(Press-News.org) COLLEGE PARK, Md. - Digging in the ground to plant trees may be an excellent gateway to further involvement in politics and civic affairs, concludes a new University of Maryland study, based on work with New York City environmental volunteers.
"The more a person is involved in environmental stewardship, the more s/he engages with other types of civic and political activities," says the report, "Digging Together", which the researchers released to coincide with Arbor Day.
The study finds that participants in the MillionTreesNYC project are significantly more active civically than other New Yorkers and other Americans. This is especially true among the veteran volunteers, suggesting that environmental stewardship bears fruit in other civic arenas.
"Getting off the couch and doing a real activity is infectious and frequently leads to additional civic involvement," says Principal Investigator Dana R. Fisher, a University of Maryland sociologist who directs the new Center for Society and the Environment. "Digging in the dirt seems to be an excellent pathway to greater involvement."
Research has shown a general decline in political, social and civic involvement over the past couple decades, Fisher adds. "Environmental stewardship may prove to be something of an antidote, and our next step is to look more closely at this relationship."
Fisher and her team surveyed a random sample of hundreds of adult volunteers who came out to plant trees in four of New York City's five boroughs in the spring and fall of 2010. The MillionTreesNYC project is a public-private collaboration launched by New York City. It aims to plant a million trees throughout the city by 2017.
The survey reveals the New York volunteers to be atypical demographically compared to the general population - predominantly women, relatively young, and well-educated. Minorities are under-represented. The volunteers also tend to be more liberal than the general U.S. population. The researchers say this general pattern is consistent with national trends in voluntarism.
The vast majority were newcomers to environmental stewardship - roughly 80 percent. Most heard about the activities through their social networks, friends and families.
"City managers and civic groups are hungry for this information," says Erika Svendsen , a co-author of the report and a research social scientist with the U.S. Forest Service. "We've heard plenty of anecdotal stories of why people get involved, but we really haven't had the type of city-wide data we would like to better understand what motivates these people to take action."
Community-based programs around the nation can benefit from this kind of information, Svendsen adds.
"Although the results of this analysis of volunteer stewards in New York City provide some support for the claim that planting trees leads to better citizenship, more research is needed to understand the relationship between civic engagement and environmental stewardship. Future research will address this issue," the report states.
INFORMATION:
The study is the second in a series on environmental stewardship funded by the National Science Foundation.
The team is reporting its findings as a white paper. A full copy is available online : http://newsdesk.umd.edu/pdfs/2011/digging_together.pdf.
MEDIA CONTACTS:
Dana R. Fisher
UMD researcher
301-405-6469 (office)
917-470-4332 (cell)
drfisher@socy.umd.edu
Neil Tickner
UMD Communications
301-405-4622
ntickner@umd.edu
Digging in dirt, Arbor Day planting, may help build citizenship: UMD study
2011-04-29
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Voyages Jules Verne Launches New Short Breaks and Sojourns
2011-04-29
Voyages Jules Verne, the specialist tour operator, has launched the latest edition of its popular Classic Resorts & Weekends brochure.
The brochure features a choice of 32 itineraries across Europe, North Africa and the Middle East, and clients can choose from classic city breaks and cultural forays or simply book a relaxing resort stay with the option to add on some sightseeing trips once they get there.
The new brochure, which covers departures from April 2011 to April 2012, encompasses perennial Voyages Jules Verne favourites - such as Venice from the Water, ...
Sustaining vulnerable lives
2011-04-29
Patient safety is a hot topic in the U.S., Australia and Europe. Large resources are set aside for research projects that will make life safer for patients. In Norway, the research field is still new – but researchers from Stavanger are in the forefront.
"Until about five years ago the Norwegian health care system had a low focus on safety and risk management compared with other high-risk sectors", says Professor Karina Aase at the University of Stavanger.
Together with her colleagues, she has concluded that there is an under-reporting of adverse events in Norwegian ...
Stealth Energy Inc. : Completion of Oil Well
2011-04-29
Stealth Energy Inc. (the "Company") is pleased to report that well 7-1 Dexter, in Musselshell County, which was previously drilled and reported on 20 Dec. 2010, has been scheduled for completion on 4 May 2011. The Company has experienced some frustration with obtaining a traditional 'frac' due to the current intense demand for this process.
Management has decided to use "Radial Drilling Technology" ("RDT") to potentially put the well into production. RDT is a relatively new completion technology which provides increased exposure to natural ...
Benefit of PET in patients with head and neck tumors cannot be assessed
2011-04-29
The benefit and harm of positron emission tomography (PET) in patients with head and neck tumours, applied alone or in combination with computed tomography (CT), cannot currently be reliably assessed. This is the result of a final report published by the German Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Health Care (IQWiG). The Institute was commissioned by the Federal Joint Committee (G-BA) to assess the advantages and disadvantages of this diagnostic method. However, as the authors of the report explain, suitable studies for this purpose are lacking.
Tobacco and alcohol ...
Student's prediction points the way to hot, dense super-Earth
2011-04-29
A planet that we thought we knew turns out to be rather different than first suspected. Our revised view comes from new data released today by an international team of astronomers. They made their observations of the planet "55 Cancri e" based on calculations by Harvard graduate student Rebekah Dawson (Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics), who worked with Daniel Fabrycky (now at the University of California, Santa Cruz) to predict when the planet crosses in front of its star as seen from Earth. Such transits give crucial information about a planet's size and orbit.
The ...
Unintentional child injuries, deaths can be prevented, public health researchers say
2011-04-29
COLUMBIA, Mo. – Patricia Schnitzer, associate professor in the MU Sinclair School of Nursing, says that most unintentional child injury deaths of young children result from inadequate supervision or failure to protect children from harm. Although injuries to children may be unintentional, they can be prevented and should not be considered accidents.
"Persistent references to tragic, freak, and horrible accidents indicate there is still important work needed to frame unintentional injuries as preventable," Schnitzer said. "Understanding and addressing social norms about ...
How to Clean LCD Screens - A Guide to Cleaning Your LCD Displays
2011-04-29
Cleaning LCD screens has been considered to be quite a hassle most times, mainly because no sooner are you done with the cleaning task than new smear marks begin appearing on your precious electronic screen! That's the reason people are perennially in a quest to find out how to clean an LCD screen in the best way. Here is some advice on a new product you can use on different types of liquid crystal displays such as flat screen monitors or LCD TVs.
The LCD Screen Cleaning Product
Now, if you want to learn how to clean LCD screens the right way, you will need a good ...
Study identifies second gene associated with specific congenital heart defects
2011-04-29
A gene known to be important in cardiac development has been newly associated with congenital heart malformations that result in obstruction of the left ventricular outflow tract. These are the findings from a study conducted by Nationwide Children's Hospital and appearing in the journal Birth Defects Research Part A.
Left ventricular outflow tract (LVOT) malformations, including aortic valve stenosis, coarctation of the aorta, hypoplastic left heart syndrome, Shone complex and interrupted aortic arch type A, are responsible for a major portion of childhood death from ...
New ORNL solar cell technology cranks up efficiency
2011-04-29
OAK RIDGE, Tenn., April 29, 2011 - With the creation of a 3-D nanocone-based solar cell platform, a team led by Oak Ridge National Laboratory's Jun Xu has boosted the light-to-power conversion efficiency of photovoltaics by nearly 80 percent.
The technology substantially overcomes the problem of poor transport of charges generated by solar photons. These charges -- negative electrons and positive holes -- typically become trapped by defects in bulk materials and their interfaces and degrade performance.
"To solve the entrapment problems that reduce solar cell efficiency, ...
Gene therapy shows promise against age-related macular degeneration
2011-04-29
BOSTON (April 29, 2011) — A gene therapy approach using a protein called CD59, or protectin, shows promise in slowing the signs of age-related macular degeneration (AMD), according to a new in vivo study by researchers at Tufts University School of Medicine. Led by senior author Rajendra Kumar-Singh, PhD, the researchers demonstrated for the first time that CD59 delivered by a gene therapy approach significantly reduced the uncontrolled blood vessel growth and cell death typical of AMD, the most common cause of blindness in the elderly. The study was published on April ...