Suggested
Readings on Sustainability
The
following are a selection of suggested readings on
sustainability.
Sustainability
From
Wikipedia,
the free encyclopedia.
Sustainability
is an economic, social and an ecological concept.
In
economics, sustainable growth
consists of increases in real incomes (i.e.
inflation-adjusted) or output that could be sustained
for long periods of time.
The modern concept of
ecological sustainability goes back to
the post-World
War II period, when a utopian view of
technology-driven economic growth gave way to a perception
that the quality of the environment was linked closely to
economic development. Interest grew sharply during the
environmental movements of the 1960?s, when popular books
such as
Silent Spring by
Rachel Carson (1962) and
The Population Bomb by
Paul Ehrlich (1968) raised public awareness.
There are two related
categories of thought on ecological sustainability. In
1968 the
Club of Rome, a group of European economists and
scientists, was formed. In 1972 they published
Limits to Growth. Although discredited by many, it
predicted dire consequences because the earth was using up
its resources, and it advocated as one solution the
abandonment of economic development. Groups sympathetic to
the general premise that the world was growing too quickly
and/or using up its resources formed, including the
Worldwatch Institute in 1975. In a different category,
other groups formed to focus less on population growth
control and slowing economic development, and more on
establishing environmental standards and enforcement.
The original term was "sustainable
development," a term adopted by the
Agenda 21 program of the
United Nations. Some people now object to the term
"sustainable development" as an umbrella term since it
implies continued development, and insist that it should
be reserved only for development activities.
Sustainability is, then, used as an umbrella term for all
of human activity.
Sustainability is
ensuring the next generation is able to live as well as
this one or better. Or, in the terms of the 1987
Brundtland Report: "Meeting the needs of the present
generation without compromising the ability of future
generations to meet their needs."
Another definition might
be like this one: Sustainability is a means of configuring
civilization and human activity so that society and its
members are able to meet their needs and express their
greatest potential in the present while preserving
biodiversity and natural
ecosystems, and planning and acting for the ability to
maintain these ideals indefinitely.
Or, in simpler terms,
sustainability is providing for the best for people and
the environment both now and in the indefinite future.
This is very much like
the "seventh generation" philosophy of the Native American
Iroquois Confederacy, mandating that chiefs always
consider the effects of their actions on their descendants
through the seventh generation in the future.
Many people have pointed
to various practices and philosophies in the world today
as being inimical to [against] sustainability. For
instance, critics of American society state that the
philosophy of infinite economic growth and infinite growth
in consumption are completely unsustainable and will cause
great harm to human civilization in the future.
One of the critically
important issues in sustainability is that of human
overpopulation. A number of studies have suggested
that the current
population of the Earth, already over six billion, is
too many people for our planet to support sustainably. A
number of organizations are working to try to reduce
population growth, but some fear that it's already too
late. Critics of such efforts, on the other hand, fear
that efforts to reduce population growth may lead to human
rights violations such involuntary sterilization and the
abandoning of infants to die. Some human rights watchers
report that this is already taking place in
China as a result of its one child per family policy.
Sustainability affects
every level of organization, from the local neighborhood
to the entire globe.
See also
sustainable development,
sustainable design,
renewable energy.