One step forward, two steps back: On the politics of sustainability in the United States Sandy Rikoon University of Missouri

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
SCIENCE,SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURE AND RURAL DEVELOPMENT IN THE E.U.
Advertisements

Non-State Global Governance: Is Forest Certification a Legitimate Alternative to a Global Forest Convention? Steven Bernstein Benjamin Cashore University.
Environmental Problems, Their Causes and Sustainability
Science & The Environment
Chapter 1 Political Thinking: Becoming a Responsible Citizen
Recap Day 2. Key messages Day 1 Why CPEIRs? How they were done in different countries? Findings and recommendations Day 2 Questions and themes emerging.
Economics, Politics, Worldviews and the Environment
Highly Qualified Teachers Social Studies
DECENTRALIZATION AND RURAL SERVICES : MESSAGES FROM RECENT RESEARCH AND PRACTICE Graham B. Kerr Community Based Rural Development Advisor The World Bank.
Seminar 3: Green Cities Green Cities: Urban Growth and the Environment By Matthew E. Kahn Professor of economics at the Fletcher School, Tufts University.
The Scope and Challenge of International Marketing
 Economics – explains the choices we make and how those choices change as we cope with scarcity  Scarcity – the idea that there is a short supply or.
Story Earth Introduction.  Despite advances in technology and science;  There are in poverty, illiterate and unemployed  1/5 live in poverty, most.
AMERICAN GOVERNMENT, 10th edition by Theodore J. Lowi, Benjamin Ginsberg, and Kenneth A. Shepsle Chapter 13: Public Policy and the Economy.
High-Level Meeting of Regional Energy Regulatory Associations of Emerging Markets Sergey Novikov Head of the Federal Tariff Service (FTS of Russia) April.
Part 1 Business in a Changing World © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education.
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings Environmental policy Policy = a formal set of general plans and principles.
Chapter 3 MEASURING RISK Decisions in life ruled by Risk and Cost Take Hwy at 70 or side road at 35? How likely will someone or something be hurt? How.
Training on Roads for Water and Resilience. ROAD FOR WATER PLANNING – GOVERNANCE BERHE FISEHA, TIGRAY BUREAU OF CONSTRUCTION ROAD AND TRANSPORT AND KEBEDE.
Lecture 7 Technological Change and the Industrial Revolution What we mean when we say Capitalism.
Why are economic and financial instruments needed? A presentation made by Noma Neseni, IWSD.
Standards TCH 347 Social Studies in the Elementary School Department of Education Shippensburg University Han Liu, Ph. D.
15 Economic Policy. Conditions Required for a Market Economy Government has a role to play in a market economy: –Ensure law and order –Secure property.
Boundary Management, Exclusive Access and Certification Schemes The Challenge of Change: Managing for Sustainability of Oceanic Top Predators April 12,
Chapter 1 GlobalizationGlobalization 1. What Is Globalization? The globalization of markets refers to; “The merging of historically distinct and separate.
Political Economy.
Chapter 6 European Industrial Policy. Competitiveness EU share of global economy Ability to generate growth and sustainable employment Based on efficient,
SUSTAINABLE ENERGY REGULATION AND POLICY-MAKING FOR AFRICA Module 5 Energy Regulation Module 5: STRUCTURE, COMPOSITION AND ROLE OF AN ENERGY REGULATOR.
1 Two points 1.From local to global consumer – the challenge of rising and unsustainable consumption 2.What can we do to reach sustainable consumption.
Social Quality in Hong Kong: Who cares? Which quality? Raymond K H CHAN City University of Hong Kong.
Professor Philip Lowe Newcastle University Director of UK Research Councils’ Rural Economy and Land Use Programme Researching Environment - Society Relations.
Investment in Sustainable Natural Resource Management (focus: Agriculture) increases in agricultural productivity have come in part at the expense of deterioration.
Small-scale fishing communities and climate change: A human rights perspective Chandrika Sharma International Collective in Support of Fishworkers Oceans.
Green economy: way to Environmental governance Chair of European integration Kateryna Iakovenko Scientific supervisor Sergey Harichkov.
Environmental Science Is a Study of Connections in Nature
GHSGT Review Economics. Unit 1 – Fundamental Concepts of Economics.
20th November 2009 National Policy Dialogue 1 Role of State in a Developing Market Economy S.B. Likwelile.
Methodological Framework for the Assessment of Governance Institutions P. Diaz and A. Rojas PFRA Workshop, March 17, 2006.
Presented by: Steve Litke, Fraser Basin Council Winnipeg, Manitoba June 18, 2012 Collaborative Approaches to Watershed Governance – Lessons from BC.
TOWARDS BETTER REGULATION: THE ROLE OF IMPACT ASSESSMENT COLIN KIRKPATRICK IMPACT ASSESSMENT RESEARCH CENTRE UNIVERSITY OF MANCHESTER, UK UNECE Symposium.
Understanding Sustainable Diets: A descriptive analysis of the determinants and processes that influence diets and their impact on health, food security.
ENVS 101 Environmental science Environmental studies Interdisciplinary!
But not all countries are growing exponentially?
The Environment in Introductory Economics Three Global Development and Environment Institute textbooks: Microeconomics in Context Macroeconomics in Context.
THE LINKS BETWEEN ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL POLICIES JOSÉ ANTONIO OCAMPO UNDER-SECRETARY GENERAL ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL AFFAIRS.
Informal Thematic Debate of the General Assembly Climate Change as a Global Challenge 31 July 2007, United Nations The way forward: International Context.
Sustainability Science in North America: towards ICSS 2012 ”Knowledge to Action for Sustainability” James Buizer Science Policy Advisor to the President,
Chapter 16: Government and the Economy. Why Is Government Involved in the Economy? We continue to debate the proper role of the government in dealing.
HUMANITY’S ECOLOGICAL FOOTPRINT A TOOL FOR NAVIGATING IN A RESOURCE CONSTRAINED WORLD Rachel Hodara.
 Recognizing that “nature” is not a natural category need not be an impediment to consensus. It can open more space for human expression and creativity.
Economics & the environment. Issues with the environment are global: 1.Need SUSTAINABLE development: Developing countries have a growing population, they.
Country over-arching strategies for inclusive, green economy approaches Usman Iftikhar UNDP New York.
1 POLITICAL IDEOLOGIES AND THE ENVIRONMENT. 2 Introduction Focus:  the environmental challenge to modern political ideologies: solutions offered by Political.
The Ethics Of Environment Businesses have been ignoring their impact on the natural environment for centuries, largely because the economic costs and harmful.
1© Dennis Meadows, 2005 System Thinking in the Higher Education A Presentation for Hungarian Teachers Budapest, Hungary April 21, 2005 Dennis Meadows
Policy Tools: Correcting Market Failures. What are the most serious problems we face? Climate change Agricultural production Peak oil Water supply Biodiversity.
Framing: Ultimate goal Living within environmental limits - Resources - Money /investment - Decision-making - Institutions Economic activity at a scale.
Sustainability The ability of earth’s various natural systems and human cultural systems and economies to survive and adapt to changing environmental conditions.
Anselm Schneider NCCR Trade Regulation/ University of Zurich
Ecosystem Health & Sustainable Agriculture Project Definitions of Sustainability – sustainable rural development and sustainable agriculture Christine.
Environmental Science: Toward a Sustainable Future Richard T. Wright
The Environment in Introductory Economics Three Global Development and Environment Institute textbooks: Microeconomics in Context Macroeconomics in Context.
Sociology and Climate Change
Environmental Problems, Their Causes, and Sustainability
Module 66 Regulations and Equity
Policy.
Multi-level citizenship: causes and opportunities The Dynamics of Citizenship in the Post-Political World, Stockholm University, May Andreas.
Chapter 5 Ethical Decision Making
Chapter Learning Objectives
SUSTAINABLE ENERGY SUPPLY
Presentation transcript:

One step forward, two steps back: On the politics of sustainability in the United States Sandy Rikoon University of Missouri

Three Dimensions of Power 1)Protection of subjective interests during direct conflicts over selected issues in public decision-making 2)Confining the scope of decision-making to only those issues that do not seriously challenge one’s subjective interests 3)Avoiding potential conflict by shaping people’s perceptions, beliefs and subjective interests via ideology and propaganda

The Modernization Project ( ) Dominant political economy Primacy of the state and state-regulated markets (Keynesianism) Public Spending Social goals Social contract and redistribution National citizenship Chief Mechanisms Public investment Import substitution industrialization Education Land reform

Strategies of manipulation Misrepresenting and manipulating the results of scientific research Misrepresenting and manipulating the results of scientific research Intimidating or threatening individual scientists Intimidating or threatening individual scientists Invoking existing rules or creating new procedures in the political system Invoking existing rules or creating new procedures in the political system invoking an existing bias of bias in the media invoking an existing bias of bias in the media

Industrialization Kuznets Curve Kuznets curve - An inverted U curve that shows increases in pollution during early phases of development, peaks at middle stages, and then declines as affluence continues to increase.

Does development cure pollution?

10 Deep Sustainability Principles 1.Seeks the well-being and flourishing of the biological and physical environment (including all species), human livelihoods, and the access to adequate physical resources necessary for all human beings to live healthy lives. 2.Recognizes the diversity of cultural and social lives and the ability of all humans to choose the cultural and social norms relevant to their lives. 3.Requires humans to recognize systems of rights and responsibilities for all peoples.

Regulatory MechanismConcept Market Component Role of the State Green TaxesIndividuals or firms participate in “greener” behavior by avoiding more costly “brown” alternatives Incentivized behavior Sets and collects taxes Cap and trade Total amount of pollutant or other “bad” is limited and tradable; rights to pollute are distributed to polluters Rewarding efficiency Sets limits and enforces contracts Green consumption Individual consumers choose goods or services based on their certified environmental impacts, typically paying more for more benign commodities Willingness to pay Oversees and authenticates claims of producers and sellers Three market-based solutions

10 Deep Sustainability Principles 4.Promotes the principle of equality and the centrality of social justice 5.Promotes mitigation over adaptation, recognizing as well that human behavior is dynamic over time and space. 6.Recognizes solutions must continuously be reviewed and adjusted; adaptive co-management in a key. 7.Promotes a cradle to cradle approach based on the premise that it is the value of natural and human capital that makes a sustainable process.

10 Deep Sustainability Principles 8.Values the democratic process and supports democratic governance 9.Recognizes that complex, self-organizing, and living systems depend on their very complexity and internal variety for long term viability. 10.Believes in appreciating quality of life rather than adhering to an increasingly higher standard of living.

The social constructions of environmental problems: a “political ecological” approach

The Modernization Project ( ?) Mobilizing tool Nationalism (postcolonialism) Institutional developments World Bank, IMF

From Development to Globalization The Globalization Project (1990-present) Dominant political economy Self-regulating markets (monetarism) Public/state downsizing Chief Mechanisms Export-orientation Privatization Entrepreneurialism Public austerity

The Globalization Project (1990-present) Mobilizing tool Markets and credit Social goals Private initiatives and global consumerism Multi-layered citizenship and recognition Institutional developments NAFTA, WTO SAP (Structural Adjustment Policies)

Presenting claims How an issue is “framed” is very important. What/who caused this situation? Is it serious? What are the harms, to humans or other species? Is the problem framed by its symptoms or underlying causes? Who stands to benefit or lose by attention How an issue is “framed” is very important. What/who caused this situation? Is it serious? What are the harms, to humans or other species? Is the problem framed by its symptoms or underlying causes? Who stands to benefit or lose by attention In many cases, what’s as important as the validity of the claim is it’s viability to an audience In many cases, what’s as important as the validity of the claim is it’s viability to an audience

Four roles of science (Ozawa) Discoverer – uncovers conditions worthy of public attention; pre-conflict Discoverer – uncovers conditions worthy of public attention; pre-conflict Mechanism of authority – providing the basis of public policy decisions Mechanism of authority – providing the basis of public policy decisions Shield – providing a buffer for unpopular decisions Shield – providing a buffer for unpopular decisions Tool of persuasion – justifying or legitimizing a particular argument/decision Tool of persuasion – justifying or legitimizing a particular argument/decision

Success factors Framed as novel and important in the media Framed as novel and important in the media Symbolic and visual dramatization Symbolic and visual dramatization Economic incentives and health outcomes for action Economic incentives and health outcomes for action Institutional sponsor Institutional sponsor

Ecological footprints suggest we are in a situation of overshoot

Global Population (billion) Total Ecological Footprint Cropland Footprint Grazing Land Footprint Forest Footprint Fishing Ground Footprint 0.1 Carbon Footprint Built-up Land0.1 Total Biocapacity Ecological Footprint to Biocapacity ratio Ecological footprints, worldwide,