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Melanie
St.James shares her path & hopes for the future
The seeds of my awakening
to the world were sewn in China 1994, on an College semester
abroad. In studying foreign policy and history from a different
culture, my US against them, nationalist perspective was forever
exchanged for that of global citizen. I then came to see China,
with its population vs. sustainable resource crisis, as a
forecast of what the world would face in 50 years. And the
more I looked, the more stunningly clear it was how little
was being done to turn the tide of poverty, environmental
devastation and human conflict across the globe. Hoping to
identify a universal root cause of the critical challenges
of our generation, I thought population and family planning
were the keys to “Saving the World”, cracking the code between
population growth and human security + environmental scarcity
= violation of human rights, poverty, conflict became my primary
occupation.
Years later, on a graduate
field study, I came to know the people of the war-torn region
of the Casamance in Senegal, West Africa. Here, through many
in depth interview and observations, the brilliance of the
human condition was further unveiled. People living in their
indigenous communities were not mere poor souls that needed
saving, changing or fixing. While they lived in economic poverty
they beheld rich cultural wisdom, and a true sense of community,
that the whole world needs more of. Indeed, we have so much
to learn from one another.
Through this voyage,
I also concluded that when people live in fear and the more
they lack control of their destinies; the more children they
have, driven by the innate need carry on the family line,
and the more short term their choices become. Indeed, ‘the
only thing to fear is fear itself’.
While people in the developing
world fight for survival and bear an unsustainable number
of children to assure their security, we in the US suffer
the deeper poverty of isolation, and a hierarchal urgency
to get ahead, which leads to unsustainable consumption.
As a species that evolved
in community, many of us sense that our current social and
economic path works against our inherent nature, and threatens
global human and environmental security. I know it, and work
to find integral solutions through EW. I also know that I
am not alone in wanting to shift our collective path - but
how often do we stop and see it as everyone’s collective issue?
How can we evolve as
species to think and act with the needed unity consciousness
to foster real human security in our time? I believe it is
within the collective answers, and in our process of finding
them, that lays our deepest opportunity to change the world.
With deepest
thanks for your collaboration,
Melanie St.James, MPA
Executive Director/ Founder

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