
***Read "Leading for the Environment" on the Catto Fellowship in the
Winter 2007/2008 Aspen Idea Magazine***
***Aspen Institute Names Catto Fellows for 2007 (September 14, 2007)***

Value-based Leadership and Environmental Values
The Catto Fellowship Program is an offshoot of the Aspen Institute's renowned Henry Crown Fellowship Program, the Rodel Fellowship Program, and the Aspen Institute's other international leadership initiatives, all of which comprise the Aspen Global Leadership Network (AGLN). Traditionally, all Aspen Institute leadership initiatives seek to grasp and resolve the indispensable values underlying leadership and, in the case of the Catto Fellowship, the common values critical for a healthy and sustainable environment. Based on this reflection, the Fellows are challenged to develop new insights about themselves, the role of leadership, and the need for effective collaborative action to ensure the well-being of the environment. The focus on collaboration across sectors will make energy and the environment a cornerstone of the leadership experience, which Fellows will then apply in their profession for the betterment of the world.
The Challenge
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Nominate a Fellow
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| Individuals may not apply to the Initiative on their own; they must be nominated by leaders of business and community organizations recognized as sponsors or affiliates of the Initiative, members of the Advisory Committee, or Trustees of the Aspen Institute. More. |
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Climate change, growing energy demand, the loss of biodiversity, diminishing fresh water availability, dwindling fish populations and other environmental problems threaten disruptions on a scale more imposing than ever before. Indeed, this combination of global environmental trends imperils the balance of nature, the survival of species and human wellbeing. Yet, far-reaching, effective collaboration on environmental issues among non-governmental, public and private organizations is lacking or inadequate, and there is little agreement among these stakeholders on how best to address these global trends.
The need for a broad consensus to respond to sustainable energy and environmental solutions is clear. To respond to this call, the Aspen Institute launched the first international environmental leadership initiative, the Catto Fellowship Program. The purpose of this leadership initiative is to gather emerging leaders from business, government, journalism, nonprofit, and other organizations through an international environmental fellowship designed to encourage young leaders to reach beyond individual success toward achieving significant and sustainable environmental results.
Every year, a diverse class of 20 Fellows between the ages of 30 and 45 undertake a program of advanced seminars under the direction of experienced Aspen Institute moderators. The two-year program involves four seminars of approximately five days each year, plus the time allocated for a major collaborative environmental leadership project. All Aspen Institute leadership initiatives seek to grasp and resolve the indispensable values underlying leadership; in this case, emphasis is also placed on the common values critical for collaborative action to create a healthy and sustainable environment.
The Program
While there are other environmental leadership programs, the environment Fellowship Program is distinctive by virtue of its international scope, its focus on collaboration, the relatively advanced stage of the participants’ careers, and the use of the Institute’s signature values-based seminars. Fellows will join a community of diverse leaders and be given the opportunity to create a professional network through collaboration with other emerging and existing leaders. The entire orientation of the Program, with the Aspen fellowship programs that inspired its creation, is “thought leading to action.”
- Through the readings that form the basis of the seminars, the Fellows are exposed to a range of “thought leaders” and role models from around the globe and across the ages who have clearly articulated their visions for “a good society” and demonstrated their capacity for effective, enlightened leadership.
- Through the dialogue and debate that is inspired by these readings and prompted by the moderators, the Fellows are exposed to the values and beliefs of others with whom they must learn to work if they are to build stronger economies and civil societies. Government and civil society leaders learn how their counterparts in the business community think about concepts such as “sustainability” and “responsibility,” how they respond to crises and critical challenges, and what their frustrations are as they try to create commerce that are compatible with the environment. Likewise, business leaders learn how their counterparts in other sectors think about “conservation” and “sustainability,” and how they balance the demands of the marketplace with the needs of the environment.
- Through their collaborative group leadership project, which challenges Fellows to put their own visions and leadership styles into action, Fellows work together in a large-scale effort to solve an environmental problem in the world. This requirement of the Fellowship is designed to put into practice the ideals of collaborative, values-based leadership that crosses the business, government, and NGO sectors to address critical national and global environmental issues.
The Seminars
Nature and Society: The Challenge of Environmental Leadership Seminar:
This seminar fuses elements of the Aspen Institute's Nature and Society Seminar with the AGLN’s traditional introductory seminar, The Challenge of Leadership. Over the course of five days, the Fellows take their first steps in discussing potential solutions to some of the most complex struggles of the 21st century, including widespread environmental degradation, climate change, pollution, and the lack of a universal environmental ethic in our society. They spend the seminar camping, hiking, and exploring the writings of authors such as Ralph Waldo Emerson, Thomas Hobbes, Niccolo Machiavelli, Henry David Thoreau, John Muir, and Rachel Carson. These seminar readings foster a reflective examination of our relationship to nature—with a unifying theme of the meaning of wilderness in history, religion, aesthetics, and philosophy—while guiding the Fellows as they probe issues of environmental philosophy and ethics. On this seminar, Fellows also address contemporary policy issues including conservation, extinction, sustainable development, and conflicts between developing and developed countries relating to the environment, and discuss art and poetry that take inspiration from nature, a key value sometimes overlooked in the policy and business worlds. At the close of this seminar, each Fellow pledges a personal sustainability commitment, and the group begins discussions of its collaborative leadership project.
Environmental Leadership in the Era of Globalization (Seminar Abroad):
The globalization of technology, communications, culture, and business is the face of a revolution which may be the greatest in history. In the rapid flow of new ideas and new forces, it is necessary to explore what globalization means for society and the environment. We seek to harness the dynamics of the age for progress and environmental improvement, and to enable different cultures and sectors to work together so that the natural environment will flourish along with the needs of society. Collaboration is hard, if not impossible, to do however, unless we both cultivate a deeper understanding of the values of others, and are thoroughly aware of and secure in our own values. In this seminar Fellows will explore the economic, political, scientific, cultural and ethical dimensions of environmental sustainability in an era of globalization. Fellows will also discuss their own leadership challenges and develop criteria for effective leadership with an emphasis on meeting the challenges of leadership.
The Aspen Seminar:
Catto Fellows follow in the footsteps of all Aspen Global Leadership Fellows before them and undertake the Institute's cornerstone seminar offering, the Aspen Seminar. This seminar, common to all Aspen Leadership Initiatives, begins with multiple perspectives on the formation and need for community. It ends with an urgent call to action: How can the Fellows create a common environmental purpose and community when faced with differences at the most fundamental human level? The trajectory of the seminar touches on the variety of human needs and concerns and explores how leadership can navigate through these obstacles to build effective organizations, create wealth, enable human flourishing, and form a viable globalized, sustainable society. The issues are explored from the perspectives of citizens, professionals with leadership responsibilities, and individuals with familities and senses of self.
The Promise of Collaborative Environmental Leadership:
In this seminar, the Fellows' last as a part of the Catto Fellowship Program, Catto Fellows explore the concepts of legacy and balance, and share the progress achieved, challenges encountered and lessons learned from their leadership projects. They will also evaluate their experiences in the program and lay the groundwork for continuing interaction and work after the formal program is concluded.
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