The human eco-predicament: Overshoot and the population conundrum

Q3 Social Sciences Vienna Yearbook of Population Research Pub Date : 2022-11-15 DOI:10.1553/p-eznb-ekgc
W. Rees
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

The human enterprise is in overshoot, depleting essential ecosystems faster than they can regenerate and polluting the ecosphere beyond nature’s assimilative capacity. Overshoot is a meta-problem that is the cause of most symptoms of eco-crisis, including climate change, landscape degradation and biodiversity loss. The proximate driver of overshoot is excessive energy and material ‘throughput’ to serve the global economy. Both rising incomes (consumption) and population growth contribute to the growing human eco-footprint, but increasing throughput due to population growth is the larger factor at the margin. (Egregious and widening inequality is a separate socio-political problem.) Mainstream approaches to alleviating various symptoms of overshoot merely reinforce the status quo. This is counter-productive, as overshoot is ultimately a terminal condition. The continuity of civilisation will require a cooperative, planned contraction of both the material economy and human populations, beginning with a personal to civilisational transformation of the fundamental values, beliefs, assumptions and attitudes underpinning neoliberal/capitalist industrial society.
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人类生态困境:过度捕捞与人口难题
人类的事业已经过度,耗尽基本生态系统的速度超过了它们的再生速度,污染了超出自然吸收能力的生态圈。生态超载是一个元问题,是造成生态危机的大多数症状的原因,包括气候变化、景观退化和生物多样性丧失。超调的直接驱动因素是为全球经济服务的能源和物质“吞吐量”过剩。收入(消费)的增加和人口的增长都促进了人类生态足迹的增长,但人口增长导致的吞吐量增加是更大的边际因素。(严重且不断扩大的不平等是一个独立的社会政治问题。)缓解各种过度反应症状的主流方法只是强化了现状。这是适得其反的,因为超调最终是一种终结状态。文明的延续将需要物质经济和人口的合作、有计划的收缩,从个人到文明的基本价值观、信仰、假设和态度的转变开始,这些价值观、信仰、假设和态度支撑着新自由主义/资本主义工业社会。
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来源期刊
Vienna Yearbook of Population Research
Vienna Yearbook of Population Research Social Sciences-Demography
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
11
期刊介绍: In Europe there is currently an increasing public awareness of the importance that demographic trends have in reshaping our societies. Concerns about possible negative consequences of population aging seem to be the major force behind this new interest in demographic research. Demographers have been pointing out the fundamental change in the age composition of European populations and its potentially serious implications for social security schemes for more than two decades but it is only now that the expected retirement of the baby boom generation has come close enough in time to appear on the radar screen of social security planners and political decision makers to be considered a real challenge and not just an academic exercise.
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