
© Steve Austin (used with permission)
By Steve Austin, JD | ASLA | Clinical Assistant Professor of Landscape Architecture, Washington State University
For over 30 years in various capacities, I have taught the profession and craft of landscape architecture to university students. Sharing my love and passion for landscape architecture with students has been one of the great joys of my life. The academic, professional, and community recognition they have received for their individual and team work gives me great personal satisfaction. Yet with all this, I now wonder if I am adequately preparing my students for their future.
Our current students will face challenges unlike any faced by previous generations. Anthropogenic destruction of life and life-support systems has pushed the planet into an ecological emergency. Mass extinctions are accelerating. Human encroachment into the last wild places has given us the global pandemic. And from the ecological emergency arise social emergencies. The botched US response to that pandemic coupled with an already wildly unequal economy is likely to have created a depression that could last a decade. At the same time, the protectors and purveyors of systemic racism in the US seem hell bent on ensuring the country disintegrates into violence and hatred rather than see any challenge to White rule for the benefit of corporations.
Oh, almost forgot: 2020 is trending toward being the hottest year in recorded history, following the hottest decade in recorded history. Global heating has already triggered 9 of the 15 known tipping points of the planetary regulating system, potentially leading to a cascade of unstoppable, devastating climactic events.
These could destabilize living conditions over large swaths of the planet, causing immense human suffering and likely leading to sustained global military conflict over the coming decades. Leading climate scientists recently published a paper in the journal Nature which concluded that “this is an existential threat to civilization.”
So yeah, today’s students got all that going for them, which is not nice.
How are we addressing this as landscape architecture educators?
While much of landscape architectural education is timeless, I fear it is not evolving as urgently as the emergency demands. Much of today’s curriculum would be recognized by students of 50 years ago or longer and is suited for a planet and society that no longer exists. The Anthropocene is not just another issue to address, rather it is a new era that requires new responses.
I realize that departmental student learning outcomes, LAAB accreditation requirements, LARE licensure exam foci, and current practice expectations still require us to teach “conventional” skills. Yet this creates a great deal of dissonance in me.
There are so many ways in which our educational efforts need to progress. Chief among them might be returning to our roots by placing social and environmental justice at the forefront of our work. According to practitioner and educator Kate Orff, this would mean envisioning landscape architecture as more than just a “realm of professional services.” She sees landscape architecture as critical to inspiring “environmental advocacy and policy” to address the Anthropogenic crises.
Critically as well, we must address our relationship to energy. Our current educational system is premised on having essentially unlimited amounts of fossil fuels to enable our work. Climate science tells us that in order to do our best to avoid the most catastrophic impacts of global heating, society must end the use of fossil fuels within 20 years. Ending fossil fuels will absolutely transform society and thus our profession. And if we don’t, then we likely will have locked in heating that may be undoable, leading to catastrophic conditions that will absolutely transform society and thus our profession.
Stated simply, either way everything will change.
Regarding this, climate activist Rupert Read writes, “This civilization is coming to an end. Our societies need to transform ways of living so drastically that even if we prevent collapse the civilization that emerges will no longer be recognizable as this civilization.”
20 years from now is mid-career for students who are currently enrolled in landscape architecture programs. If we are dealing with the crises effectively, the twenty-years-from-now world will have very different needs and abilities to address them. Energy limits will change materials and construction methods, demanding new ways of approaching design. This will affect our professional values and ethics as well.
Obviously we are – right now – between two worlds: an old one where we were confident of how the future would unfold and a new one where the only certainty is that radical transformations are on the way.
Therefore my dissonance: for which world are we teaching?
Ultimately, I am an optimist. I believe that we will educate students to be of use for the world where we come together globally to end fossil fuels, do everything possible to restore a livable climate, and stop the destruction of planetary life and life support systems. This is social and ecological justice, the very soul of Frederick Law Olmsted’s understanding of what this profession could be.
Doing this will be daunting, Alternatively, I guess we could educate students for a world where acceptance of, and attempted adaptation to, climate disaster and environmental destruction is the mainstream response. This seems to be the current default position. However, landscape architects should want no part of a world that simply accepts the greatest human rights violation ever perpetrated.
I believe – but maybe it’s just a hope – that landscape architecture is an instrument greatly needed to help us to reverse these crises. If it is to be, we have to get real about teaching to the new realities ASAP. The longer it takes us, the more planetary systemic disruptions will occur, which will make it that much harder for today’s students to succeed. We must do our best to help them.
steve.bellacitta@gmail.com
Lead Image: © Steve Austin (used with permission)