RSA: Is It Time for 21st Century Cathedral Thinking?

Read the article on RSA’s website here

Cathedral thinking provides policymakers with an opportunity to re-envision the future they would want for their children and their children’s children. Jane Davidson FRSA argues that the Well-being and Future Generations (Wales) Act 2015 provides one intergenerational model for others to follow.

When I came to live in North Pembrokeshire, one of our greatest joys was to find ourselves stewards of a small woodland that had not been touched for nearly half a century. The trees are a very British mix; mostly broadleaved with ash as the dominant species and a huge number of self-seeded wild cherries with their wonderfully richly red-brown coloured trunks. There are oaks whose roots must have been laid in the time of the industrial revolution and where some branches are now embedded as lintels and windowsills in our home. What there was not were either horse chestnuts for conkers or sweet chestnuts for its fruit, despite these trees being able to live to be up to 800 years old.

One of the first things we did when we moved in was to plant two of each from local stock. When city friends asked us why we were planting trees that we would not see bear fruit, we responded that our children and grandchildren would. In essence, the act of planting a tree to outlive you and your children can be called ‘cathedral thinking’, where long-term goals require decades of foresight and planning so future generations can enjoy their realisation.

As a baby boomer, I have spent years feeling of my generation is a bad ancestor. The wartime generation wanted my generation to succeed to make up for their ultimate sacrifice; for us to have lives without war, without want, with full employment and with decent housing. One of the tenets of the Attlee post-war government in 1945 was to create a long-term vision of opportunity for the next generation and beyond. After six long years, battered by war, the voters wanted an end to austerity. The country might have felt broken but people wanted hope and they voted in their millions for a collective vision of a welfare state, which leaves no-one left behind.

We should have continued to be that standard-bearer but instead what I see today is an erosion of that vision. Young people are poorer, less likely to be homeowners or to have pensions than my generation. If you are under 30 now, you have probably acquired thousands in student debt for your university education, had your wages held down by austerity and seen public services and opportunities shrink. You and most of your friends are probably furloughed, with your education on hold, living in poor accommodation and worried about losing your job later in the year. More of you are seeking mental health support than ever before.

Last week, I heard a newscaster say: “I don’t want to sound apocalyptic, but do we just have to write this generation off?” Emphatically no, but how on earth did it come to this?

It is the government that sets the tone and the agenda in a democracy. Any reset post-Covid-19 must ensure that humans can live in harmony with nature and that future generations do not pay the price for the failings of the current one or its predecessors. The governments of all nations in the UK have been given a once in a lifetime chance to build back better. As John Rawls, the American philosopher says: “do unto future generations what you would have had past generations do unto you.”

In Wales, five years ago, the government exercised cathedral thinking when it passed the Well-being and Future Generations (Wales) Act 2015 to protect the rights of future generations in everything it and its public services delivered. Perhaps the time has come for such commitments to be made across the UK and more widely.

In a democracy, good governance and decision-making foster trust. The journey to the Act in Wales was a long and bumpy road but its ambition has given Wales a massive global opportunity. By enshrining intergenerational justice into law, current and future governments are required to deliver on the Act’s obligations, and the world is watching. How they deliver is also enshrined in law: they must think long-term, preventatively, collaborate with others, integrate their outcomes and involve those affected by decisions. Importantly, the Welsh government does not mark its own homework: there is an independent Future Generations’ Commissioner and Auditor General to apply external pressure, as ultimately can the courts.

Of course, passing legislation does not of itself make change even though Wales did receive global recognition following the Act’s Royal Assent in April 2015. The UN response was that: “what Wales does today, the world will do tomorrow”. Current and future governments in Wales now have the opportunity to demonstrate that the Act has changed how decisions are made and that future historians will be able to document actions commensurate with the government’s ambition, not least on climate change.

In the same year the Act was passed, the Welsh government introduced presumed consent for organ donation; last year it turned down a motorway proposal on environmental grounds and earlier this year banned the smacking of children. This week saw votes for 16 and 17 year olds in Welsh elections come into law.  The 2020-2021 budget’s focus is on “a more prosperous, more equal and greener Wales”, where a prosperous Wales is defined within the Act as an “innovate, productive and low carbon society which recognises the limits of the global environment”.

The need for long-term thinking has never been more urgent, yet it is completely counter-cultural to a society accustomed to fast food, whose attention span is often limited to the latest tweet and, up until now, has been content to leave the voice of future generations out of politics. We live in the tyranny of now, where those not yet born have no voice at all although decisions taken today – or not taken today – will have profound impact on the quality of their lives. Now, due to Lord John Bird and Caroline Lucas MP, there is growing interest in creating a Future Generations’ Commissioner for the whole of the UK and their campaign #todayfortomorrow is gathering momentum.

I have a simple ask. I want a world where my grandchildren can watch those chestnut trees rise from the woodland floor knowing their children will also be able enjoy their fruits. My grandparents would have expected nothing less. So why should we? Legislating for future generations is twenty-first century cathedral thinking and there is no better time to start than now.

Jane Davidson is an author and environmental activist and chairs the RSA in Wales. She served as a Welsh government minister and has worked as a university Pro Vice-Chancellor and land restorer. Her book, #futuregen: Lessons from a Small Country is out on 4 June and forms part of her mission to mainstream sustainability.

Institute of Welsh Affairs: What a difference a day makes

There are political moments which stop you in your tracks and I had one recently. On 20th May, the UK Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, was taking questions in the House of Commons.

The new Labour leader, Sir Keir Starmer, challenged the Prime Minister to exempt health and social care workers from the NHS surcharge (the additional money immigrants to the UK pay for health cover) in light of the extraordinary contribution those same immigrants have made to keeping UK citizens well looked after during this tragic outbreak…

Read the article on IWA's website here

The Big Issue: Jane Davidson: Coronavirus is our chance to build back better’

I’ve been a fan of The Big Issue from the outset 30 years ago. What started for me as a personal act of giving to support people who were homeless quickly turned into loving its mix of social commentary, the arts, interesting jobs and overall quirkiness.

When magazines are bought casually on a street you don’t know who is buying, but you do know the quantity of sales and in the week prior to lockdown, The Big Issue sold around 80,000 copies across the UK and supported the livelihoods of 1,500 vendors, by any definition among the most vulnerable in our society. Then came March 23 – day zero – when the UK went into lockdown and life as we knew it ended. The speed with which The Big Issue, a small but incredibly effectively organisation, has turned its model around is breathtaking.

Read the blog on The Big Issue's website here

Tortoise: Has the virus shown us what it will take to tackle global warming?

In a matter of weeks the immediate threat of mass casualties has forced governments to assert powers and spend funds never contemplated in the battle against climate change. Coronavirus has also shown us we can work and study remotely and have almost everything we need delivered to our door. It’s had the moonshot treatment. Doesn’t climate change deserve it too?

Chair: Giles Whittell, Editor and Partner, Tortoise

Special guests include:

Jane Davidson, Pro Vice-Chancellor Emeritus, University of Wales; Minister for Environment, Sustainability and Housing, Wales (2007-11); author, #futuregen Lessons from a Small Country

Juliet Davenport, founder and Chief Executive Officer of Good Energy – a renewable energy company with a mission to power a greener, cleaner future together with its customers. An innovator, Juliet has been developing technologies and innovations for over 20 years to fight climate change and transform the energy sector for the better. In 2013, she was awarded an OBE for services to renewables. She currently sits on the board of the Renewable Energy Association, Innovate UK and is Vice President of the Energy Institute

Spencer Dale, group chief economist, BP. He is responsible for advising the board and executive team on economic drivers and trends in global energy

Visit Tortoise’s website here

Cardiff Business School: What Wales Is Doing Today, The World Will Do Tomorrow

"What Wales is doing today, the world will do tomorrow"

These are the words of UN Assistant Secretary General Nikhil Seth, and in her new book, “#futuregen – Lessons from a Small Country”, former Minister for Environment, Sustainability and Housing in Wales, Jane Davidson explains how she proposed what became the Wellbeing of Future Generations (Wales) Act 2015.

During the Briefing, she will explain why this groundbreaking legislation was forged here in Wales, and will explore how this shift from traditional economic growth to a more sustainable future is creating new opportunities for communities and governments all over the world.

Hay Festival 2020: #futuregen: Lessons from a Small Country

JANE DAVIDSON, JONATHAN BOSTON, BECKY RICKETTS AND CAROLINE LUCAS

#FUTUREGEN: LESSONS FROM A SMALL COUNTRY, WALES AND THE WORLD

Hay Digital 2020,  Sunday 31 May 2020

In #futuregen, Jane Davidson explains how, as Minister for Environment, Sustainability and Housing in Wales, she helped create the Well-being of Future Generations (Wales) Act 2015—the first piece of legislation on Earth to place regenerative and sustainable practice at the heart of government. Unparalleled in its scope and vision, the Act connects environmental and social health and looks to solve complex issues such as poverty, education and unemployment.

It’s a living, breathing prototype for local and global leaders as proof of what is possible in the fight for a sustainable future. Davidson is joined by Caroline Lucas MP, Becky Ricketts, President of the Students’ Union UWTSD and incoming President of the National Union for Students in Wales, and Jonathan Boston, Professor in the Wellington School of Business and Government, who advises the New Zealand government on their policy for future generations. 

Chaired by Andy Fryers.

Watch on Hay Player here.

The Bookseller: Jane Davidson - 'I think some of the best and most exciting ideas come out of small countries'

I live in the most incredibly beautiful, warm, bilingual— therefore culturally different—and special place. And I want people to know more about it.” So says Jane Davidson, formerly minister for environment, sustainability and housing in the Welsh government, and now the author of #futuregen: Lessons from a Small Country. It’s a book that does indeed focus attention on her adopted home nation of Wales, and it also provides considerable food for thought for those interested in how we might tackle the momentous issues that face us, both locally and globally.

Read the article on The Bookseller’s website here