Paul and Anne Ehrlich receive the Heinz Award in the Environment in recognition of their thoughtful study of difficult environmental issues, their commitment to bringing their findings to the attention of policy makers and the public, and their willingness to suggest solutions.
Paul and Anne Ehrlich have been producing important scientific research for over three decades. Distinguished by their passionate determination to communicate their findings to non-scientific audiences, they have long seen it as their responsibility to alert humanity to the dangers of ecological carelessness and arrogance. This perspective, uncommon among scientists, has made them the target of often harsh criticism - criticism they accept with grace as the price of their forthrightness.
They are also distinguished by their willingness to offer and seek solutions to the problems they identify. Their prescriptions, sometimes misrepresented as draconian, are rooted in the same Judeo-Christian principles that are the source of the Ehrlichs' profound ethic of stewardship. It would be difficult to name any other couple who have made such a long-standing and substantive contribution to scientific and policy understanding of population, environment, and resource issues.
As scientists, authors and educators, Paul and Anne Ehrlich have for 30 years devoted themselves to enhancing public understanding of a wide range of environmental issues, including conservation biology, biodiversity and habitat preservation.
The basis of the Ehrlichs' work has always been their science, and they have compiled an important body of scientific research over the years. But it is their environmental advocacy - particularly in the area of population - for which the Ehrlichs are most well known. Paul Ehrlich made a memorable debut on the world scene with the publication of his 1968 book, The Population Bomb, warning that the Earth's resources could not indefinitely support the planet's growing population. In a 1990 sequel, The Population Explosion, Paul and Anne Ehrlich provided an unflinching update.
Setting forth challenging but prescient work was to become a hallmark of the Ehrlichs' careers. Several decades ago, they did it again, becoming the first to raise the alarm about a possible resurgence of infectious diseases - another controversial theory now taken seriously.
Paul Ehrlich, currently Bing Professor of Population Studies in the Department of Biological Sciences at Stanford University, and Anne Ehrlich, senior research associate in the biology and policy coordination center founded by the couple at Stanford's Center for Conservation Biology, have never suggested that population issues represent the whole of the planet's problems. In fact they have been forceful advocates for broadening the agenda of the environmental movement to include such issues as biodiversity, poverty, consumption, carrying capacity, energy supplies, agriculture and food, global warming, nuclear weapons, international economics, environmental ethics, and sustainable development.
The Ehrlichs have displayed rare leadership in seeking to translate meaningful science into workable policy. Far from being prophets of doom, they are spirited optimists, whose unrivaled contributions have flowed from a belief that the future is still ours to make.
Note: This profile is excerpted from the commemorative brochure published at the time of the awards' presentation.
UPDATES SINCE RECEIVING THE HEINZ AWARD
July 2006 - Nearly 500 bird species worldwide have become extinct in the last five
milennia because of human activities according to a new report co-authored by
Paul Ehrlich. Ten additional species will go extinct each year based on these
trends unless society changes its behavior. - Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences
2004 - The
Ehrlichs together author One with Nineveh: Politics, Consumption, and
the Human Future. The textbook
concerns issues of population growth and control.
February 2003 - Paul Ehrlich's controversial article entitled "Genes and cultures: What
creates our behavioral phenome?" appears in the science journal, Current
Anthropology. The article provides "a detailed critique of genetic determinism"
and describes many basic and accepted assumptions about what characteristics
are a result of DNA and which are not. - Genomics & Genetics
Weekly
July 2001 - Paul Ehrlich receives the Eminent Ecologist Award from the Ecological Society
of America for his revolutionary contributions to the science world. - Science
Blog website (www.scienceblog.com)
May 2001 - Paul Ehrlich authors Human Natures: Genes, Cultures, and the
Human Prospect, a book that aims "to
explore for nonscientists the range of what we know about human evolution, both
biological and cultural." - American Scientist
March 2001 - Paul Ehrlich is honored with the Distinguished Scientist Award from the
American Institute of Biological Sciences. The award goes to Ehrlich for his
pioneering efforts to inform the public of population concerns. - American
Institute of Biological Sciences website (www.aibs.org)
June 1999 - Paul Ehrlich receives the Blue Planet Prize, "the world's most lucrative
environmental award." The prize, which consists of a $422,000 grant from the
Asahi Glass Foundation, goes to Ehrlich "for his research on solutions to
pressing environmental problems." Ehrlich plans to use the money to continue
current research he is conducting in Costa Rica. - The
San Francisco Chronicle
June 1998 - The Ehrlichs are honored with the $200,000 Tyler Prize for Environmental
Achievement, "an award for environmental science, energy, and medicine." - Wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org)
October 1996 - The Ehrlichs release their latest book entitled Betrayal
of Science and Reason: How Anti-Environmental Rhetoric Threatens Our Future. The book is intended to honestly make the public aware of
just "how much damage industrial emissions, pollutants and synthetic products
are doing to the environment." - The Washington Post
August 1996 - Paul Ehrlich appears in a television special called "Paul Ehrlich and the
Population Bomb". The special details Ehrlich and his decades worth of
predictions and warnings about overpopulation and overconsumption in our world
today. - The New York Times