Difference between revisions of "E. Bruce Harrison"
Bob Burton (talk | contribs) m (Reverted edits by Ebharrison (Talk); changed back to last version by CMD bot) |
Bob Burton (talk | contribs) (SW: start tidy) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | The name E Bruce Harrison often refers both to an anti-environmentalist PR practitioner, and the company he established in 1973 --the | + | The name '''E Bruce Harrison''' often refers both to an anti-environmentalist PR practitioner, and the company he established in 1973 --the [[E Bruce Harrison Company]] -- which led the early fight against the early environmental activism on behalf of the chemical industry.{{fact}} It later became well known for the establishment of policy groups and associations which were funded and controlled by coalitions of companies with polluting and poisoning problems. |
− | Despite the patriarchial company name, this company was very much a partnership between Bruce and his wife Patricia (ex- | + | Despite the patriarchial company name, this company was very much a partnership between Bruce and his wife Patricia (ex-Patricia de Stacy). Bruce Harrison appears to have been the public relations/anti-environmental strategist, while Patricia focussed on political contacts and the establishment of pseudo-grassroots 'counter' organisations.{{fact}} She later co-chaired the Republican National Committee.{{fact}} |
− | + | E. Bruce Harrison himself is often referred to as the inventor of "environmental public relations."{{fact}} | |
A former journalist in Alabama and Georgia, and press secretary to a member of Congress from Alabama, Harrison was PR director at the [[Chemical Manufacturers Association]] and vice president of Freeport Minerals Company (now [[Freeport McMoran]]) in New York, before establishing the [[E. Bruce Harrison Company]] with his wife [[Patricia Harrison]] in Washington, D.C., in 1973.[http://www.odwyerpr.com/members/jack_odwyers_nl/0629.htm] [http://www.cpb.org/programs/pr.php?prn=468] In 1996 the company was sold to [[Ruder Finn]] and ceased to trade independently. [http://www.ruderfinn.com/text.asp?dept_id=21&textblock_id=312&menuitem_id=684&bhcp=1] | A former journalist in Alabama and Georgia, and press secretary to a member of Congress from Alabama, Harrison was PR director at the [[Chemical Manufacturers Association]] and vice president of Freeport Minerals Company (now [[Freeport McMoran]]) in New York, before establishing the [[E. Bruce Harrison Company]] with his wife [[Patricia Harrison]] in Washington, D.C., in 1973.[http://www.odwyerpr.com/members/jack_odwyers_nl/0629.htm] [http://www.cpb.org/programs/pr.php?prn=468] In 1996 the company was sold to [[Ruder Finn]] and ceased to trade independently. [http://www.ruderfinn.com/text.asp?dept_id=21&textblock_id=312&menuitem_id=684&bhcp=1] | ||
− | In 1991 Harrison was elected to be a member of the College of Fellows of the [[Public Relations Society of America]], and was recognized by [[PR Week]] in 1999 as one of the 100 most influential public relations professionals of the 20th Century. He was selected in 2000 to the Public Relations Hall of Fame, established by the Washington, D.C. chapter of the [[Public Relations Society of America]]. | + | In 1991 Harrison was elected to be a member of the College of Fellows of the [[Public Relations Society of America]], and was recognized by [[PR Week]] in 1999 as one of the 100 most influential public relations professionals of the 20th Century. He was selected in 2000 to the Public Relations Hall of Fame, established by the Washington, D.C. chapter of the [[Public Relations Society of America]].{{fact}} |
== Harrison and Environmental PR== | == Harrison and Environmental PR== | ||
Harrison's career began when he helped the pesticide industry attack Rachel Carson and her classic 1962 environmental book, ''Silent Spring''. | Harrison's career began when he helped the pesticide industry attack Rachel Carson and her classic 1962 environmental book, ''Silent Spring''. | ||
− | He was initially appointed "manager of environmental information" on behalf of the [Chemical Manufacturing Association] and its sub-Associations, to coordinate the scientific defenses being mounted against the book and to attack the early environmental movement. | + | He was initially appointed "manager of environmental information" on behalf of the [Chemical Manufacturing Association] and its sub-Associations, to coordinate the scientific defenses being mounted against the book and to attack the early environmental movement.{{fact}} |
− | Bruce and Patricia established the company in 1973 specifically to run a campaign against environmentalism, and they had the financial support at this time of Monsanto and Dow Chemicals. | + | Bruce and Patricia established the company in 1973 specifically to run a campaign against environmentalism, and they had the financial support at this time of Monsanto and Dow Chemicals.{{fact}} |
− | A few years after its founding, the company was incorporated into the Pinnacle Group, and later it was sold to Ruder Finn. | + | A few years after its founding, the company was incorporated into the Pinnacle Group, and later it was sold to Ruder Finn. [http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G1-55610053.html] Later it became part of the PR convergence trend which has now (in 2007) produced three global giant conglomerates covering the advertising-PR-polling-campaign strategy sectors. It is now part of the WPP Group, and has offices across the USA and in Europe.{{fact}} |
==Coalition foundations== | ==Coalition foundations== | ||
− | For many years the company specialized in the creation of industry-wide 'umbrella' activities and ideologically based political campaigns. In its political activities, it had the support of companies like Coors the brewers and RJ Reynolds tobacco, who are active promoters of unrestrained free-market movements, reduction in taxes, and small government. | + | For many years the company specialized in the creation of industry-wide 'umbrella' activities and ideologically based political campaigns. In its political activities, it had the support of companies like Coors the brewers and RJ Reynolds tobacco, who are active promoters of unrestrained free-market movements, reduction in taxes, and small government.{{fact}} |
− | One of the company's more notorious umbrella organisations was the [Total Indoor Environmental Quality] (TIEQ) coalition of tobacco companies, fibre (asbestos and other) manufacturers, carpet makers, office equipment manufacturers and airlines. These companies all had problems with volatile chemicals from their products, or the need to influence workplace Indoor Air Quality legislation. | + | One of the company's more notorious umbrella organisations was the [[Total Indoor Environmental Quality]] (TIEQ) coalition of tobacco companies, fibre (asbestos and other) manufacturers, carpet makers, office equipment manufacturers and airlines. These companies all had problems with volatile chemicals from their products, or the need to influence workplace Indoor Air Quality legislation.{{fact}} |
==Greenwashing== | ==Greenwashing== | ||
Line 27: | Line 27: | ||
By the late 1970s, however, Harrison realized that attacking environmentalists had its downside, and he began advising his clients in the art of corporate camouflage--a strategy that environmental groups have labeled "[[greenwashing]]." The greenwashing strategy emerged at the same time that the environmental movement was undergoing an internal transformation. What began as a popular grassroots movement began to institutionalize itself. A handful of giant organizations emerged as "leaders" within the movement, paying six-figure salaries to their executives and raising hundreds of millions of dollars per year from direct mail campaigns, foundations and corporate donors. | By the late 1970s, however, Harrison realized that attacking environmentalists had its downside, and he began advising his clients in the art of corporate camouflage--a strategy that environmental groups have labeled "[[greenwashing]]." The greenwashing strategy emerged at the same time that the environmental movement was undergoing an internal transformation. What began as a popular grassroots movement began to institutionalize itself. A handful of giant organizations emerged as "leaders" within the movement, paying six-figure salaries to their executives and raising hundreds of millions of dollars per year from direct mail campaigns, foundations and corporate donors. | ||
− | "The activist movement that began in the early 1960s ... succumbed to success over ... the last 15 years," Harrison proclaimed in his 1993 book, ''Going Green''. He observed that although the big environmental groups are formally incorporated as nonprofit organizations, their size and inertia have transformed them into business ventures themselves. Fundraising, he observed, had become their real primary mission. As he put it, the environmental movement's most pressing need was "not to green, but to ensure the wherewithal that enable it to green." The need for money and a "respectable" public image, he said, provided the motivation for green bureaucrats to sit down and cut deals with industry. | + | "The activist movement that began in the early 1960s ... succumbed to success over ... the last 15 years," Harrison proclaimed in his 1993 book, ''Going Green''. He observed that although the big environmental groups are formally incorporated as nonprofit organizations, their size and inertia have transformed them into business ventures themselves. Fundraising, he observed, had become their real primary mission. As he put it, the environmental movement's most pressing need was "not to green, but to ensure the wherewithal that enable it to green." The need for money and a "respectable" public image, he said, provided the motivation for green bureaucrats to sit down and cut deals with industry.{{fact}} |
− | In the | + | In the years since Harrison wrote ''Going Green'', his advice has become gospel not just in the corporate suites of his clients, but in the offices of the large, Washington-based environmental groups he wrote about. Corporate partnerships have come to be viewed not just as a source of funding but even as a source of legitimation, as a sign of "success" and accomplishment. An environmental group that forms a partnership with [[McDonald's]] or International Paper usually gets some kind of concession from the company, however trivial, which the organization can tout as proof of its ability to tame the corporate beast. |
==Current== | ==Current== | ||
Line 38: | Line 38: | ||
In January 2007 he was one of the participants in a one-day seminar organised by the [[PR Coalition]] and the [[U.S. State Department]] titled the 'Private Sector Summit on Public Diplomacy'. [http://www.state.gov/documents/organization/82818.pdf] (Pdf - see page 32). The seminar was designed to advise business on how it could help rehabilitate the public standing of the U.S. abroad in the wake of its disastrous invasion of Iraq. | In January 2007 he was one of the participants in a one-day seminar organised by the [[PR Coalition]] and the [[U.S. State Department]] titled the 'Private Sector Summit on Public Diplomacy'. [http://www.state.gov/documents/organization/82818.pdf] (Pdf - see page 32). The seminar was designed to advise business on how it could help rehabilitate the public standing of the U.S. abroad in the wake of its disastrous invasion of Iraq. | ||
− | |||
Bruce Harrison now advises corporations through speeches and books, and his new focus is on carbon/energy and climate change. His wife is active both in the Republican Party (mainly women's isues) and the Bush II Administration (Assistant Secretary of State for Educational and Cultural Affairs) and was elected President and CEO of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting in June 2005. | Bruce Harrison now advises corporations through speeches and books, and his new focus is on carbon/energy and climate change. His wife is active both in the Republican Party (mainly women's isues) and the Bush II Administration (Assistant Secretary of State for Educational and Cultural Affairs) and was elected President and CEO of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting in June 2005. | ||
− | + | ==Books== | |
− | == | ||
*E. Bruce Harrison, ''Environmental Communication and Public Relations Handbook'', Government Institute, 2nd edition December 1992. ISBN 0865873216 | *E. Bruce Harrison, ''Environmental Communication and Public Relations Handbook'', Government Institute, 2nd edition December 1992. ISBN 0865873216 | ||
*E. Bruce Harrison, ''Going Green: How to Communicate Your Company's Environmental Commitment'', Irwin Professional, April 1993. ISBN 1556239459 | *E. Bruce Harrison, ''Going Green: How to Communicate Your Company's Environmental Commitment'', Irwin Professional, April 1993. ISBN 1556239459 | ||
− | ==Articles | + | ==Articles and resources== |
− | + | ===Related SourceWatch articles=== | |
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | == | ||
*[[Greenwashing]] | *[[Greenwashing]] | ||
*[[Patricia Harrison]] | *[[Patricia Harrison]] | ||
Line 59: | Line 53: | ||
*[[Cosmetic, Toiletry, and Fragrance Association]] | *[[Cosmetic, Toiletry, and Fragrance Association]] | ||
− | ==External links== | + | ===External links=== |
− | ===Articles By Harrison=== | + | ====Articles By Harrison==== |
+ | *E. Bruce Harrison, ''Superfund: Compliance and communication'', Public Policy Committee of the Public Relations Society of America, 1988. ASIN B00072NO9U | ||
+ | *E. Bruce Harrison, "[http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/stores/detail/-/ebooks/B00092NNYO/reviews/104-2402315-5673539#b00092nnyo2300 Reject a green cold war]", ''Public Relations Quarterly'', Volume: v37 Issue: n4 Page: p26 (2), December 22, 1992. | ||
+ | *E. Bruce Harrison, "[http://www.public.iastate.edu/~tmat/302/contact/harrison.pdf Assessing The Damage: Practitioner Perspectives On The Valdez]", ''Public Relations Journal'' 45, 10 (1989): 40-45. ASIN B000731H0W. (Pdf file). | ||
*E. Bruce Harrison, "[http://www.odwyerpr.com/members/0419comm_harrison_greenwash.htm The Drying of Greenwash]", ''O'Dyers PR Daily'', April 19, 2007 (Sub req'd). | *E. Bruce Harrison, "[http://www.odwyerpr.com/members/0419comm_harrison_greenwash.htm The Drying of Greenwash]", ''O'Dyers PR Daily'', April 19, 2007 (Sub req'd). | ||
− | ===General Articles=== | + | |
+ | ====General Articles==== | ||
*"[http://www.odwyerpr.com/members/jack_odwyers_nl/2000/0301.htm Harrison to Step Down as Page Dir]", ''Jack O'Dwyer's Newsletter'', March 1, 2000. | *"[http://www.odwyerpr.com/members/jack_odwyers_nl/2000/0301.htm Harrison to Step Down as Page Dir]", ''Jack O'Dwyer's Newsletter'', March 1, 2000. | ||
* John Stauber, "[http://www.prwatch.org/prwissues/2001Q3/index.html Flack Attack re: E. Bruce Harrison]", ''PR Watch'', Volume 8, No. 3, Third Quarter 2001. | * John Stauber, "[http://www.prwatch.org/prwissues/2001Q3/index.html Flack Attack re: E. Bruce Harrison]", ''PR Watch'', Volume 8, No. 3, Third Quarter 2001. |
Revision as of 20:47, 25 May 2009
The name E Bruce Harrison often refers both to an anti-environmentalist PR practitioner, and the company he established in 1973 --the E Bruce Harrison Company -- which led the early fight against the early environmental activism on behalf of the chemical industry.[citation needed] It later became well known for the establishment of policy groups and associations which were funded and controlled by coalitions of companies with polluting and poisoning problems.
Despite the patriarchial company name, this company was very much a partnership between Bruce and his wife Patricia (ex-Patricia de Stacy). Bruce Harrison appears to have been the public relations/anti-environmental strategist, while Patricia focussed on political contacts and the establishment of pseudo-grassroots 'counter' organisations.[citation needed] She later co-chaired the Republican National Committee.[citation needed]
E. Bruce Harrison himself is often referred to as the inventor of "environmental public relations."[citation needed]
A former journalist in Alabama and Georgia, and press secretary to a member of Congress from Alabama, Harrison was PR director at the Chemical Manufacturers Association and vice president of Freeport Minerals Company (now Freeport McMoran) in New York, before establishing the E. Bruce Harrison Company with his wife Patricia Harrison in Washington, D.C., in 1973.[1] [2] In 1996 the company was sold to Ruder Finn and ceased to trade independently. [3]
In 1991 Harrison was elected to be a member of the College of Fellows of the Public Relations Society of America, and was recognized by PR Week in 1999 as one of the 100 most influential public relations professionals of the 20th Century. He was selected in 2000 to the Public Relations Hall of Fame, established by the Washington, D.C. chapter of the Public Relations Society of America.[citation needed]
Contents
Harrison and Environmental PR
Harrison's career began when he helped the pesticide industry attack Rachel Carson and her classic 1962 environmental book, Silent Spring. He was initially appointed "manager of environmental information" on behalf of the [Chemical Manufacturing Association] and its sub-Associations, to coordinate the scientific defenses being mounted against the book and to attack the early environmental movement.[citation needed]
Bruce and Patricia established the company in 1973 specifically to run a campaign against environmentalism, and they had the financial support at this time of Monsanto and Dow Chemicals.[citation needed]
A few years after its founding, the company was incorporated into the Pinnacle Group, and later it was sold to Ruder Finn. [4] Later it became part of the PR convergence trend which has now (in 2007) produced three global giant conglomerates covering the advertising-PR-polling-campaign strategy sectors. It is now part of the WPP Group, and has offices across the USA and in Europe.[citation needed]
Coalition foundations
For many years the company specialized in the creation of industry-wide 'umbrella' activities and ideologically based political campaigns. In its political activities, it had the support of companies like Coors the brewers and RJ Reynolds tobacco, who are active promoters of unrestrained free-market movements, reduction in taxes, and small government.[citation needed]
One of the company's more notorious umbrella organisations was the Total Indoor Environmental Quality (TIEQ) coalition of tobacco companies, fibre (asbestos and other) manufacturers, carpet makers, office equipment manufacturers and airlines. These companies all had problems with volatile chemicals from their products, or the need to influence workplace Indoor Air Quality legislation.[citation needed]
Greenwashing
By the late 1970s, however, Harrison realized that attacking environmentalists had its downside, and he began advising his clients in the art of corporate camouflage--a strategy that environmental groups have labeled "greenwashing." The greenwashing strategy emerged at the same time that the environmental movement was undergoing an internal transformation. What began as a popular grassroots movement began to institutionalize itself. A handful of giant organizations emerged as "leaders" within the movement, paying six-figure salaries to their executives and raising hundreds of millions of dollars per year from direct mail campaigns, foundations and corporate donors.
"The activist movement that began in the early 1960s ... succumbed to success over ... the last 15 years," Harrison proclaimed in his 1993 book, Going Green. He observed that although the big environmental groups are formally incorporated as nonprofit organizations, their size and inertia have transformed them into business ventures themselves. Fundraising, he observed, had become their real primary mission. As he put it, the environmental movement's most pressing need was "not to green, but to ensure the wherewithal that enable it to green." The need for money and a "respectable" public image, he said, provided the motivation for green bureaucrats to sit down and cut deals with industry.[citation needed]
In the years since Harrison wrote Going Green, his advice has become gospel not just in the corporate suites of his clients, but in the offices of the large, Washington-based environmental groups he wrote about. Corporate partnerships have come to be viewed not just as a source of funding but even as a source of legitimation, as a sign of "success" and accomplishment. An environmental group that forms a partnership with McDonald's or International Paper usually gets some kind of concession from the company, however trivial, which the organization can tout as proof of its ability to tame the corporate beast.
Current
After the sale of his company Harrison worked as a part-time Executive Director of the Arthur W. Page Society, a position he resigned from in June 2000. Jack O'Dwyers Newsletter' reported that Harrison said he would work fulltime on "my corporate counsel practice" in Washington. D.C. [5] He now runs his own Washington. D.C. PR company Harrison Consulting. His website describes him as "the founder and international franchiser of EnviroComm." [6]
In April 2005 Harrison was nominated to continue in the role as Treasurer of the Washington D.C. Professional chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists. [7] A statement in support of his candidacy states that he is "chairman of EnviroComm International, is a former newspaper reporter, Congressional press secretary and public relations professional, who has been a member of SPJ/SDX since 1960. He co-chaired SPJ's national Project Watchdog project, served as informal PR counsel to the national Board, hired former SPJ President Jim Plante to head up E. Bruce Harrison Company's New York office, and provided office space in Washington for the First Amendment program when Dick Kleeman ran it." [8]
In January 2007 he was one of the participants in a one-day seminar organised by the PR Coalition and the U.S. State Department titled the 'Private Sector Summit on Public Diplomacy'. [9] (Pdf - see page 32). The seminar was designed to advise business on how it could help rehabilitate the public standing of the U.S. abroad in the wake of its disastrous invasion of Iraq.
Bruce Harrison now advises corporations through speeches and books, and his new focus is on carbon/energy and climate change. His wife is active both in the Republican Party (mainly women's isues) and the Bush II Administration (Assistant Secretary of State for Educational and Cultural Affairs) and was elected President and CEO of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting in June 2005.
Books
- E. Bruce Harrison, Environmental Communication and Public Relations Handbook, Government Institute, 2nd edition December 1992. ISBN 0865873216
- E. Bruce Harrison, Going Green: How to Communicate Your Company's Environmental Commitment, Irwin Professional, April 1993. ISBN 1556239459
Articles and resources
Related SourceWatch articles
- Greenwashing
- Patricia Harrison
- Harrison Consulting
- Tobacco industry
- Cosmetic, Toiletry, and Fragrance Association
External links
Articles By Harrison
- E. Bruce Harrison, Superfund: Compliance and communication, Public Policy Committee of the Public Relations Society of America, 1988. ASIN B00072NO9U
- E. Bruce Harrison, "Reject a green cold war", Public Relations Quarterly, Volume: v37 Issue: n4 Page: p26 (2), December 22, 1992.
- E. Bruce Harrison, "Assessing The Damage: Practitioner Perspectives On The Valdez", Public Relations Journal 45, 10 (1989): 40-45. ASIN B000731H0W. (Pdf file).
- E. Bruce Harrison, "The Drying of Greenwash", O'Dyers PR Daily, April 19, 2007 (Sub req'd).
General Articles
- "Harrison to Step Down as Page Dir", Jack O'Dwyer's Newsletter, March 1, 2000.
- John Stauber, "Flack Attack re: E. Bruce Harrison", PR Watch, Volume 8, No. 3, Third Quarter 2001.
- E.Bruce Harrison, "Rawl Is Remembered for One Mute Moment", O'Dwyer's PR Daily, February 17, 2005.
- "Members of the College by Year of Election", Public Relations Society of America, accessed June 2005.
- "Harrison Named CEO of CPB", O'Dwyer's PR Daily, June 24, 2005.