Sustainability and Autodependency Norman W. Garrick Lecture 6.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Energy and Environmental Infrastructures and Technologies Small and Isolated Regions Madeira Case José Manuel Melim Mendes.
Advertisements

Scenario 2 "Future water use and the challenge of hydropower development in Western Balkan" February 2013, Ljubljana, Slovenia.
Environmental Problems, Their Causes and Sustainability
Woodrow Wilson Center 15 January 2009 Urban socio-ecological systems and environmental transitions in the Asia Pacific Region Peter J. Marcotullio Distinguished.
1. 2 UN-HABITAT Current Status & Strategy for the Future.
ITU Regional Standardization Forum For Africa Dakar, Senegal, March 2015 Smart Sustainable Cities Concept in Developing Nations Nakiguli Helen Cynthia,
Sustainability and Autodependency Norman W. Garrick Lecture 8 CE 4710/5710.
The Equity Principles of Sustainability Norman W. Garrick Lecture 8 Sustainable Transportation.
What is Sustainability? Norman W. Garrick Lecture 5 Sustainable Transportation.
What is Technology? What is Management?. What is Technology Technology = Beauty …those who have it worry about keeping it …those who don’t have it feel.
Ozone Layer Depletion Resource Depletion Dispersion of Toxic Substances Urban Environmental Problems Waste Water Pollution & Water Resources Marine Environment.
What is Transportation Planning? To answer this question, I drew on the following discussion from Todd Litman of the Victoria Transport Policy Institute.
Contextualising the Waste Management Sector in the Green Economy Green Economy Summit, May 2010 Nolwazi Cobbinah.
Story Earth Introduction.  Despite advances in technology and science;  There are in poverty, illiterate and unemployed  1/5 live in poverty, most.
Transportation Planning in Case Study Cities All of the cities selected for case study in this class have had decades of experience with transportation.
GHANA’S AGENDA FOR SHARED GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT,
The Post-2015 Development Agenda
Why Assess Environmental Impacts? The Big Picture Why does environment matter?
Hoàng Danh Sơn Director of International Cooperation and Science, Technology (ISD) Viet Nam Environment Administration (VEA) Ministry of Natural Resources.
Education for Sustainable Development (ESD).  There is no universal model of ESD and there will be differences based on local contexts, priorities and.
SWITCH Training Kit: Module 1 – Preparing for the Future Module 1: Preparing for the Future SWITCH Training Kit Module 1: Preparing for the Future Strategic.
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT: A Challenge for Engineers Ata M. Khan March 2002.
EU Transport Policy Regional Meeting on Sustainable Transport Policies in South Eastern Europe Budapest, June Wioletta Szymanska Project Manager.
Sustainable City Management and the Urban Ecological Footprint.
OPERATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL LITERACY The Ultimate Goal of Environmental Education.
GOOD PLACES BETTER HEALTH A New Approach for a New Era George Morris and Lorraine Tulloch.
Economic Instruments Expert Group Meeting on Enabling Measures for Inclusive Green Economy in Africa 23 and 24 September 2014, UNCC, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
Strategic Priorities of the NWE INTERREG IVB Programme Harry Knottley, UK representative in the International Working Party Lille, 5th March 2007.
Practical Strategies for Urban Adaptation in Asia: the Asian Cities Climate Change Resilience Network Dr. Stephen Tyler ISET Cities and Climate Change:
PRESENTATION ON ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY UNITED NATIONS ENVIRONMENT PROGRAMME (UNEP) SUMMIT IMPLEMENTATION REVIEW GROUP (SIRG)OEA/Ser.E First Regular.
1 Sustainable Development Assessment: A formalized approach initiated in Tunisia Rafik MISSAOUI (APEX-ALCOR)
Sustainable Development
MACROECONOMICS AND HUMAN DEVELOPMENT Deepak Nayyar 15 January 2013 AGW, Bangalore.
For a better built environment 1 Driving Relevance of Built Environment Professions in the context of Africa’s Developmental Agenda By Bheki Zulu CEO –
45:211: Environmental Geography Module 12 Sustainability.
Sustainability and Autodependency Norman W. Garrick Lecture 9 CE 4710/5710.
1 Children and chemical safety: framework for action to protect children from harmful exposures Presented on behalf of the IFCS Children & Chemical Safety.
Key Themes in Physical Geography July 6 th, 2009.
Planning and Sustainability Paul Farmer American Planning Association M6: Protecting the Urban Environment and Historical and Cultural Heritage.
Action towards Resource-efficient and Low Carbon Cities in Asia
TOWARD A SOCIETY OF ALL AGES & TOURISM ECONOMY Dr. Mohamed Beddy Ebnou Director of IESE, Brussels Lecturer, Dauphine University, Paris.
UNIT-IV Social issues and the environment
May 7, 2009 Discussion Materials (draft) “Sustainable Development Dilemma” By the Woosh Team – 1 st IDEAS Family (supervised by Thompson & Thomson Co.)
The business case for investing in the natural environment Charles Burt Olive “the sustainability experts”
EEA priorities on circular economy Multi-annual work programme OutputsTime frame Briefing on progress towards a circular economy in EuropeAnnual.
Nigel Hannam and David Phillips Parish Conference – 11th September 2013 Balancing Development.
Association of Child Welfare Agencies Conference, 2008 Management and Leadership Institute.
Sustainable Cities. What is a sustainable city? A sustainable city enhances the economic, social, cultural and environmental well-being of current and.
ECOLOGICALLY SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT (Reducing Disparities)
What is a Resource? A resource is anything useful. A resource helps us to achieve a goal or fulfill a function. Three types of resources are: Natural.
Nature, Scope and Key Concepts in Environmental Economics
Chapter 25 Tomorrow’s World. Overview of Chapter 25 o Living Sustainably o Sustainable Living: A Plan of Action o Changing Personal Attitude and Practices.
Water Sustainability in Cities Unit 1: Module Introduction (Photos and Graphics by Steve Burian)
Exploring the Dimensions of U.S. Environmental Carrying Capacity Workshop David Dzombak November 9, 2009.
Sustainability and Autodependency
The Fundamentals of Effective Transportation Planning
Structural Funds Programming Predeal, Romania
ENRE Lecture 1, Part 1 Environmental Policy Objectives
Three Themes of Sustainability
Sustainable City Management and the Urban Ecological Footprint
Ben Simuyandi DFID 27 May 2015 Introduction slide
NATIONAL URBAN DEVELOPMENT AND HOUSING FRAMEWORK (NUDHF)
Stiglitz Commission GDP and beyond
Sustainability and Autodependency
Stiglitz Commission GDP and beyond
SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA | October 2018
Title of notes: Sustainability Triangle
Territorial Trends and Challenges in Regional Policies
Managing Wastewater in the City of the Future
Sustainable Development
Presentation transcript:

Sustainability and Autodependency Norman W. Garrick Lecture 6

What is Sustainability? Sustainability is the stewardship of natural and human-made resources so that the quality of living and the health of our cities, countryside and open space do not deteriorate from one generation to the next Cervero, The Transit Metropolis: Transit and the Changing World

Talking the Talk Politicians in Jamaica and many other third world countries are very aware of the need to ‘talk’ sustainability but the policies often don’t add up to changes that support environmental sustainability. Environmental and health sustainability is often compromised in the interest of economic growth. The situation in the USA is slightly different – often technological fixes are offered up as the solution that will cause us to achieve environmental health without changing any of the economic or social issues that impact sustainability So how do we convert the seemingly vague concept of sustainability into a concrete framework for guiding policy and design?

The Three-Legged Stool The common model of sustainability is made up of a triad of economic, social, and environmental sustainability Sustainability Environment Society Economy

The Problem with the Three-legged Stool Model The three-legged stool model does not help us address seemingly hard questions like How do we improve people’s quality of life without necessarily increasing consumption to levels that might cause environmental degradation? Can we have a sustainable economy without the need for constantly increasing levels of consumption? Can we satisfy people’s desire for access without environmentally damaging levels of mobility?

The Starting Place for Understanding Sustainability Source:

Why Protecting the Biosphere is the Bottom-line for Sustainability We only have the one biosphere – this biosphere consists of natural ecosystems at different scales. It is a closed system with only one energy input and no output for waste Human activities have a big impact on the biosphere We need to re-structure these activities so that we can satisfy our needs and desires without continuing to cause harm to the biosphere

The Three-Legged Stool Sustainability Environment Society Economy

The Problem with the Three-Legged Stool The triad model of sustainability is considered by some to be flawed because it does not explicitly recognize that environmental sustainability requires changes to social and economic institutions – instead, it talks about balance It is universally acknowledged that the three dimensions of sustainability - environmental, social and economic – are a useful and valid way of conceptualizing this issue What is in dispute is the order in which they are considered. The three-legged stool does not imply any order or priority

The Appropriate Order for the Three Domains The important shift is to recognize that the economy is the creation of society, and not the other way around. The economy is thus framed by the social context in which it occurs. Further, both society and the economy operate within the context of a natural environment of limited capacity. This lead to the nested box model of sustainability in which the order of priority is environment, social, and economy sustainability

Environment Society Economy (LOW AND GLEESON 2003, HART 2006)

It is important not to take this model to mean that the economy, or economic considerations, are not important Rather it should be interpreted as saying that growth should serve the interest of the society and be environmentally sustainable. The most extreme examples of economic growth without social or environmental sustainability can be found in many “oil rich” countries around the world. The Nested box model also contains echoes of Littman's point about striving for ‘development’ not just ‘growth’ Interpreting the Nested Box Model of Sustainability

From an article by McGranahan and Satterthwaite in Pugh, Sustainable Cities in Developing Countries, Earthscan, pg

Ref: Low and Gleeson, Making Urban Transportation Sustainable, Palgrave MacMillan, pg