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PRESS RELEASE
Tuesday, October 22, 2013
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Cultivating Resilience in the Face of Ecological Change
The
Worldwatch Institute suggests increasing the resilience of our social,
economic, and political systems to adapt to a changing climate
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Washington, D.C.---In
the past decade, approximately 200-300 million people have been
seriously affected by natural disasters or technological accidents each
year-a staggering figure that is bound to only increase in the coming
decades. It is becoming clear that a failure to make political systems
pay attention to climate challenges might lead to massive population
displacements. In State of the World 2013: Is Sustainability Still Possible?, the Worldwatch Institute (www.worldwatch.org) discusses the imperative to prepare for such disasters and outlines how we can move forward on the path toward resiliency.
"The
repercussions from environmental degradation do not occur in a void,"
notes Michael Renner, contributing author and senior researcher at
Worldwatch. "They interact with a cauldron of pre-existing societal
pressures and problems."
Building
up a globalized and industrialized market economy and growing our food
in globe-spanning monocultures may increase efficiency, but such
practices also decrease resiliency. Many societies are now at risk of
either short-term or permanent displacement due to both environmental
and non-environmental disasters.
"Of
course, disasters of all kinds are nothing new," remarks Laurie Mazur,
contributing author and nonprofit consultant. "But the current era may
be one in which their frequency, scale, and impact are greater than
anything our species has previously confronted."
In State of the World 2013,
contributing authors discuss an array of strategies and case studies
that offer lessons for surviving and coping with the coming calamities
that may result from climate and other ecological changes.
Recipe for resilience.
In order for societies to be truly resilient-able to mitigate and
withstand disturbances and recover afterward-socioeconomic practices
should include redundancies, so that the failure of one component does
not impact the entire system. Modularity is also critical, in that
individual units retains some self-sufficiency when disconnected from
the larger networks. Other characteristics of resilient systems include
diversity, inclusiveness, tight feedbacks, and the capacity for
innovation.
Adjusting and adapting.
We must consider how the physical changes that take place on Earth will
translate into social and economic changes. Adaptation can help reduce
vulnerability by way of disaster and famine early-warning systems,
livelihood diversification, drought-tolerant crops, restoration of
ecosystems, flood-defense infrastructure, and crop insurance.
Cultivating social capital.
Social capital, the sum total of resources, knowledge, and goodwill
possessed by everyone in a network, provides a web of connections that
communities can use to obtain relief and reconstruction aid. Members in
well-functioning communities are best able to organize support,
articulate their needs, and work together to rebuild and stabilize.
The Cuban Experiment.
Over the past two decades, Cuba has moved to the forefront of
sustainability. In 2006, it was the only country in the world rated as
having achieved "sustainable development" in WWF's Living Planet Report.
Although it is materialistically poor, it has First World education,
literacy, and health care. The Cuban example proves what many wealthy
nations are hesitant to even consider: that high material consumption
does not necessarily equal human well-being. Cuba represents an
alternative where material success as measured by energy consumption is
secondary, while other quality-of-life issues are given priority.
A
global paradigm shift is in order. We must not only alter our outlook
on consumption and realign our consciousness with sustainability, but
also begin to integrate policies and practices that diversify and
strengthen our social, political, and economic domains.
Worldwatch's State of the World 2013, released in April 2013, addresses
how "sustainability" should be measured, how we can attain it, and how
we can prepare if we fall short. For more information, visit www.sustainabilitypossible.org.
Authors of mentioned chapters include:
- Paula
Green, founder and senior fellow at the Karuna Center for
Peacebuilding, professor at the School of International Training, and
author of Chapter 33, "Shaping Community Responses to Catastrophe."
- Laurie
Mazur, D.C.-based writer and consultant to nonprofit organizations and
author of Chapter 32, "Cultivating Resilience in a Dangerous World."
- Faith
Morgan, executive director of the Arthur Morgan Institute for Community
Solutions and co-author of Chapter 30, "Cuba: Lessons from a Forced
Decline."
- Pat
Murphy, research director of the Arthur Morgan Institute for Community
Solutions and co-author of Chapter 30, "Cuba: Lessons from a Forced
Decline."
- Michael Renner, senior researcher at the Worldwatch Institute and author of Chapter 31, "Climate Change and Displacements."
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