Lynton K. Caldwell Explained

Lynton Keith Caldwell
Birth Date:21 November 1913
Birth Place:Montezuma, Iowa
Death Place:Bloomington, Indiana
Other Names:Keith
Known For:Invented idea of environmental impact statement in NEPA
Occupation:Professor

Lynton Keith Caldwell (November 21, 1913 – August 15, 2006) was an American political scientist and a principal architect of the 1969 National Environmental Policy Act, the first act of its kind in the world. He was educated at the University of Chicago and spent most of his career at Indiana University Bloomington, where he received tenure in 1956 and retired as Arthur F. Bentley Professor Emeritus of Political Science in 1984. Caldwell was the internationally acclaimed author or coauthor of fifteen books and more than 250 scholarly articles, which may be found in at least 19 different languages.[1] He served on many boards and advisory committees, as a consultant on environmental policy issues worldwide, and received numerous honors and awards.[2] [3]

Early life and education

Caldwell was born in Montezuma, Iowa to Lee Lynton and Alberta (Mace) Caldwell, and died in Bloomington, Indiana, at age 92. He earned his undergraduate degree in English at the University of Chicago in 1934, his Master's degree at Harvard in History and Government in 1938, and his doctoral degree in political science at the University of Chicago in 1943. He married Helen A. Walcher on December 21, 1940 and they raised two children.[2]

Academic career and public service

From 1944-1947 he was director of research and publications for The Council of State Governments in Chicago. In 1947 he was appointed professor of political science at the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs at Syracuse University. In 1952 and 1953 he was part of U.N. sponsored missions in public administration in Colombia, the Philippines, and Japan. His next one-year U.N. appointment was as co-Director of the Public Administration Institute for Turkey and the Middle East in Ankara, Turkey. Indiana University then appointed him director of the Institute of Training for Public Service and Coordinator of Indonesian and Thailand Public Administration Programs. By the time of his retirement, further appointments, research and lecture tours and vacations had enabled him to visit nearly one hundred countries around the world as well as every state in the union. In 1956, after a year as visiting professor of government at the University of California, Berkeley, he returned to Bloomington as Professor of Government at Indiana University, where he remained until his retirement.[4] In the course of his career he secured 21 National Science Foundation grants to support his research.[5]

During his career, Caldwell served on the faculties of the University of Chicago, Northwestern University, the University of Oklahoma, Syracuse University, and the University of California at Berkeley, and had shorter appointments at some 80 other collegiate institutions both within the U.S. and overseas. At various times, Caldwell served as advisor or consultant to the U.S. Senate, UNESCO, the United Nations, the Departments of Commerce, Energy, Defense, and Interior, and the National Institutes of Health. Although not a natural scientist, as part of his work towards establishing interdisciplinary study in universities and achieving a greater merging of the two worlds of science and public policy, he became deeply involved in national and international environmental affairs and worked closely with several important scientific bodies serving, among many appointments, on the Sea Grant Program of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the first Environmental Advisory Board of the United States Army Corps of Engineers, the Pacific Science Congress, the President’s National Commission on Materials Policy, the Science Advisory Board for the Great Lakes of the International Joint Commission, as chair of the first Commission on Environmental Policy, Law and Administration for the International Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN), and as advisor to the UNESCO Man and the Biosphere Program (MAB), and the UNESCO working program for the environmental education and training of engineers.[5]

He also served on the editorial boards of numerous prestigious scientific and professional journals. A lover of nature, bird watching, and botany from an early age, he was a founding member of the South Bend, Indiana chapter of the Audubon Society, and of both the first local chapter of The Nature Conservancy (TNC) in New York, and the Conservancy's Indiana Chapter. He served on the Board of Governors of TNC from 1959 to 1965.[4]

Notable accomplishments

During the 1960s Caldwell was virtually a lone voice in attempting to establish policies for the environment because such a holistic and interdisciplinary approach to solving environmental problems did not then exist.[6] In 1962 his groundbreaking article “Environment: A New Focus for Public Policy?” appeared in Public Administration Review,[7] launching development of a new subfield of environmental policy studies.[8] After 1962, he changed the main focus of his career towards examining policies for protecting the quality of the human environment. In 1972 he was the catalyst for founding the School of Public and Environmental Affairs (SPEA) at Indiana University, Bloomington. His 1976 article "Novus Ordo Seclorum: The Heritage of American Public Administration" in Public Administration Review was a defining paper in the modern history of public administration.[9]

Caldwell is perhaps best known as one of the principal architects of the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), the first act of its kind in the world, signed into law on January 1, 1970. Much of the impulse for Caldwell's broad approach came from his experience watching flawed international development work while overseas in the 1950s and 1960s.[10] In drafting A National Policy on the Environment in 1968[11] as consultant to Senator Henry Jackson, the head of the powerful Senate Interior and Insular Affairs Committee, Caldwell realized that more was needed than a mere a policy statement: an “action-forcing mechanism” would be necessary to secure federal agency compliance with the Act’s requirements. The origin of the requirement for preparation of an environmental impact statement (EIS) has been attributed to Caldwell,[12] [13] whose testimony at the Senate hearing in April 1969 laid the groundwork for inclusion of provisions requiring an evaluation of the effects of all major federal projects significantly affecting the quality of the human environment.[14] [15] In these “detailed statements,” as they were termed in the Act, all reasonably foreseeable social, economic, and environmental effects of a proposed action and any possible alternatives to it must be identified and assessed before any federal action takes place.[16] [17]

NEPA has been emulated, in one form or another, by more than one hundred other countries,[18] and many states have also established “mini NEPAs.”[4] When national government agencies first started to prepare EISs, there were no professional associations dedicated to the planning and problem solving that NEPA demanded. Subsequently, Caldwell's efforts in formulating NEPA, and later promoting it, led to formation of the National Association of Environmental Professionals (NAEP), a national professional association of persons who prepare EISs.[19]

Honors and awards

The many awards Caldwell received included the William E. Mosher Award (1964) and the Marshall E. Dimock Award of the American Society for Public Administration (1981); the John M. Gaus Award from the American Political Science Association; and the National Environmental Quality Award from the Natural Resources Council of America (1997). In 1991, he was named one of the United Nations Environmental Program's (UNEP) Global 500 for distinguished environmental services, and in 1997, he was awarded an honorary LLD from Western Michigan University. In 2001 he was the recipient of Indiana University's Distinguished Service Award. He was a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, and an honorary member of the International Association for Impact Assessment.[2] Annually since 1995 the American Political Science Association has awarded the Lynton Keith Caldwell Prize for the best book in environmental politics and policy published during the previous three years.[20] Shortly after his death in 2006, the Caldwell Center for Culture and Ecology was established in Bloomington, IN to provide environmental education for youth and adults.[21]

Scholarly publications

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Lynton K. Caldwell. Environmental Science Faculty, School of Public and Environmental Affairs, Indiana University. http://www.indiana.edu/~speaweb/faculty/caldwell.php Accessed 2-16-09.
  2. "Lynton Keith Caldwell," Bloomington Herald-Times, August 17, 2006.
  3. Netta, Danielle. Who's Who in America 2002, 56th ed. New Providence, NJ: Who's Who, 2001, p. 750.
  4. "Lynton Caldwell leaves quite a legacy," Bloomington Herald-Times, August 22, 2006.
  5. Wertz, Wendy Read. The Nature Conservancy’s Journey with Nature: Lynton Keith Caldwell, Indiana’s Conservation Giant. Accessed 2-10-09.
  6. Wertz, Wendy Read. 2006. “Lynton Keith Caldwell (1913-2006): His pathbreaking work in environmental policy and continuing impact on environmental professionals.” Environmental Practice 8 (December): 208-211.
  7. Caldwell, Lynton K. "Environment: A New Focus for Public Policy?" Public Administration Review, 23(September 1963): 1329.
  8. Bartlett, Robert, and James Gladden. 1995. “Lynton Keith Caldwell and environmental policy: What have we learned?” In Environment as a focus for public policy, edited by Lynton K. Caldwell. College Station, TX: Texas A&M University Press, pp. 3-4.
  9. Hadley, Donita. "Founding father of ecological policy dies at 92," Bloomington Herald-Times, August 17, 2006.
  10. Thomas B. Robertson, Malthusian Moment: Global Population Growth and the Birth of American Environmentalism, p 167
  11. U.S. Congress, Senate, Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs. A National Policy on the Environment. 90th Cong., 2d sess. 1968 (Committee Print).
  12. Anderson, Frederick R. NEPA in the Courts: A Legal Analysis of the National Environmental Policy Act. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1973, p. 6.
  13. Wandesford-Smith, Geoffrey. “Conclusions: Congress and the Environment of the Future.” In Richard A. Cooley and Geoffrey Wandsford-Smith, eds. Congress and the Environment. Seattle: University of Washington Press. .
  14. Weiland, Paul, Lynton K. Caldwell, and Rosemary O’Leary. “The Evolution, Operation, and Future of Environmental Policy in the United States. In: Environmental Law and Policy in the European Union and the United States, Randall Baker, ed. Westport, CT: Praeger, 1997, pp. 100-101.
  15. U.S. Congress. Senate. Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs. National Environmental Policy. Hearings on S. 1075, S. 237 and S. 1752, 91st Cong., 1st sess., April 16, 1969, p. 116.
  16. Wertz, Wendy Read. The Nature Conservancy’s Journey with Nature: Lynton Keith Caldwell, Indiana’s Conservation Giant.http://www.nature.org/wherewework/northamerica/states/indiana/misc/art24490.html Accessed 2-10-08.
  17. Caldwell, Lynton K. Science and the National Environmental Policy Act: Redirecting policy through procedural reform. University, AL: University of Alabama Press, 1982.
  18. Bronstein, D. A., D. Bear, H. Bryan, J.F. DiMento, and S. Narayan. 2005. “The National Environmental Policy Act at 35.” Environmental Practice 7 (January): 3-5.
  19. Perkins, John H. and Debora R. Holmes. 2006. “Lynton K. Caldwell’s Legacy is NEPA and More.” Environmental Practice. 8: 205-215.
  20. Lynton Keith Caldwell Prize Awarded. http://mitpress.typepad.com/mitpresslog/2008/07/award-news---am.html Accessed 2-18-09.
  21. Caldwell Center for Culture and Ecology. http://thecaldwellcenter.org/pages/about_the_center.html Accessed 2-1-09.