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Characterizing a Sustainability Transition: Goals, Targets, Trends, and Driving Forces


Citation:
Parris, Thomas M., and Robert W. Kates. 2003. Characterizing a Sustainability Transition: Goals, Targets, Trends, and Driving Forces. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 100(14) (8 July): 8068-8073.
Abstract:
Sustainable development exhibits broad political appeal but has proven difficult to define in precise terms. Recent scholarship has focused on the nature of a sustainability transition, described by the National Research Council as meeting the needs of a stabilizing future world population while reducing hunger and poverty and maintaining the planet's life-support systems. We identify a small set of goals, quantitative targets, and associated indicators that further characterize a sustainability transition by drawing on the consensus embodied in internationally negotiated agreements and plans of action. To illustrate opportunities for accelerating progress, we then examine current scholarship on the processes that influence attainment of four such goals: reducing hunger, promoting literacy, stabilizing greenhouse-gas concentrations, and maintaining fresh-water availability. We find that such analysis can often reveal "levers of change," forces that both control the rate of positive change and are subject to policy intervention.
Full Text:
PDF document


Related Links:
PNAS Special Feature: Science and Technology for Sustainable Development (collection of 6 articles)
Long-Term Trends and a Sustainability Transition (PNAS companion article)

For further information regarding this publication, contact Thomas Parris.
 

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