indicators include, among other things:

Taken simultaneously, these pillars allow us to envision a new future one in which communities are better equipped to mitigate dangers of emergent threats and protect vulnerable populations.

COVID-19 has laid this fact bare, and it has reminded us that we need to be ever-vigilant if we want to prepare for the other crisis of the moment: climate change.

Climate change is on the mind of many people, including in Hawaii, where rising seas regularly flood coastal roads.

Cory Lum/Civil Beat

The current moment serves as a foreboding preview of catastrophic climate events to come, and its far-reaching devastation is precisely the kind of crisis that climate experts have warned us about for years. In their model, the emergence of this sort of sudden yet predictable crisis combined with a rapid and silent acceleration is soon to become commonplace.

Research shows that climate change, often coined as a threat multiplier, can exacerbate inequalities in a region and disproportionately affect poorer countries or individuals, women, and marginalized communities of color. In Hawaii, it could mean greater food insecurity, environmental degradation, and health disparities among Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander groups.

Understandably, many are looking to shift this moment into a portal, as Arudhati Roy called it, through which we might find a better way of being. Positive peacebuilding within our communities is the method that stands the best chance of getting us all of us there.

In the midst of this crisis and despite the tragedies that surround us, the communities around the world with high levels of positive peace including social cohesion, investments in physical infrastructure, and transparent, accountable leadership have also shown us what a successful response can look like. In this way, the necessity of positive peacebuilding work is being proven.

Kuuleilani Samson cleans up an encampment on the rocky edges of Mauna Lahilahi Botanical Garden. Neighbors took it upon themselves to restore the garden which had been taken over by transients.

Kuu Kauanoe/Civil Beat

It is the countries that often rank highest for levels of positive peace, such as New Zealand, Iceland, Canada, and Japan, that are proving to be the most prepared for this crisis. And interestingly, when the framework for peace is already in place, not only can countries respond more effectively, but a communitys unity can even be accelerated. This was seen in Aceh, Indonesia, where a 30-year civil conflict was interrupted by the devastating earthquake and tsunami of 2004. That crisis triggered a return to negotiations and a peaceful settlement that has lasted.

We can also see this work in our local communities today. From first responders and food banks to local schools and grocery stores, community networks and neighbors are emerging as critical parts of the safety net protecting many from a free fall into conflict or chaos. Volunteer mutual aid groups are reporting record numbers of signups, and more than a quarter of a million people responded in a single day to the UK governments recent call for volunteers.Governments are leveraging resources to offset lost income, to provide free rent and cover tax payments, and to subsidize basic services to keep communities insulated from the worst outcomes of the crisis.

These are stepping stones on the pathway to peace, yet we must investigate and rework them to protect all rather than just some populations. And we must pay particular attention to those that have been at the bottom of an insidious racial hierarchy.

Hawaiis reopening provides the opportunity to weave positive peace and climate resilience into the fabric of a new political economy. It starts by translating climate resilience and peacebuilding into tangible, culturally-responsive processes, that allow us to not only recover from this crisis but lay the groundwork to mitigate and be resilient in the next.

Examples of this include the ina Aloha Economic Futures Declaration, which was sent to Gov. David Ige last month and is the first part of an effort to create a sustainable, pono economy based on centuries of island-based values, and the feminist economic recovery plan for Hawaii, from the Honolulu State Commission on the Status of Women, which recommends shifting away from our lopsided reliance on just two industries (tourism and the U.S. military), and focusing on sustainable economic opportunities, more access for women and Native Hawaiians to capital to promote their financial independence, midwifery, green jobs and other initiatives. These projects are critical in serving as a springboard for a more peaceful Hawaii, one that can indeed bounce forward after shocks.

Other vital initiatives could include:

As we work toward a new and more resilient reality, let us consider ways in which we can promote the interests and peace of our local communities and our environment, of which we are a part. Our economic policy cannot afford to revert back to normal, but must instead reimagine what equitable and green social prosperity looks like in our islands.

Should we prove unable to use this moment of pause to restructure our current systems, we risk a fragile peace amidst a fragile climate in the immediate years ahead.

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A Pathway To Peace: Ideas For A New And More Resilient Reality - Honolulu Civil Beat

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