Unit 5 SD NOTES
Unit 5 SD NOTES
Definitions of
Sustainable Development
Development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future
generations to meet their own needs
A sustainable society enables its members to achieve a high quality of life in ways that are
ecologically sustainable
(United Nations)
A Goal for
Sustainable Development
To enable each individual to live life to their full potential physical, mental, and spiritual
development
We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors, we are borrowing it from our children
Prevention of pollution
Those who reap the benefits of development must bear the costs
Those who bear the costs of development should share in the benefits
Precautionary principle
Precautionary Principle
Where there are threats of serious or irreversible damage, lack of full scientific certainty shall
not be used as a reason for postponing cost-effective measures to prevent environmental degradation
(Agenda 21)
Economic, social, and ecological factors must be integrated in political and business decision
making - they are surely integrated in workings of the natural world
Institutions must move out of their narrow, specialised ‘niches’ to integrate and interact with
one another
Poverty alleviation
Human health
Biodiversity
Mountainous areas
Solid wastes
Key criterion for sustainable development is whether the needs of the least advantaged, most
vulnerable members of society are met
Development, Poverty
and Hunger (Cont’d)
Increased pressure
to exploit marginal environments
More poverty
Development, Poverty
and Hunger (Cont’d)
• Any development which significantly impacts natural resources can create poverty
• Human population numbers, their distribution, and their consumption of resources create
poverty and hunger
inadequate sanitation
erosion, flooding
Thus..........
adequate housing
disease control
Means of livelihood
Unemployment
Increased poverty, ill-health, societal breakdown, crime
2. Prevention in process
3. Reduction, minimization
4. Recycle, re-use
5. Treatment
6. Disposal
Decreasing preference
(Agenda 21)
The Sustainable
Development Journey
Sustainable development is a journey, not a destination… and there are no short cuts
Vehicles for the Sustainable Development Journey
Visionary policies
Concluding Thoughts
Sustainable development must respect the rights and dignity of all human beings and the
environment
Core themes are pollution prevention, conservation, equitable sharing of benefits, stakeholder
input to decisions
Sustainable development can succeed only if it addresses poverty, hunger, disease, and illiteracy
Unsustainable Effects
of Forest Loss
Global warming
2. Unsustainable Effects of
Mangrove Forest Removal
Loss of habitat for breeding and feeding coastal marine species, lower biodiversity,
3. Unsustainable Fisheries
6. Unsustainable Effects
of Urbanization
Lowering of well-being in cities: health, pollution, waste, crime, social tensions, family and community
breakdown
8. Unsustainable Attitudes
and Beliefs
When humans forget we are children of nature and instead believe we can dominate nature
Definitions of
Sustainable Development
Development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future
generations to meet their own needs
A sustainable society enables its members to achieve a high quality of life in ways that are
ecologically sustainable
(United Nations)
A Goal for
Sustainable Development
To enable each individual to live life to their full potential physical, mental, and spiritual
development
We do not inherit the earth from our ancestors, we are borrowing it from our children
Prevention of pollution
Those who reap the benefits of development must bear the costs
Those who bear the costs of development should have a share in the benefits
Precautionary principle
Historical background
inadequate sanitation
erosion, flooding
adequate housing
disease control
Development and
Indigenous Peoples
Means of livelihood
Unemployment
Prevention in process
Reduction, minimization
Recycle, re-use
Treatment
Disposal
Decreasing preference
Barriers to sustainability
increasingly efficient and resource-hungry technology (extracting, processing, and distributing more in
less time)
a social, political, and corporate culture that focuses on the short term
change is only seen through the eyes of an election cycle or a human lifetime
Barriers to sustainability
a distancing from the environmental consequences of our actions (e.g. our waste does not pile up in our
back yard)
the complexity of ecosystems making it difficult for scientists to give clear and univocal advice to
political decision-makers,
Barriers to sustainability
we do not (yet) pay for nature as we would for other goods and services and are therefore inclined to
assume it has little value.
we are not prepared to change our behaviour if it takes us out of our comfort zone (even in the face of
overwhelming scientific evidence)
Visionary policies
Concluding Thoughts
Sustainable development must respect the rights and dignity of all human beings and the environment
Core themes are pollution prevention, conservation, equitable sharing of benefits, stakeholder input to
decisions
Sustainable development can succeed only if it addresses poverty, hunger, disease, and illiteracy
Sustainable development becomes more precarious as the number of disadvantaged people increases
Sustainable development depends on preserving healthy land and water resources
Sustainable development is a journey, not a destination… and there are no short cuts……
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