After attending part of the Northeast regional conference
of Association of Experiential Education, some thoughts come to mind regarding
the United States’
outdoor industry. My disclaimer reads as: I have limited exposure to the
industry as a whole, so my thoughts would be biased and incomplete. Since I
could say so many wonderful things about the conference (which most people
would agree), here I will focus on my reflections and critique, which people
should feel free to disagree.
1. Outdoor industry is called an “industry” for a good
reason. It is closely tied to industrial production and consumerism. It has its
own guild, conference, publication, etc. It sells nature and the outdoor
experience as its products. Money-making might not be the primary goal, but it is
definitely the industry’s chief worry and bottleneck.
2. Outdoor industry as a whole is probably the most
eco-conscious industry. Organized in an industrial form, the outdoor industry
is actually teaching and practicing anti-industrialist philosophy and methods,
like leave-no-trace, land preservation, intrinsic value of nature and human,
etc.
3. Outdoor industry, by embracing the industrial form,
can not escape the curse of industrialization: the commodification of nature, the
packaging of outdoor experience, the lack of accessibility, etc. The outdoor
industry carves out a part of nature, mix it with gears and commercial
practice, and then sell it to the customers who pay a high price for a
pre-packaged, non-organic experience. The outdoor industry has become the
gatekeeper of nature’s beauty and magnificence, only letting in those who have
the free time and money. Should nature be hijacked and sold to the affluent for
a profit?
4. The entire conference was 99.5% white and has only one
black person. This might partly reflects the demography of the Northeast, but
is no excuse for the shocking absence of any diversity. Some workshops are
titled “multicultural” and “underprivileged neighborhood”, etc. I wonder who the
audience is.
5. The outdoor industry is in the grip of an
insatiable Fetishism of Certifications. There are all kinds of cards and certification
you must have in your wallet to be a qualified outdoors person. Is this a good
use of people’s time and money? Do certifications translate into real abilities?
Is there an inflation of skills? Is it just the certification-agency’s
money-making needs gone wild?
6. The outdoor staff in the college has continually
been treated as second-class educators. They are over-worked and under-paid.
This might reflects American society’s imbedded discrimination again physical
labor, but why are football coaches paid so handsomely? At the bottom of this,
is the dominance of money-making logic, "if you are not making money for the
school, why should you get paid more?" However, I have to say that I have spent more quality time with my college's Outdoor Program than with all my professors combined.
There’s a long way till we could reinstall the
intrinsic value of nature and labor. The outdoor industry, despite its
paradoxes and limitations, still holds great hope for true progress.