Nature Protection, Environmental Policy, and Social Movements in Communist and Capitalist Countries during the Cold War

Nature Protection, Environmental Policy, and Social Movements in Communist and Capitalist Countries during the Cold War

Organisatoren
Volkswagen Stiftung; German Historical Institute Washington; Mortara Center for International Studies at Georgetown University; Conveners: Astrid Mignon Kirchhof / John McNeill, Georgetown University
Ort
Washington, DC
Land
United States
Vom - Bis
29.05.2015 - 30.05.2015
Url der Konferenzwebsite
Von
Timothy J. Schmalz / Natalie Smith, Georgetown University

Environmentalism emerged in postwar Europe as an arena for both competition and cooperation between communist/socialist and capitalist countries, interlacing state policies and social movements in complex ways that affected the Cold War itself. Conference participants questioned how and to what degree conditions in different social, political, and economic ideologies, systems, and governments impacted nature conservation and environmental politics. Furthermore, papers discussed whether environmental issues led to the de-legitimization of states in addition to exploring factors that help explain the seeming synchronicity of environmentalisms in the East and West: was the similarity across the Iron Curtain a product of imitation, of mutually experienced Cold War pressures, or did it represent the logical state of modernization?

The conference’s first panel, chaired by KATE BROWN (Maryland), noted how differences in the political and economic structures in the East and West complicated environmental policies by analyzing the role of experts and scientists. In his paper, EAGLE GLASSHEIM (Vancouver) argued against the normative claim that communist governments were generally immune to popular concerns about the environment. Rather, he suggested, environmental dialogue on the global level and worsening environmental conditions prompted a shift in the state’s priorities from balancing economic growth and environmental protection to containing the political fallout associated with the deteriorating standard of living. MICHEL DUPUY’s (Paris) paper, contended that interactions both within the Eastern Bloc and across the Iron Curtain regarding the damaging effects of acid rain shaped domestic policy in the German Democratic Republic on both national and local levels. Furthermore, he linked the state censorship and falsification of scientific findings on acid rain with the international and popular de-legitimization of the regime. The panel concluded with SCOTT MORANDA’s (Cortland) paper on agricultural reform in the American sector of postwar Germany. American experts intended to restructure German agriculture on small-scale crop farms, but West German farmers and local officials adopted only those American policies that complemented local environmental conditions.

The second panel, moderated by ASTRID KIRCHHOF (Washington, DC), discussed the intersections of the economy and environmental politics. HENDRIK EHRHARDT's (Berlin) paper addressed the shifting role of utility companies in West German environmental politics since the early 1970s. He argued that utility companies passed through a series of strategic stages until the early 1980s when they realized they could no longer defeat environmental legislation and finally sought to place themselves at the head of the green movement. This transformation of political strategy contributed greatly to the dramatic reductions in air pollution that were possible by the early 1990s. In his paper, WILKO GRAF VON HARDENBERG (Madison) turned to Cold War Italy. Instead of producing long-term plans to ameliorate the effects of environmental degradation, the ruling Christian Democrats relied on a patronage system that awarded funds to groups that engaged in localized, short-term projects. The lack of any form of centralized planning meant that there was little concern for the immediate or long-term environmental consequences of industrialization or urban development. VIKTOR PÁL's (Vienna) paper offered a comparison of Eastern and Western European attitudes towards environmental protection by focusing on a case study of a water treatment plant in northeastern Hungary. Pál argued that capitalist and socialist economies shared certain assumptions about environmental protection: namely, that environmental protection could not be justified without economic growth, while industrial economic growth itself made environmental pollution harder to control.

The third panel, chaired by DAVID PAINTER (Washington, DC), was devoted to national environmental politics. BRIAN LEECH’s (Illinois) paper illuminated the significance of regional differences, arguing that subnational attitudes towards national environmental policies were informed by local conditions. In the American West during the 1970s, tensions between the corporatization of natural resources and growing environmental concern gave rise to grassroots activism with widespread support. The regional combination of resource abundance and low population density shaped perceptions of and reactions to conservation policies. Examining the American-sponsored ‘Water for Peace’ desalinization project in the Middle East, JACOB DARWIN HAMBLIN’s (Corvallis) paper described how the so-called “technical solution” – the construction of nuclear power plants – to water shortages was meant to ensure lasting peace in the region. Once nuclear reactors became an option instead of a requirement, however, political and monetary support for the project dissipated, indicating that policymakers and industrialists preferred either a nuclear solution to water scarcity and regional instability or no solution at all. In his presentation, SIMO LAAKKONEN (Turku) countered the notion of Eastern technical backwardness. His case study of water protection in Lithuania demonstrated that the communist states could have had an alternative model of technical competence had it not been for limited access to and safekeeping of records. LAURENT COUMEL’s (Paris) paper offered a rethinking of the Cold War’s impact on environmental policy in the Soviet Union. The Brezhnev era Ministry of Water Management and Land Reclamation dominated internal environmental discourse, ignored elite-driven popular calls for increased protection, and discounted Western water protection practices. The heightened transparency of the Gorbachev era, however, created the space for a more independent ministry that prioritized environmentalism and used water protection as an arena for competition with the West.

In the fourth panel, moderated by JOHN MCNEILL (Washington, DC), presenters discussed the influence of environmental politics on the national and international stage. In his paper, JAN-HENRIK MEYER (Berlin) focused on the environmental policy of the European Communities in the early 1970s. He argued that West European policy officials looked to the Eastern Bloc, drawing examples from which they could craft their own policy recommendations, despite political and economic differences. Meyer challenged the notion that environmental policy represented an example of "technocratic internationalism," in which transnational issues are framed as technical problems to be managed by experts instead of as political questions. He concluded that West European treatment of Eastern policy was not entirely depoliticized. In her paper, RACHEL ROTHSCHILD (New York) maintained that the climate of détente between the Soviet Union and the United States allowed Nordic countries to exert pressure on acid rain polluters and ultimately bring about the 1979 Convention on Long-range Transboundary Air Pollution. She concluded that the broader effort to ease Cold War hostilities created an environment in which major international agreements concerning acid rain were possible despite the united opposition of major polluters within the European Communities. ASTRID KIRCHHOF’s paper, argued that a policy of cooperation regarding environmental issues between the United States and Soviet Union was "primarily a vehicle in and for the détente process." The United Nations conference in Stockholm in 1972 gave the two powers an opportunity to test their commitments towards cooperation, though these efforts were complicated by questions about East Germany’s participation after they were denied equal “quasi-member” status with West Germany and ultimately boycotted the event.

Participants reconvened on the second day for the fifth panel, chaired by HARTMUT BERGHOFF (Washington, DC), the first of two discussing the environmental and peace movements. MELANIE ARNDT’s (Regensburg) paper described how the 1986 nuclear disaster catalyzed the mobilization of environmental groups that were, because of the fallout’s global impact, heterogeneous and transnational. The lasting ecological effects of the crisis demonstrated the entangled nature of radioactive fallout, provoking a critical rethinking of both the regulation and future of nuclear energy in the United States. STEPHEN MILDER’s (New Brunswick) paper contended that the unparalleled mobilization and intensity of anti-nuclear proliferation demonstrations in the early 1980s across West Germany were shaped by anti-nuclear reactor protests of the 1970s. West Germans’ personal and localized concerns over nuclear energy in the 1970s transformed popular attitudes a decade later that equated the anti-nuclear movement in Germany with safety, appealing to a wide social base between the traditional political bipolarity.

During the final panel, moderated by STEPHEN BRAIN (Mississippi), participants continued their conversation about the environment and peace movements. JULIE AULT (Chapel Hill) opened the discussion with her paper, which contrasted the environmental movements in East Germany and Poland. Ault emphasized the culture of protest and relative political freedom of the Polish movement in order to highlight variation within the Eastern Bloc. She concluded that concerns over local environmental problems fed into the anti-nuclear movement after the disaster at Chernobyl and eventually into larger protest movements directed at Eastern regimes which were perceived as being unable to provide for the health and safety of their citizens. The final panelist, HROVJE PETRIĆ (Zagreb), presented the case of Yugoslav environmentalism, a unique example because of Yugoslavia’s intermediate position between the Eastern and Western Blocs. Petrić argued that the trajectory of the Yugoslav environmental movement mirrored that of the ruling communist party itself, both of which became increasingly decentralized following the constitution of 1974. The number of successful local environmental protests “from below” indicated the extent to which the Communist Party was losing its grip on the political monopoly it had once enjoyed.

JOHN MCNEILL’s closing remarks highlighted three of the most prominent themes from the conference discussions. First, he re-emphasized the paradigm of a porous iron curtain in which pollution, radiation, attitudes, technology, and information were all able to travel from one side of the Cold War divide to the other, though inconsistently over time and place. The global nature of environmental concerns led to McNeill's second theme, which was that of regional versus national frame. How do environmentalisms look different when framed at the subnational or supranational level? Is the model of the East-West divide still a useful tool? Finally, McNeill asked to what extent these environmentalisms represented Cold War phenomena. Were they spurred by nuclear build-up or military production, by Cold War competition to be or to appear more 'green' than one's political or economic rivals, or indeed by the quest for safe political space in which East and West could cooperate? Several participants felt that increased production of consumer goods and financial limitations due to debt in the Eastern Bloc also characterized those environmental movements as a uniquely Cold War phenomenon. This final question also sparked a debate among participants as to whether the Cold War simply represented the context during which environmental change occurred, as Laurent Coumel contended, or was itself a motor of change. Others felt environmental issues were equally important as a venue for competition as they were for international cooperation. Were environmental issues used as a tool by politicians, as Astrid Kirchhof argued in the case of East Germany's quest for sovereignty and legitimacy, or were politics used as a tool by environmentalists, as Rachel Rothschild contended in the case of acid rain legislation? Were these strategies different in an Eastern and Western context? McNeill concluded that future historical studies explore the interaction of environmentalism and the Cold War in an East Asian context in order to complete the picture presented by the European-American cases discussed thus far.

Conference Overview:

Panel 1: Experts and Scientists
Chair: Kate Brown (University of Maryland, Baltimore County)

Eagle Glassheim (University of British Columbia, Vancouver)
The Internationalization of Czechoslovak Environmental Discourse in the 1970s and 1980s

Michel Dupuy (Institut d’Histoire Moderne et Contemporaine, Paris)
Acid Rain: An Issue between East and West

Scott Moranda (SUNY, Cortland)
A Brief Moment of Balance? Meat Consumption, Grassland Management, and Postwar Germany’s Socio-ecological Metabolism

Panel 2: Impact of Economy on Environmental Politics
Chair: Astrid Kirchhof (Georgetown University, Washington, DC)

Hendrik Ehrhardt (Technische Universität Berlin)
Keeping the Air Clean? Environmental Politics, Utility Companies, and Social Movements in Western Germany since the 1970s

Wilko Graf von Hardenberg (University of Wisconsin, Madison)
A Boom without Guidance: Environmental Policies of Cold War Italy

Viktor Pál (Wirtschaftsuniversität Wien)
Craving for Growth: Water Pollution and Water Protection in East-Central Europe during the Cold War

Panel 3: National Environmental Politics
Chair: David Painter (Georgetown University, Washington, DC)

Brian Leech (Augustana College, Illinois)
Energy and Environmentalism during the 1970s and 80s: The View from the U.S. West

Jacob Darwin Hamblin (Oregon State University, Corvallis)
An American Miracle in the Desert: Environmental Crisis and Nuclear-Powered Desalination in the Middle East

Simo Laakkonen (University of Turku, Finland)
Successful Soviet Water Protection? A Case Study from the Baltic Sea Region

Laurent Coumel (Centre d’Études des Mondes Russe, Caucasien et Centre Européen, Paris)
East-West Competition and the Attempts to Create a Soviet Eco-Power on Water Resources (1960s-1980s)

Panel 4: Cold War Effects on National and International Politics
Chair: John McNeill (Georgetown University, Washington, DC)

Jan-Henrik Meyer (New York University, Berlin)
Relevant Others? Perspectives across the Cold War Divide and the Rise of European Environmental Policy

Rachel Rothschild (New York University)
Transnational Air Pollution and Environmental Diplomacy

Astrid Kirchhof (Georgetown University, Washington, DC)
Fighting for Recognition of Sovereignty: The GDR’s Nature Conservation Policy in an International Arena

Panel 5: Environmental and Peace Movement I
Chair Hartmut Berghoff (GHI Washington)

Melanie Arndt (Institut für Ost- und Südosteuropaforschung, Regensburg)
Chernobyl Transnational: The Impact of the Nuclear Disaster on Social and Environmental Movements in Eastern Europe and the United States

Stephen Milder (Rutgers University, New Brunswick)
From Anti-Nuke to Ökopax: Anti-Reactor Activism and the Emergence of a Mass Peace Movement in West Germany, 1975-1983

Panel 6: Environmental and Peace Movement II
Chair: Stephen Brain (Mississippi State University)

Julie Ault (University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill)
Protesting Pollution: Environmental Activism in East Germany and Poland, 1980-1990

Hrvoje Petrić (University of Zagreb)
Nature Protection, Environmental Thought, and Environmental Social Movements in Socialist Yugoslavia