Publications: Articles
and papers
My first article appeared in 1974. Elaine reminds me that I had
had so many rejections by that time that I sent the piece off to
the Architectural Association Quarterly saying to her that if they
didn't take it I'd give up on writing. The threat, though silent,
seems to have worked. Having now written several thousands of articles,
it has all become a bit of blur. But digging through the boxes at
home, I surfaced a number which were important to me at the time—and
they are a key part of the Articles section here.
There is little point in listing the literally thousands of articles
I have written for publications like Biotechnology
Bulletin, Earthlife
News, The ENDS Report and The
Guardian - let alone the many occasional
pieces written for the likes of BP Shield, Director
Magazine, Glaxo World, ICI Magazine, The International Herald Tribune,
Management Today, New Scientist, The Observer, Resurgence, The Sunday
Times and so on. Worth mentioning, though, are the columns I wrote for
publications like Tomorrow, Nikkei Ecology and The Guardian—notably,
in the latter case, 'From the Top' (1996-2000).
I used to regularly interview leading figures in the CSR
and SD areas for SustainAbility's newsletter, Radar. Recent interviews
have profiled Ed Gibson (Microsoft UK's Chief Security Advisor),
Al Gore (former US vice-president), Kevin
Kelly (Chief Maverick,
Wired magazine, among many other things), Jed
Emerson (originator
of the 'Blended Value Proposition'), Sara Fox (new Building Director
for Swiss Re's London HQ, the 'Erotic Gherkin'), Paul
Rice (President
and CEO, TransFair USA), David Stubbs (Head of Environment, London
2012 Olympics bid) and Angela Wilkinson (Joint United Nations Programme
on HIV/AIDS). See www.sustainability.com/radar for details. See also
the monthly 'Full Disclosure' columns I contribute to Grist magazine
with Mark Lee (http://www.grist.org/biz/fd).
The first decade: Winding the clock back, pieces
that stand out in my memory from the first decade of writing include:
1974: 'Paolo Soleri: A Flight from Flatness,' Architectural
Association Quarterly, vol 6, no 1. The 6-page article also featured 10 of my
photographs of Arcosanti.
1975: 'Strangers in the Playground,' New
Behaviour, 18 September.
A report on some of the school playground greening projects I had
been involved in around London.
1975-on: 'Beware the Wrath of Osiris,' New
Scientist, 11 December
1975. This 3-page article was high-risk, exposing problems with a
major development project I had been involved with in Egypt. In the
event, however, it led to a restructuring of the work in Egypt—and
to New Scientist commissioning dozens of contributions over the next
5 years. One early article in which I switched from international
issues like desertification back to UK issues, was 'Breathing Life
into the Thames,' which appeared in the 24 March
1977 issue of New
Scientist. A longer treatment of the subject appears in the book The English Landscape, 2000.
An unusual set of contributions was commissioned by then-Editor
Dr Bernard Dixon. It focused on the role and contributions of the
ecologists who were increasingly being employed by planning authorities.
The 3 articles in this series were co-authored with John
Roberts of TEST. They were: 'Who Needs Ecologists?', 27 October 1977; 'Is
There an Ecologist in the House?', 3 November 1977; and 'The Ecology
of Tomorrow's World,' 17 November 1977.
These articles, in turn, led to a series of articles in which I
explored the ways in which business was adapting to the environmental
challenge. One of these was 'Reclaiming the Cornish Moonscape,' focusing
on English China Clays (5 January 1978). And the New Scientist writing,
done while I continued to work with TEST, led directly to my being
invited to be a co-founder of Environmental Data Services (ENDS)
in 1978 - and the founder-Editor of The ENDS
Report.
1977: 'The Impact of Development Projects on Estuarine and Other
Wetland Ecosystems,' Environmental Conservation, vol 4, no 2, Summer
1977. Commissioned by Professor Nicholas Polunin, this was probably
the most widely referenced piece of work of mine in the scientific
world. It built on the New Scientist article on Egypt's Lake Manzala
(1975), but went much wider. Among other things, it led to my being
invited to Nicholas Polunin's Second International Conference on
the Environmental Future, held in Reykjavik in 1977. I wrote a 3-page
article on the conference on the flight back to London, which appeared
as 'The Reykjavik Imperative' in Is 23 June 1977 issue. This was
also the event where I met people like Teddy
Goldsmith, Editor of
The Ecologist (we platonically shared a bedroom for a number of days)
and Buckminster
Fuller, a long-time hero.
1978: 'Red Herrings in the Inner City,' The
New Ecologist, no 3,
May/June. A direct follow-on from the meeting with Teddy Goldsmith.
Although I have prioritised publication in business media, I have
also enormously valued such opportunities to publish in what would
once have been viewed as 'alternative media'. A case in point has
been my writing through the 1990s for Resurgence.
1978: A key piece in the development of my own thinking appeared
in New Scientist on 7 September 1978, in which I reviewed the various
handbooks produced by Social Audit. Much later, in the mid-1990s,
Social Audit founder Charles
Medawar would become a member of SustainAbility's
Council. The notion of auditing companies was to resurface both at
ENDS and in SustainAbility's work from 1990 on.
1980: 'The Environmental Pressure,' Management Today, January. The
first of several contributions to the magazine, as part of an effort
to mainstream the environmental agenda. Management Today gave a full-page
review to my first book, The Ecology of Tomorrow's
World, in its
February 1981 edition. Another major piece - 'Making Money out of
Sunshine'—appeared in Management Today in December 1981.
1985: Outside the first decade horizon, but building on earlier
work, Director Magazine published my piece 'Please: No More Bhopals'
(their choice of title) in its March 1985 issue.
The last decade: While continuing to write Biotechnology
Bulletin until a few years ago, a project that started in 1983, I
also did regular columns for publications like The Guardian, Tomorrow
and Nikkei Ecology. In addition, I have been a regular contributor
to magazines like Resurgence and to SustainAbility's own Radar,
available on SustainAbility's website.
As an illustration of the nature and diversity of current articles,
here are several pieces written during 2003:
- An
article on the World Economic Forum's Davos 2003 event appeared
in Director magazine's April 2003 issue.
- A column for Forbes magazine's special issue on sustainable development.
- My
second piece of the year for the openDemocracy website (www.opendemocracy,net),
this time on biotechnology and sustainable development.
- A profile of Jed Emerson and his Blended Value Project for the
October-November issue of Radar.
- My October piece for Nikkei
Ecology, which focused on the Woods
Hole Oceanographic Institution.
- An obituary of Max Nicholson for Resurgence magazine. |