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Thousands
                                                                    marching in
                                                                    “Appalachia
                                                                    Rising” march
                                                                    on
                                                                    Washington
                                                                    DC, Sept
                                                                    27, 2010 to
                                                                    protest
                                                                    Mountaintop
                                                                    Removal
                                                                    Mining




“Poverty, Economic Injustice & Lack of Economic
                    Vitality”
          Central Appalachian Women's Tribunal on Climate Justice
                   May 10, 2012, Charleston, West Virginia

  Betsy Taylor (contact betsyt@vt.edu or http://vt.academia.edu/BetsyTaylor)
High school completion rates in
      distressed counties in USA (1990)
                                                          DISTRESS:
                                                          over 150 % of
                                                           US poverty rate
                                                           and
                                                          over150 % of
                                                           US
                                                           unemployment
                                                           rate (for past
                                                           three years)
                                                          Less than 67 %
                                                           of the US per
                                                           capita income
                                                         OR
                                                          Twice the US
                                                           poverty rate and
                                                           at least one of
                                                           other two
                                                           variables.




Educational attainment is % of adults without high school degree:
       BROWN = over 63%, RED = over 50%, ORANGE = over 40%
2006–2010 poverty
rates in Appalachian
parts of:

 Kentucky       24.4%
 Tennessee     16.9%
 Virginia       17.5%
 West Virginia 17.4%




2006–2010 US poverty
  rates = 13.8%
What causes this poverty?
 It is primarily a political economic problem
 the region has abundant natural and human assets for a stable, robust
    economy
 From 1870s to 1920s, large corporate networks began to dominate the regional
    economy – cartels of timber, coal, railroad industries with interlocking
    ownership, membership and big political influence in national legislatures and
    courts
 This period was marked by violence, as local elites struggled to find a place in a
    regional economy rapidly being absorbed by national & global markets
 This violence was inaccurately stereotyped, in national media, as „primitive‟
    violence among „archaic‟ clans– beginning a process of severe cultural
    stigmatization of mountain peoples as premodern, unintelligent „savages‟

SOURCES: Cunningham (1987) Apples on the Flood; Hennen (1996) The Americanization of West Virginia ; Lewis (1998) Transforming
   the Appalachian Countryside; Pudup et al (1995) Eds., Appalachia in the Making; Salstrom (1994) Appalachia’s Path to Dependency;
   Waller (1988) Feud: Hatfields, McCoys and Social Change in Appalachia, 1860-1900
Economic macrostructures of 19th c, laid down
              development pathway for severe economic
              structural injustice in 20-21st centuries
 Massive land grab (1870s – 1920s) by land speculators & coal / timber / railroad/
   corporations .
 Steep inequality in land ownership: in coal producing counties 70%-over 90% of
   land still is typically owned by outside corporations who pay little in taxes
 Coal industry is tied into global markets which are volatile in demand, supply &
   pricing patterns – creating severe boom & bust cycles
 Coal tends towards monopolization & concentration of ownership
 Coal tends towards monolithic regional economies with weak capacity to diversify
   when coal does not produce jobs – creating communities dependent on one source
   of employment & vulnerable to boom & bust cycles
 Coal tends to be a job shedding industry. With high rates of injury, anti-unionism &
   unstable markets, the industry emphasizes mechanization over investment in
   worker benefits (except in countries with political will to encourage employment)

SOURCES: Appalachian Land Ownership Task Force (1983) Who Owns Appalachia?; Economic Development
  Research Group et al (2007) Sources of Regional Growth in Non-Metro Appalachia; Lockard (1998) Coal: a
  memoir and critique; Mannion & McCourt (2002) Trends in Coal Production and the Socio-Economic and
  Environmental Cost of the Coal Extraction Industry
Trends in Mining Total Productivity
        1923-1998                                                               Long term US historical
12000
        In Millions of Short Tons
                                                                                trends show that coal
10000

8000
                                                                                tends to be a job-
6000

4000
                                                                                shedding industry:
2000
   1923       1933     1943      1953        1963   1973   1983   1993   1998


        YEAR

        SOURCE: Department of Energy

        Energy Inf ormation Administration
                                                                                •Steep production increases
         Trends in Coal Mining
         1928-1998                                                              •Long term declines in
         Working Miners                                                         employment
800000
700000
600000                                                                          •These data clearly show that
500000
400000                                                                          cultural ideologies are
300000
200000
100000
                                                                                counterfactual when they use
     0
    1923       1933     1943     1953        1963   1973   1983   1993   1998   “jobs vs. environment” thinking
         YEAR

         SOURCE: Department of Energy

         Energy Inf ormation Administration
US coal industry tends toward
      monopolization
         Trends in Coal Mining
         1928-1998
         Number of Mines
 10000

 8000

 6000

 4000

 2000

    0
    1923       1933     1943      1953        1963   1973   1983   1993   1998


         YEAR

         SOURCE: Department of Energy

         Energy Inf ormation Administration
Employment & production trends in
                          Central Appalachian coal industry
                         350                            75,000



                                                        65,000
                         300


                                                        55,000
                         250
Millions of Short Tons




                                                        45,000
   Coal Production
    DASHED LINE




                                                                 SOLID LINE
                                                                 Mining Jobs
                         200

                                                        35,000

                         150
                                                        25,000


                         100
                                                        15,000


                          50
                                                        5,000



                           0                            -5,000
Economic inequality linked to political
    inequality, domination & divisiveness
 Local elites dependent on cronyistic networks with powerful global
    corporate players
   Political corruption, corporate capture of, or influence
    over, government regulatory agencies and expert institutions
   Weakness in dominant elites‟ creativity, interest or capacity to build
    alternative economic pathways
   Cycles of „power & powerlessness‟ – vibrant social & environmental
    justice movements as well as widespread citizen quiescence and
    hopelessness
   In 21st century, large-scale coal industry media & public opinion
    campaign to stigmatize non-coal development
   In 21st century, fearfulness, lack of social trust & bitter divisions
    within local communities,

SOURCES: Bell & York (2010) “Community Economic Identity: The Coal Industry and Ideology
  Construction in West Virginia.” Rural Sociology. 75(1):111-143; Blee & Billings (2000) The
  Road to Poverty; Reid, "Global Adjustments, Throwaway Regions, Appalachian Studies:
  Resituating The Kentucky Cycle on the Postmodern Frontier," Journal of Appalachian Studies
  (Fall, 1996) 164-181; Reid & Taylor (2002) “Appalachia as a Global Region: Toward Critical
  Regionalism and Civic Professionalism” Journal of Appalachian Studies 8 (1):9-32; Smith &
  Fisher (2012) Transforming Places: Lessons from Appalachia
Human Development Index: one of most
widely used indicators of human wellbeing
 Developed to integrate social & political health
  measures with economic measures
 Used by United Nations for international
  comparison re/ “life chances” of individuals
 HDI = combination of
    Income (per capita + inequality + poverty rate)
    Education (literacy + High school & above rates)
    Mortality (general death rate + infant mortality)

Data from:
Elgin Mannion “Education, longevity, income: measuring Kentucky’s
   Human Development Index” Appalachian Center, University of
   Kentucky 2003
Kentucky: human development index
    International norm:
       above .8 HDI= “high” development
       Above .5 HDI= “medium” development
       Below .5 HDI= “low” development
       Below .3 HDI= very bad sign, equivalent to some of the poorest
        countries in Africa (such as Niger) & other parts of the Global South
    Kentucky:
      Below .3 HDI= McCreary County
      Below .4 HDI = 10 counties
       (McCreary, Wolfe, Elliott, Powell, Letcher, Breathitt, Menifee, Clay,
       Bell)
      Below .5 HDI = 43 counties

Data from:
Elgin Mannion “Education, longevity, income: measuring Kentucky’s Human Development Index”
Appalachian Center, University of Kentucky 2003
Externalization of costs of coal
        mining onto Appalachia
•market value of coal
does not include the
externalized costs of
coal mining for the land
and people of Central
Appalachia.

•For the US, a recent
study cost the American
public roughly $500
billion annually



SOURCE:
2011 - Epstein, P. et
al, (2011) “Full cost
accounting for the life cycle
of coal” Annals of the New
York Academy of Sciences.       Damage from Buffalo Creek Flood, February
1219: 73-98.                                                     26, 1972
The wealth of Appalachia
 In the 21st century, resource scarcity, climate
  change, ability to relocalize
  production, consumption and transportion will be
  key features of successful development
 Sustainable, just development will put a high
  value on assets that Appalachia has in
  abundance:
       Water
       Biodiversity
       Proximity of rural producers to urban populations
       Local knowledge & cultural assets for sustainable, re-localized
        economies
VERY HUMID REGION
•Only 2 other extensive areas
of USA have greater annual
preciptation
•Clean & abundant water
supply
•Rugged topography & high
annual precipitation have
formed soils which are poor for
industrial style agriculture
Extraordinary biodiversity
Appalachian treasures:
                                               cultural heritage
                                          •Unbroken cultural traditions of
                                          sustainable, local, forest farming
                                          •Ecological knowledge
                                          •Livelihood knowledge & skills
                                          •Union heritage: skills of
                                          organizing, sense of justice, pride
                                          •Cultural attachment to place &
                                          land & social systems of mutual
                                          support [“neighborliness”]
                                          •Powerful tradition of social &
                                          environmental justice movements
                                          •Global citizens



Daymon Morgan, Leslie County, KY
(founding member of Kentuckians for the
Commonwealth)
incorporates 679 excerpts from original sound recordings and 1,256 photographs from the American Folklife Center's Coal River Folklife Project (1992-99)
documenting traditional uses of the mountains in Southern West Virginia's Big Coal River Valley. Functioning as a de facto commons, the mountains have
supported a way of life that for many generations has entailed hunting, gathering, and subsistence gardening, as well as coal mining and timbering. The
online collection includes extensive interviews on native forest species and the seasonal round of traditional harvesting (including spring greens; summer
berries and fish; and fall nuts, roots such as ginseng, fruits, and game) and documents community cultural events such as storytelling, baptisms in the
river, cemetery customs, and the spring "ramp" feasts using the wild leek native to the region. Interpretive texts outline the
social, historical, economic, environmental, and cultural contexts of community life, while a series of maps and a diagram depicting the seasonal round of
community activities provide special access to collection materials.

                                                              http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/cmnshtml/

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Appalachian Poverty and Economic Injustice

  • 1. Thousands marching in “Appalachia Rising” march on Washington DC, Sept 27, 2010 to protest Mountaintop Removal Mining “Poverty, Economic Injustice & Lack of Economic Vitality” Central Appalachian Women's Tribunal on Climate Justice May 10, 2012, Charleston, West Virginia Betsy Taylor (contact betsyt@vt.edu or http://vt.academia.edu/BetsyTaylor)
  • 2. High school completion rates in distressed counties in USA (1990) DISTRESS:  over 150 % of US poverty rate and  over150 % of US unemployment rate (for past three years)  Less than 67 % of the US per capita income OR  Twice the US poverty rate and at least one of other two variables. Educational attainment is % of adults without high school degree: BROWN = over 63%, RED = over 50%, ORANGE = over 40%
  • 3. 2006–2010 poverty rates in Appalachian parts of:  Kentucky 24.4%  Tennessee 16.9%  Virginia 17.5%  West Virginia 17.4% 2006–2010 US poverty rates = 13.8%
  • 4. What causes this poverty?  It is primarily a political economic problem  the region has abundant natural and human assets for a stable, robust economy  From 1870s to 1920s, large corporate networks began to dominate the regional economy – cartels of timber, coal, railroad industries with interlocking ownership, membership and big political influence in national legislatures and courts  This period was marked by violence, as local elites struggled to find a place in a regional economy rapidly being absorbed by national & global markets  This violence was inaccurately stereotyped, in national media, as „primitive‟ violence among „archaic‟ clans– beginning a process of severe cultural stigmatization of mountain peoples as premodern, unintelligent „savages‟ SOURCES: Cunningham (1987) Apples on the Flood; Hennen (1996) The Americanization of West Virginia ; Lewis (1998) Transforming the Appalachian Countryside; Pudup et al (1995) Eds., Appalachia in the Making; Salstrom (1994) Appalachia’s Path to Dependency; Waller (1988) Feud: Hatfields, McCoys and Social Change in Appalachia, 1860-1900
  • 5. Economic macrostructures of 19th c, laid down development pathway for severe economic structural injustice in 20-21st centuries  Massive land grab (1870s – 1920s) by land speculators & coal / timber / railroad/ corporations .  Steep inequality in land ownership: in coal producing counties 70%-over 90% of land still is typically owned by outside corporations who pay little in taxes  Coal industry is tied into global markets which are volatile in demand, supply & pricing patterns – creating severe boom & bust cycles  Coal tends towards monopolization & concentration of ownership  Coal tends towards monolithic regional economies with weak capacity to diversify when coal does not produce jobs – creating communities dependent on one source of employment & vulnerable to boom & bust cycles  Coal tends to be a job shedding industry. With high rates of injury, anti-unionism & unstable markets, the industry emphasizes mechanization over investment in worker benefits (except in countries with political will to encourage employment) SOURCES: Appalachian Land Ownership Task Force (1983) Who Owns Appalachia?; Economic Development Research Group et al (2007) Sources of Regional Growth in Non-Metro Appalachia; Lockard (1998) Coal: a memoir and critique; Mannion & McCourt (2002) Trends in Coal Production and the Socio-Economic and Environmental Cost of the Coal Extraction Industry
  • 6. Trends in Mining Total Productivity 1923-1998 Long term US historical 12000 In Millions of Short Tons trends show that coal 10000 8000 tends to be a job- 6000 4000 shedding industry: 2000 1923 1933 1943 1953 1963 1973 1983 1993 1998 YEAR SOURCE: Department of Energy Energy Inf ormation Administration •Steep production increases Trends in Coal Mining 1928-1998 •Long term declines in Working Miners employment 800000 700000 600000 •These data clearly show that 500000 400000 cultural ideologies are 300000 200000 100000 counterfactual when they use 0 1923 1933 1943 1953 1963 1973 1983 1993 1998 “jobs vs. environment” thinking YEAR SOURCE: Department of Energy Energy Inf ormation Administration
  • 7. US coal industry tends toward monopolization Trends in Coal Mining 1928-1998 Number of Mines 10000 8000 6000 4000 2000 0 1923 1933 1943 1953 1963 1973 1983 1993 1998 YEAR SOURCE: Department of Energy Energy Inf ormation Administration
  • 8. Employment & production trends in Central Appalachian coal industry 350 75,000 65,000 300 55,000 250 Millions of Short Tons 45,000 Coal Production DASHED LINE SOLID LINE Mining Jobs 200 35,000 150 25,000 100 15,000 50 5,000 0 -5,000
  • 9. Economic inequality linked to political inequality, domination & divisiveness  Local elites dependent on cronyistic networks with powerful global corporate players  Political corruption, corporate capture of, or influence over, government regulatory agencies and expert institutions  Weakness in dominant elites‟ creativity, interest or capacity to build alternative economic pathways  Cycles of „power & powerlessness‟ – vibrant social & environmental justice movements as well as widespread citizen quiescence and hopelessness  In 21st century, large-scale coal industry media & public opinion campaign to stigmatize non-coal development  In 21st century, fearfulness, lack of social trust & bitter divisions within local communities, SOURCES: Bell & York (2010) “Community Economic Identity: The Coal Industry and Ideology Construction in West Virginia.” Rural Sociology. 75(1):111-143; Blee & Billings (2000) The Road to Poverty; Reid, "Global Adjustments, Throwaway Regions, Appalachian Studies: Resituating The Kentucky Cycle on the Postmodern Frontier," Journal of Appalachian Studies (Fall, 1996) 164-181; Reid & Taylor (2002) “Appalachia as a Global Region: Toward Critical Regionalism and Civic Professionalism” Journal of Appalachian Studies 8 (1):9-32; Smith & Fisher (2012) Transforming Places: Lessons from Appalachia
  • 10. Human Development Index: one of most widely used indicators of human wellbeing  Developed to integrate social & political health measures with economic measures  Used by United Nations for international comparison re/ “life chances” of individuals  HDI = combination of  Income (per capita + inequality + poverty rate)  Education (literacy + High school & above rates)  Mortality (general death rate + infant mortality) Data from: Elgin Mannion “Education, longevity, income: measuring Kentucky’s Human Development Index” Appalachian Center, University of Kentucky 2003
  • 11. Kentucky: human development index  International norm:  above .8 HDI= “high” development  Above .5 HDI= “medium” development  Below .5 HDI= “low” development  Below .3 HDI= very bad sign, equivalent to some of the poorest countries in Africa (such as Niger) & other parts of the Global South  Kentucky:  Below .3 HDI= McCreary County  Below .4 HDI = 10 counties (McCreary, Wolfe, Elliott, Powell, Letcher, Breathitt, Menifee, Clay, Bell)  Below .5 HDI = 43 counties Data from: Elgin Mannion “Education, longevity, income: measuring Kentucky’s Human Development Index” Appalachian Center, University of Kentucky 2003
  • 12. Externalization of costs of coal mining onto Appalachia •market value of coal does not include the externalized costs of coal mining for the land and people of Central Appalachia. •For the US, a recent study cost the American public roughly $500 billion annually SOURCE: 2011 - Epstein, P. et al, (2011) “Full cost accounting for the life cycle of coal” Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. Damage from Buffalo Creek Flood, February 1219: 73-98. 26, 1972
  • 13. The wealth of Appalachia  In the 21st century, resource scarcity, climate change, ability to relocalize production, consumption and transportion will be key features of successful development  Sustainable, just development will put a high value on assets that Appalachia has in abundance:  Water  Biodiversity  Proximity of rural producers to urban populations  Local knowledge & cultural assets for sustainable, re-localized economies
  • 14. VERY HUMID REGION •Only 2 other extensive areas of USA have greater annual preciptation •Clean & abundant water supply •Rugged topography & high annual precipitation have formed soils which are poor for industrial style agriculture
  • 16. Appalachian treasures: cultural heritage •Unbroken cultural traditions of sustainable, local, forest farming •Ecological knowledge •Livelihood knowledge & skills •Union heritage: skills of organizing, sense of justice, pride •Cultural attachment to place & land & social systems of mutual support [“neighborliness”] •Powerful tradition of social & environmental justice movements •Global citizens Daymon Morgan, Leslie County, KY (founding member of Kentuckians for the Commonwealth)
  • 17. incorporates 679 excerpts from original sound recordings and 1,256 photographs from the American Folklife Center's Coal River Folklife Project (1992-99) documenting traditional uses of the mountains in Southern West Virginia's Big Coal River Valley. Functioning as a de facto commons, the mountains have supported a way of life that for many generations has entailed hunting, gathering, and subsistence gardening, as well as coal mining and timbering. The online collection includes extensive interviews on native forest species and the seasonal round of traditional harvesting (including spring greens; summer berries and fish; and fall nuts, roots such as ginseng, fruits, and game) and documents community cultural events such as storytelling, baptisms in the river, cemetery customs, and the spring "ramp" feasts using the wild leek native to the region. Interpretive texts outline the social, historical, economic, environmental, and cultural contexts of community life, while a series of maps and a diagram depicting the seasonal round of community activities provide special access to collection materials. http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/cmnshtml/