THE TALLORIES DECLARATION FOR CAMPUS SUSTAINABILITY
The USM Arboretum was officially dedicated on April 19, 2002 with the signing of the Tallories Declaration by USM President Richard Pattenaude. The Tallories Declaration arose from a 1990 meeting of thirty-five university presidents concerning a university's role in environmental education and stewardship at the Tufts University campus in Tallories, France. The Declaration was signed in 1991 by over 150 universities to display their commitment to sustainable development within their institutions. The full text of the Declaration is as follows:
THE TALLORIES DECLARATION
We, the presidents, rectors, and vice chancellors of universities from all regions of the world are deeply concerned about the unprecedented scale and speed of environmental pollution and degradation, and the depletion of natural resources.
Local, regional, and global air and water pollution; accumulation and distribution of toxic wastes; destruction and depletion of forests, soil, and water; depletion of the ozone layer and emission of "green house" gases threaten the survival of humans and thousands of other living species, the integrity of the earth and its biodiversity, the security of nations, and the heritage of future generations. These environmental changes are caused by inequitable and unsustainable production and consumption patterns that aggravate poverty in many regions of the world.
We believe that urgent actions are needed to address these fundamental problems and reverse the trends. Stabilization of human population, adoption of environmentally sound industrial and agricultural technologies, reforestation, and ecological restoration are crucial elements in creating an equitable and sustainable future for all humankind in harmony with nature.
Universities have a major role in the education, research, policy formation, and information exchange necessary to make these goals possible. Thus, university leaders must initiate and support mobilization of internal and external resources so that their institutions respond to this urgent challenge.
We, therefore, agree to take the following actions:
1) Use every opportunity to raise public, government, industry, foundation, and university awareness by openly addressing the urgent need to move toward an environmentally sustainable future.
2) Encourage all universities to engage in education, research, policy
formation, and information exchange on population, environment, and development
to move toward global sustainability.
3) Establish programs to produce expertise in environmental management,
sustainable economic development, population, and related fields to ensure that
all university graduates are environmentally literate, and have the awareness
and understanding to be ecologically responsible citizens.
4) Create programs to develop the capability of university faculty to teach
environmental literacy to all undergraduate, graduate, and professional
students.
5) Set an example of environmental responsibility by establishing institutional
ecology policies and practices of resource conservation, recycling, waste
reduction, and environmentally sound operations.
6) Encourage involvement of government, foundations, and industry in supporting
interdisciplinary research, education, policy formation, and information
exchange in environmentally sustainable development. Expand work with community
and nongovernmental organizations to assist in finding solutions to
environmental problems
7) Convene university faculty and administrators with environmental
practitioners to develop curricula, research initiatives, operations systems,
and outreach activities to support an environmentally sustainable future.
8) Establish partnerships with primary and secondary schools to help develop the
capacity for interdisciplinary teaching about population, environment, and
sustainable development.
9) Work with national and international organizations to promote a worldwide
university effort toward a sustainable future.
10) Establish a Secretariat and a steering committee to continue this momentum,
and to inform and support each other's efforts in carrying out this declaration.

USM President Richard Pattenaude
signing the Tallories Declaration
April 19, 2002

President Pattenaude and Dudley Greeley, USM's Environmental
and Economic Sustainability Coordinator, planting a Pagoda Dogwood
April 19, 2002
President Pattenaude and Environmental Science
and Policy student Tom Lambert displaying a copy of the Declaration
April 19, 2002
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