Christine MacDonald

Journalist, author

Share Madness

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Can renting cars by the hour and crashing in strangers’ spare bedrooms really change the economy?

capbikeshare

 

My latest cover story in the Washington City Paper allowed me to call on a couple of years of personal experiences as a “collaborative consumer.” I also got to talk to other people using D.C.’s car and bike shares, Airbnb and eatFeastly hosts, as well as a bunch of pundits who say the burgeoning “sharing economy” is ushering in big changes in the way we live.

 

Here’s an excerpt from the story:

Sharing enthusiasts see a future with less pollution, inefficiency, and injustice—not to mention fewer cars. But sharing services aren’t always green (you can, after all, share a private jet). They seem more likely—not less—to accentuate class differences and perpetuate the same bad behavior on commercial, labor, and environmental fronts that everything that came before them did. And while sharing depends on high-tech social media and smartphone apps, in many ways the collaborative world harkens back to the past: to barter systems; the hyper-localism of preautomobile societies; and the almost small-town importance of reputation, which will increasingly follow us around as “data exhaust” that could replace the credit rating. Still, the changes afoot are propelled by decidedly 21st century realities: population growth, booming cities, rising costs, and shrinking personal space.

READ THE STORY

 

Using geo-maps to improve medical care

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Photo courtesy of Asthmapolis

Photo courtesy of Asthmapolis

My new story on “geomedicine” examines an emerging field in which doctors and other caregivers use new mapping tools and “Big Data” to gain insights into their patients’ lives so they can offer better treatment and advice. The story features a new asthma inhaler that has a GIS sensor for mapping the patient’s every puff. The information is sent back to a server, where the doctor and patient — and in some cases eventually asthma researchers too — can login and see where and when the inhaler was used. The idea is that patients will better understand what triggers their symptoms while doctors will be able to “see” when a patient’s condition is deteriorating “in real time” and intervene quickly to turn things around.

The Asthmapolis inhaler is just one of many new high tech upgrades to healthcare. Others use social medial platforms to share information, not just about illnesses, but about environmental exposures, as well as mapping farmers’ markets, healthy eateries, parks and other recreational outlets. It’s proponents say the geo-mapping can help us understand the environmental factors driving an individual’s health problems and then map out ways to address them. The story ran this morning in the Washington Post. Read it here.

 

Environment + Culture: More closely tied then you’d think?

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If I hadn’t become a journalist, I may have taken up sociology.  I’m fascinated about what makes society work; how people think and why; and how different cultures can come to very different views — or sometimes very similar ones — through different — or remarkably the same — experiences and approaches.

At the beginning of my career, I had the good fortune to spend six years in Mexico writing about everything from Mexican cinema to the country’s political elections and economic development for the Dallas Morning News and other newspapers.

This year, I’ve had a chance to reconnect with this interest in “the general assignment,” as in general assignment reporting. As the managing editor of the new Latino cultural site, Hola Cultura, I spend part of every day now focused on the arts and humanities.  Besides becoming more fluent in online video and other forms of multimedia communication, which are most certainly the future of journalism, the work has reconnected me to a past love: reporting on Hispanic culture.

While running holacultura.com is a blast, I haven’t lost interest in stories about environmental issues and their connections to most aspects of life — a web of relationships often reflected upon in art. Since it’s been awhile since I updated this site, here’s a roundup of environmental stories I’ve published in recent months:

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Debate over DC’s “Smart Meters”

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Chris Turner's smart meter at work. Click to watch video.

For those of us following the climate change debate, we’ve heard for years that to build a clean energy economy we first need a “smart grid” capable of plugging into an array of big and small power sources — from residential rooftop solar panels to massive wind farms. For some, however, the “smart meters” represent a  massive new assault on the airwaves and public health.

Read more about DC’s meter battle in my story in this week’s Washington City Paper.

 

Zero Waste revolution?

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"Empire of Dirt" By niXerKG. Creative Commons license.

After reading one too many reports that corporations were going “zero waste,” I began to wonder what this means for landfills. Could we really be headed toward a world without trash dumps and Superfund sites?

Considering that there’s possibly as much as 30 tons of industrial trash for every ton of municipal solid waste, we are talking a lot of trash; though corporations have even trashed the word and now consider their castoffs the fodder of new “profit centers.” But what happens to these newly branded “resources” after they’ve been “reduced, reused or recycled”? I learned the answer is far from straightforward. Read the story on Alternet.org.

Climate change fueling extreme weather?

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Earlier this year I had an assignment investigating the links between climate change and weather. In the course of the reporting I talked to a Yale pollster who says last year’s extraordinary weather — dry and drought-like or rainy and flooded  in most places — has done more to convince people that the climate is indeed changing than any number of increasingly urgent reports like this one from the OECD.

For the story, I spoke with climate scientists too, and learned about efforts to better pinpoint when rising global temperatures play a role in a particular extreme of weather. It’s a still evolving area of science. Controversy rages.  Kevin Trenberth, a climate scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research, has perhaps most riled his colleagues — not to mention climate change contrarians and non-believers — by suggesting that today global warming should be considered a factor in all weather.  Not all climate scientists agree — one even called it a “crap idea” in a major UK newspaper! But Trenberth hasn’t backed off. He elaborates on the idea in a new article due out this spring.

You can read all about this (and much more!) in my just published cover story in E Magazine. There’s also a sidebar on the impact to harvests and water supplies if the world remains on its current trajectory toward 10+ degrees Fahrenheit of warming.

If you still have time, check out my piece on Italy’s growing woes with the “ecomafia.”

 

When Trusted Companies Go Corporate

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I was on Wisconsin Public Radio this morning discussing my new E Magazine cover story on what happens after little, trusted and/or organic companies get bought out by big corporations. Can they be trusted?

You can download the segment here.  Or click here to listen.

Corporate Rhetoric v. Reality

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My latest magazine feature, a package of stories on corporate sustainability, is now online! It examines the booming “corporate responsibility” movement and asks whether companies that claim to be good citizens are backing up those flowery words with meaningful actions. Too often, it’s not the case. But there are some encouraging examples too.

The pieces for Miller-McCune Magazine include a main story, “Corporations, Meet Transparency” followed by case studies on three companies – Alcoa, Cargill and DuPont – and a final sidebar discussing companies that do a better job of walking the good citizen talk and offering websites where readers can get the lowdown on the worst corporate sustainability posers.

It’s good to see the stories finally in print after months researching and writing them, followed by months awaiting publication.

Please give the stories a read. Then, come back here and tell me what you think!

 

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