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The United Nations
has declared
2005-2014 as the Decade of Education for Sustainable Development,
because only education will change peoples' lifestyles and consumption
patterns, and create the public support and political will necessary to
implement the major changes in society and our economy required to
become more sustainable. For information on the decade, one good place
to start is the web page maintained by the International Environment
Forum at: http://www.bcca.org/ief/desd.htm.
In the United States, many organizations have joined together in a US
partnership for the decade: http://www.uspartnership.org/.
For teachers interested in bringing sustainable development concepts
into the schools, there is an excellent paper by Prof. Victoria
Thoresen on the IEF web site at http://www.bcca.org/ief/dthor04a.doc.
UNESCO, which is the lead organization in the United Nations for the
decade, has identified
eight Key Action Themes for
the UN Decade:
1.
Overcoming poverty
2.
Gender equality
3. Health promotion
4.
Environment
5.
Rural development
6. Cultural diversity
7.
Peace
and human security
8. Sustainable
urbanization
Consider how the principles and values of sustainable
development described in the earlier modules are important for, and
would
contribute to, each of these action themes.
REEXAMINING INDIVIDUAL LIFESTYLES
Individuals
can do
many things to live more sustainably. We can:
reexamine our values;
educate
ourselves about the issues;
change our
ways of thinking to be
more integrated, systemic, and long-term;
look
outward with more
solidarity; and
live
lightly on the earth, being content with little.
We can
economize on
our use of water in washing, bathing, laundry, and gardening, and we
can
We can
economize or use more
efficiently the energy we consume in heating, cooling, cooking,
lighting, and appliances.
We can
reduce our need for transport and
replace motor vehicles with public transportation, bicycles, or
walking.
Food offers
many choices of lifestyle: fast food or organic,
meat or vegetarian, local or fair trade, nutritional balance, risks of
contamination with pesticides/hormones/antibiotics, and the possible
presence of genetically-modified organisms.
We can
choose clothing made
of natural fibers, with possible agricultural impacts, or synthetic
fibers that are persistent and non-renewable.
In our role
as consumers,
we can consider issues of socially responsible manufacture, changing
styles or using things until they wear out, and the desirability of
making choices based on brand names and fashions.
In choosing
housing
we can look at location, materials, health impacts, energy efficiency,
and social effects.
We can
consider the sustainable dimensions of
recreation, tourism and entertainment, such as their impact on the
natural environment, effects of transport, and ecotourism.
We cannot
ignore the aesthetic aspects of the environment, such as beauty,
natural versus human made, and cultural diversity.
In all of
this, we
should try to live according to our ethical and spiritual values.One way to measure our impact on the environment and, therefore, what share of the Earth's resources we are consuming is the Ecological Footprint, which estimates how much productive land and water area a population (individual, city, country, all humanity) requires for the resources it consumes and for the absorption of its wastes, using prevailing technology. Today, on the average, each human being is consuming the resources of 2.3 hectares, when the biologically productive land and sea area available on this planet is only 1.9 hectares per person (not counting the space required to support other species). By this indicator, the world population overshot world capacity in 1975. Of course, the global average hides huge disparities. North Americans and Europeans consume much more than that, while impoverished third-world villages use much less. There are web sites where you can calculate your own ecological footprint and measure what responsibility you have for today's unsustainability.
| Do the exercise on the internet: measure your ecological footprint: http://www.myfootprint.org/ |
APPLYING SUSTAINABILITY at the local community or project
level
Now
that you have
learned about sustainable development, and its important relationship
to
your physical and spiritual well-being, what are you going to do to put
these ideas and values into practice in your own life, your family, and
your community? This has been a topic of discussion at recent
International Environment Forum conferences. You can find some useful
ideas in their reports: http://www.bcca.org/ief/conf7.htm,
http://www.bcca.org/ief/conf8.htm,
http://www.bcca.org/ief/conf9.htm.
The
Community Sustainability Assessment (http://gen.ecovillage.org/activities/csa/English/index.php)
provides a good checklist of issues to consider.
Part of the process is to assess your own impacts by informing yourself
about or thinking through your consumption patterns and lifestyle
choices. Then think about how you can monitor the trends in your
consumption, perhaps by the size of the bills you pay or the volume of
trash you throw away. You need to consider the dynamics of your own
personal situation and what you have the capacity to change.
Many local communities have developed their own local Agenda 21,
identifying their problems and priorities and defining measures to
address them to make their community more sustainable, along with
indicators to report on their progress. See if there are ways you can
join in this process, or perhaps start one if it has not already been
done.
If you want to organize some action for sustainability in your local
community, business or institution, the following are some of the
important steps to follow:
- Develop the knowledge
base about the environment and local issues
This could involve everything including research about the environment;
obtaining scientific advice; monitoring of trends in environmental
conditions; defining the local ecological, socioeconomic, and cultural
circumstances; collecting local knowledge, including traditional
knowledge; undertaking environmental impact assessments; and making
pollution release inventories.
- Set priorities
This includes determining the severity of each problem, and whether
there is the technological and human ability to solve them. The
benefits and costs of each action, including doing nothing, need to be
calculated. The process of setting priorities should involve all the
stakeholders, including marginalized groups. It will be necessary to
define where there are shared interests, to identify joint
responsibility, and determine the willingness to solve the problem.
- Promote coordination
Since most actions for sustainability require collaboration, it is
necessary to promote coordination across different goverment
departments or ministries, between local, regional and national levels
of government, and among all the stakeholders and actors
actors
including businesses and non-governmental organizations.
- Carry out
implementation
Implementing an action requires a clear definition of actions and
responsibilities, which may be in the form of a project
document,
agreement or legislative framework. Some administrative
structure
needs to be created or assigned the responsibility for leadership in
the action. The necessary technical skills need to be assembled, and
financial resources made available. It often helps to assign some
decentralized responsibility to be a close to the level of action as
possible, as this facilitates adaptive management to adjust the action
to changing conditions or new perceptions. Some of the tools that can
be used for implementation include the polluter pays principle,
internalization of costs, and economic incentives and disincentives.
- Participatory approaches can be very important, involving local people. Most actions for sustainability need to have an environmental education component, building local capacity and strengthening the ability of community groups and NGOs to participate. One aim should be to build a local capacity for science, teaching people process thinking, how to evaluate evidence, and local monitoring.
- Evaluate
Compare the results you accomplished with what you set out to do,
identify the reasons for any shortfalls and the contributing factors
for success, and use this information to improve the project or design
the next one.
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ADDITIONAL READING
Institute for Studies in Global Prosperity (2001), Science, Religion and
Development: Some Initial Considerations, http://www.bcca.org/ief/isgpsrd.htmInstitutions will only contribute to sustainability if they operate in a framework of values that combines scientific and religious knowledge systems, making it possible to implement alternative development paradigms. This paper presents some creative thinking on this topic. |
INTERFAITH PERSPECTIVES
The
environment and sustainable development are areas where all the major
religions share fundamental values and approaches. Therefore, they
provide rich opportunities for interfaith dialogue and collaboration.
Other resources and a bibliography concering interfaith approaches to
the environment and sustainability are available elsewhere on the IEF
web site.
QUESTIONS:
How can we implement sustainable development at the individual level?
What are the most unsustainable things about life in your own community?
What do you plan to do to live more sustainably?
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ADDITIONAL
READING FOR TEACHERS
Victoria
Thoresen (2004). Cultivating
Sustainable Lifestyles. Paper presented at
the 8th Conference of the International Environment Forum,
Thessaloniki, Greece, October 2004. http://www.bcca.org/ief/dthor04a.doc (of
particular interest to teachers).The Transformative Learning Centre, http://tlc.oise.utoronto.ca/about.html |

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Last updated 10 April 2006