可持续转型:为人类和地球走向安全和公正未来的新途径

Pub Date : 2022-04-05 DOI:10.12924/cis2022.10010001
Christopher J. Orr, Katie Kish
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引用次数: 0

摘要

我们很高兴地推出《可持续发展的挑战》第三期特刊,题为《可持续发展转型:为人类和地球走向安全和公正未来的新途径》。本期特刊是在2019冠状病毒病全球大流行背景下与加拿大生态经济学会(CANSEE)合作出版的。2019冠状病毒病危机引发了许多关于恢复、重建和更好地重建以应对气候危机的呼吁。但是,大流行暴露了现有政治和经济制度固有的脆弱性和紧张局势。现有的脆弱性和不平等加剧了对健康和福祉的挑战,威胁到社区生计,并阻碍了实现生态稳定和完整的努力。此外,紧张局势揭示了福祉的社会、经济和环境层面是多么紧密相连。简单地按照以前的道路重建既站不住脚,也不可取。相反,当前的形势为人类和地球走向安全和公正的未来提供了契机。这项紧迫的任务需要勇气、创造力和实验精神。哪些团体、举措和愿景已经在疫情造成的裂缝中生根发芽,或正在从中出现?我们体系的哪些特征必须重新构想,哪些关系必须重新协商?什么样的解决方案能够催化支持这种重新定位的行动?CANSEE支持新兴和成熟的可持续发展学者和生态经济学家从对现状的深刻批判的角度理解和分析可持续发展的挑战。长期以来,生态经济学家一直强调,在过时的以增长为导向的经济框架内解决气候危机的局限性,这种经济框架优先考虑增加经济活动,而忽略了质量和生态完整性。因此,生态经济学家在理解和支持向公正、可再生和生态经济的可持续转型方面做出了重要贡献。本期特刊从生态经济学的角度探讨了近期脆弱性、不平等、不公正和系统性紧张局势背景下的可持续性挑战。本期特刊中的论文使用生态经济学的镜头、批评和工具来处理生态和社会挑战交叉点的问题。这些贡献侧重于从社区到国际层面的多个层面,为有效、包容和变革性的解决方案提供信息。他们以解决方案为导向,因为他们运用生态经济学的思维来探索影响人类和生态福祉的具体问题。这期特刊的一个重要贡献是通过知识转移在现实世界中的应用。我们认识到,解决方案本质上是复杂和系统性的,涉及政府、非政府组织、土著群体、活动家、企业和民间社会等不同行为体。因此,我们鼓励那些被认为具有变革性的作品
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Sustainability Transformations: Emerging Pathways Toward Safe and Just Futures for People and the Planet
We are pleased to introduce the third special issue in Challenges in Sustainability entitled Sustainability transformations: Emerging pathways toward safe and just futures for people and the planet. This special issue emerged in partnership with the Canadian Society for Ecological Economics (CANSEE) in the context of the global COVID-19 pandemic. The COVID-19 crisis has led to many calls for recovery, to rebuild, and to build back better to address the climate crisis. But the pandemic has exposed vulnerabilities and tensions inherent in established political and economic systems. Existing vulnerabilities and inequalities have exacerbated challenges for health and wellbeing, threatened community livelihoods, and empeded efforts to achieve ecological stability and integrity. Moreover, tensions have revealed how deeply interconnected social, economic, and environmental dimensions of wellbeing are. Simply rebuilding to pursue the previous path is neither tenable nor desirable. Instead, the current context provides an opportunity to pivot towards safe and just futures for people and the planet. This urgent task demands courage, creativity, and experimentation. What groups, initiatives, and visions have been seeded or are emerging from the cracks created by the pandemic? What features of our systems must be reimagined and what relationships must be renegotiated? And what solutions are capable of catalyzing action that supports this reorientation? CANSEE supports emerging and established sustainability scholars and ecological economists in understanding and analyzing sustainability challenges from a perspective that is deeply critical of the status quo. Ecological economists have long emphasized the limits of attempting to address the climate crisis within an outdated growthoriented economic framework that prioritizes increasing economic activity at the expense of attending to quality and ecological integrity. Thus, ecological economists have important contributions to make in understanding and supporting sustainability transformations towards just, regenerative, and ecological economies. This special issue engages with sustainability challenges from an ecological economics perspective in the context of recent vulnerabilities, inequalities, injustices, and systemic tensions. Papers in this special issue use the lens, critiques, and tools of ecological economics to engage with problems at the intersection of ecological and social challenges. These contributions focus on multiple levels from the community to international scales to inform effective, inclusive, and transformative solutions. They are solution-oriented in that they apply ecological economics thinking to explore concrete problems that impact human and ecological wellbeing. An important contribution of this special issue is realworld application through knowledge transfer. Recognizing that solutions are inherently complex and systemic, they implicate diverse actors from governments, NGOs, Indigenous groups, activists, businesses and civil society. Thus, we encouraged submissions that considered transformative
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