Daniel C. Taylor

Daniel C. Taylor (born June 26, 1945) is an American scholar and practitioner of social change, with notable achievements in community-led conservation and global education.

In the words of Wade Davis, Taylor’s method was shown around Mount Everest in “the creation of a nature preserve, not administered by distant bureaucrats but protected by the people who dwelt within its boundaries. It was a bold idea, so novel that at every meeting Daniel was able to increase the size” [1] until trans-border protection resulted for the entire Mount Everest and central Himalayan region encompassing an area larger than Switzerland connecting the ecosystems of China and Nepal.

Taylor is Executive Director of Future Generations and Future Generations Graduate School both of which he founded. He has established thirteen nonprofit organizations, twelve still thrive, five are in the US. Since 1993, he has been also a Senior Associate at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

He was knighted Suprabala-Gorkha-Dakshina-Bahu in Nepal in 1990, made the first Honorary Professor of Quantitative Ecology by the Chinese Academy of Sciences in 1995, and decorated with the Order of the Golden Ark by Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands in 2004.

Professional significance

Bill McKibben encapsulates his work, “The most interesting development expert I’ve ever met is a West Virginian named Daniel Taylor …. His mantra, based on a series of principles called SEED-SCALE, goes like this: Forget big plans. Development is not a product, not a target, not some happy future state … it’s a process, measured not in budgets but in how we invest our human energy.” [2]

His theoretical work on social change, SEED-SCALE, mentioned above by McKibben, represents a systematic approach to utilize humanity’s most available resource, that of human energy, as the primary force of societal mobilization. The work was launched by then UNICEF Executive Director James P. Grant, resulted in a first major publication in 1995,[3] a second in 2002,[4] and a third in 2012.[5] The basic concept is that ‘seeds’ of human success exist in every community, even those considered destitute, and from these seeds fitted to local culture, resources, and ecology can be ‘scaled up’ grown both a rising quality of life and also extension out toward equitable improvement for all.[6]

In education, Taylor explored experiential education during his twenty years leading The Mountain Institute. With Future Generations Graduate School two accredited master's degrees were started that utilize a global campus now extending to 31 countries.[7] With the Green Long March in China, an environmental educational consortium was created with 50 Chinese universities.[8]

In conservation, Taylor pioneered a method for community-based conservation that protects areas first by using political boundaries then within these environmental criteria to create management zones, a less costly, less confrontational approach within the World Network of Biosphere Reserves.[9] In the USA, his efforts integrated private land with public lands near Spruce Knob the summit of West Virginia.

In the Himalaya, his conservation initiatives include trans-border conservation between China and Nepal with a seven million acre initiative around Mount Everest that he directly spawned both the (Makalu-Barun National Park and adjoining Qomolangma national nature preserve. In eastern Tibet Autonomous Region, he and co-worker Chun-Wuei Su Chien led in working through the regional government the Four Great Rivers Ecosystem Plan (40 million acres that includes the Yarlung Tsangpo Grand Canyon plus seven protected areas coupled to land and forest management polices across the upper drainages of the Yangtze, Mekong, Salween, and Brahmaputra Rivers). With Su Chien he also led in establishing the Lalu Wetlands National Nature Preserve in Lhasa, at 1,600 acres the largest urban protected area in Asia, now a region completely surrounded by the city of Lhasa.[10] Additionally, he led in setting up a range of community conservation initiatives in Arunachal Pradesh, India.[11]

For the enigmatic maker of mysterious tracks in Himalayan snows, the yeti, after three decades of field research he was able to show ‘the abominable snowman’ to be the Asiatic black bear (Ursus thibetanus) which in its early life years spends time in trees and develops a “thumb-like” digit on its paw that then can make an overprint of hind paw onto front creating a human-looking, bipedal-like snowprint.[12][13]

Additionally, Taylor has an interest in building innovative physical structures—a diversity of structures modifying the Mongolian yurt, two homebuilt airplanes (Varieze and Defiant), super-insulated homes and offices, electrical wind generators, and restoration of historic structures from an 1845 gristmill in West Virginia to three monasteries in Tibet.

Organizations founded

Books published

References

  1. Wade Davis, The Clouded Leopard Vancouver BC: Douglas & McIntyre 1998, p86
  2. Bill McKibben Deep Economy: The Wealth of Communities and the Durable Future, Henry Holt, p 211.
  3. Community Based Sustainable Human Development—Going to Scale with Self-reliant Social Development, co-author Carl E. Taylor, (New York: UNICEF, 1995).
  4. Just and Lasting Change: When Communities Own Their Futures, Carl E. Taylor co-author, (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2002)
  5. Empowerment on an Unstable Planet: From Seeds of Human Energy to a Scale of Global Change, co-authors Carl E. Taylor, Jesse O. Taylor, (New York: Oxford University Press, 2012
  6. Seed-Scale
  7. Future Generations Graduate School
  8. Empowerment on an Unstable Planet, Chapter 10, Op. cit.
  9. Michael Rechlin and Daniel Taylor, Community-based Conservation: Is it More Effective, Efficient, and Sustainable? Franklin WV: Gordon & Betty Moore Foundation and Future Generations Graduate School, March 2008
  10. Empowerment on an Unstable Planet Chapter 9, Op. cit.
  11. McKibben, Op. cit.
  12. Beasts: Traditional Hidden Creatures, Jacob Covey, Seattle, Washington: Fantagraphic Books, Distributed by WW Norton, 2006, p191-93.
  13. ‘’Something Hidden Behind the Ranges: An Himalayan Quest’’, San Francisco: Mercury House, 1995
  14. The Mountain Institute
  15. Pendleton Community Care
  16. Future Generations
  17. University of the World

External links

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