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Date

Photo Credit: Gallo Images/Thinkstock
There’s a little bit of ‘karma’ associated with this blog post. I sat down to write the post – a post ostensibly to be (only) focused on E. O. Wilson’s, book Half Earth (and I will indeed cover that book a little bit).
I had just reached the point where I had the piece outlined, and I went into the neighboring room where I could hear (from the TV) the voice of Peter Coyote narrating a documentary.
I sat down with the rest of the family, who had settled in to watch the program. The show was Ken Burns’ excellent documentary, National Parks: America’s Best Idea, being rebroadcast by PBS – it first aired in 2009. Parks, as described by PBS, is “a six-episode series produced by Ken Burns and Dayton Duncan and written by Dayton Duncan. Filmed over the course of more than six years at some of nature's most spectacular locales – from Acadia to Yosemite, Yellowstone to the Grand Canyon, the Everglades of Florida to the Gates of the Arctic in Alaska. In this series, Burns, aided by the talented voices of such celebrities as Adam Arkin, Tom Bodett, Andy Garcia, Tom Hanks, Derek Jacobi, John Lithgow, Amy Madigan, Sam Waterston, and George Takei.
The lengthy series covers the history and implementation of 58 US wilderness national parks, featuring some of the most beautiful photography and editing you have ever seen. And yes, because creating these parks required the cooperation of key sponsors and the participation (sometimes forceful) of many types of stakeholders, there are lots of project lessons simply in that aspect of the show. In fact, the subtitle of the show, “America’s Best Idea” aligns with our assertions that project management is about bringing ideas to reality and that is what happened in these 58 parks.
So where’s the karma? It is in the connection of (1) the National Park theme, which is one of stopping development and carving out space for nature - - and (2) the theme of Wilson’s book. So now on to E. O. Wilson and his book, Half Earth: Our Planet’s Fight for Life.
E. O. Wilson is a two-time winner of the Pulitzer Prize and a professor emeritus from Harvard University.
In his book, Half Earth, Wilson says, well – I think I’ll let him speak for himself, via this snippet from a recent New York Times interview:
Reading your book, one senses you felt a great urgency to write it?
The urgency was twofold. First, it’s only been within the last decade that a full picture of the crisis in biodiversity has emerged. The second factor was my age. I’m 86. I had a mild stroke a couple of years ago. I thought, “Say this now or never.”
And what I say is that to save biodiversity, we need to set aside about half the earth’s surface as a natural reserve. I’m not suggesting we have one hemisphere for humans and the other for the rest of life. I’m talking about allocating up to one half of the surface of the land and the sea as a preserve for remaining flora and fauna.
It’s a huge, controversial, sweeping proposal. And we suggest you read it, even if you’re highly cynical of the idea.
Both the book and the concept of the national park have to do with long-term thinking. Drastic steps such as preserving vast areas of land for the future are not taken by those who are looking to the next quarter’s profits. They are ‘generational’ in nature (excuse the pun) and take a view that is about benefits realization to the extreme. Thinking like this is Portfolio Management on steroids. And that’s a good thing. Moreover, this is the type of thinking we are trying to encourage our project management audience to consider. It does not mean that you have exactly this same attitude on each project – in fact, there are many cases where this thinking just does not apply. But there are many (surprising) cases where it does apply. We, of course, would send you to our two books (Green Project Management and Driving Project, Program, and Portfolio Success) to see some of these in action.
References:
National Parks: Americas Best Idea – A series by Ken Burns, written by Dayton Duncan, broadcast on the Public Broadcasting System of the United States (PBS)
Half Earth: Our Planet’s Fight For Life - a book by E. O. Wilson
https://nature.berkeley.edu/breakthroughs/sp15/eo-wilson-on-saving-half-the-earth
http://www.smithsonianmag.com/ist/?next=/science-nature/can-world-really-set-aside-half-planet-wildlife-180952379/
Posted
by
Richard Maltzman
on: April 30, 2016 09:12 AM |
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