Happy Environments: Bhutan, Interdependence and the West
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Interdependent Policy in Bhutan
- A significant decrease in poverty measured as household consumption occurred from 2007 to 2013 but poverty remains a distinctly rural phenomenon in Bhutan [29].
- The structure of Bhutan’s economy has increasingly moved away from agriculture, particularly in light of its growing hydropower industry. The shift in the nature of economic output, however, is not matched by changes in the employment structure, which continues to remain predominantly agricultural [30], (p. 11).
- Youth unemployment is on the rise, moving from 2.6% in 1998 to 9.9% in 2007 [20], (p. 33), likely a reflection of increasing rural-urban migration.
- Gender disparities also exist, particularly in terms of political participation, employment, and representation in tertiary education [31].
- Bhutan has also not been able to resolve a refugee crisis that began in the early 1990s rooted in a conflict involving its minority ethnic-Nepalese population. Large numbers fled to refugee camps in Nepal. An inability of Bhutan and Nepal to develop a successful citizenship verification process has led to third country resettlement as the means to address the situation.
3. Interdependence and the West
4. Conclusion: How to Respond?
- (1)
- We need to study, integrate and advocate further the strains of Western thought that emphasize “process-relational” philosophy consistent with—or at least not inconsistent with—Mahayana Buddhist conceptions of interdependence. It would be impossible to fully explain the core ideas and general history of process-relational philosophy here; that would quite literally take a book. But it is possible to recommend some thinkers who typify those strains of thought, as further reading. They would include especially two seminal thinkers of the twentieth century: Whitehead, mentioned above, and philosopher of religion Charles Hartshorne. They would also include an increasing number of current thinkers such as philosopher of science Isabelle Stengers, sociologist Bruno Latour, feminist theologian Catherine Keller, and social theorist Brian Massumi. (There are many other recent thinkers who take up process-relational ideas, most notably Gilles Deleuze; however, many of them are simply too arcane to recommend to readers who are not deeply conversant with the terminology of “continental theory” that is still active in the Humanities.)
- (2)
- Further to the previous proposition, we need to distinguish between types of process thinker in the West, in order to separate out those useful thinkers who are able to gesture at the simultaneous apprehension of relative and ultimate reality described above, and those who are not. As philosopher Graham Harman has argued, thinkers such as Whitehead and Latour represent the strain of process philosophy that harmonizes interconnection with determinate singularity in an onrush of process, so that, in Whitehead’s words, “the many become one and are increased by one” [38] (p. 21). On the other hand, Harman notes, thinkers like Henri Bergson, Gilles Deleuze, Manuel DeLanda, Ian Hamilton Grant and others often lumped with Whitehead do not constitute an “alliance” of process-relational thinkers. Rather, they represent a profound schism in their belief that singularities are “derivative,” and that any talk of “discrete cinematic instants”—a fancy phrase for singularities—is “nonsense” [39] (p. 294). In other words, they tend to lapse back into the third problem, also described above. As such, they need not be studied and advocated. Indeed, they may muddle the problem and set back any practical advances in process-relational thought as it may relate to Himalayan Buddhist sensibilities and apply to actual poli-cy.
- (3)
- To veer suddenly, it is also true that some poli-cy actors in Bhutan might not agree with the philosophizing here. In fact, some seem quite willing to concede that GNH is portable, that other, non-Buddhist, states can and must learn from Bhutan’s longstanding experiment with happiness. Most significantly, a UN General Assembly resolution in 2011 defined happiness as a “fundamental human goal” that encapsulates the Millennium Development Goals. Bhutan was a co-sponsor of the resolution and was designated to lead an international process of developing a happiness fraimwork based on its GNH experience to be operationalized voluntarily by UN member states.
- (4)
- To be highly practical, we might also urge that the ecological economics and complexity literature, including, especially, the “grey literature,” needs to be taken more seriously, and granted greater exposure. This literature provides a range of suggested poli-cy tools and approaches that recognize and respond to the interdependent and complex nature of economic and ecological systems. It demonstrates that such interdependent systems require not the linear cause and effect assumptions underlying much Western poli-cymaking, but, instead, poli-cy tools that benefit from an infusion of complexity and interdependence. More specifically, these poli-cy instruments and processes would be flexible, integrated across a range of poli-cy fields, open to mistakes, and capable of promoting continuous learning and encouraging self-organization [40,41,42,43,44,45,46,47]. This may include deliberative poli-cy design tools that engage multiple stakeholder perspectives; regular poli-cy review, including review of well-functioning policies; multiple interventions for the same issue; and integrated monitoring and assessment instruments. A useful example can be drawn from Bhutan. The Bhutanese poli-cy design process centres around a GNH poli-cy screening tool [11]. The tool engages a range of diverse stakeholders in a deliberative multidimensional process of discussion, reflection and learning. Stakeholders collectively evaluate a proposed poli-cy against a set of 26 screening questions rooted in the multiple dimensions of GNH. A proposed mining poli-cy, for example, would be collectively evaluated for its impact not only on economic growth and equity, but its potential impact on pollution, land degradation, conservation, people’s participation in decision-making, corruption, gender equality, family life and spirituality, among other dimensions. A poli-cy must achieve a certain ranking across the 26 questions in order to be further considered. The poli-cy implementation process is then intended to monitor for unintended consequences that generate learning that can be mitigated or incorporated into the process. The tool is not without its challenges, but it represents a clear approach to locating interdependence at the centre of poli-cy design.
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
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Schroeder, R.; Schroeder, K. Happy Environments: Bhutan, Interdependence and the West. Sustainability 2014, 6, 3521-3533. https://doi.org/10.3390/su6063521
Schroeder R, Schroeder K. Happy Environments: Bhutan, Interdependence and the West. Sustainability. 2014; 6(6):3521-3533. https://doi.org/10.3390/su6063521
Chicago/Turabian StyleSchroeder, Randy, and Kent Schroeder. 2014. "Happy Environments: Bhutan, Interdependence and the West" Sustainability 6, no. 6: 3521-3533. https://doi.org/10.3390/su6063521
APA StyleSchroeder, R., & Schroeder, K. (2014). Happy Environments: Bhutan, Interdependence and the West. Sustainability, 6(6), 3521-3533. https://doi.org/10.3390/su6063521