Sustainability: An Interdisciplinary Guide
- 1 November 1992
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Environmental Values
- Vol. 1 (4) , 321-362
- https://doi.org/10.3197/096327192776680034
Abstract
A definition of sustainability as maintaining ‘utility’ (average human wellbeing) over the very long term future is used to build ideas from physics, ecology, evolutionary biology, anthropology, history, philosophy, economics and psychology, into a coherent, interdisciplinary analysis of the potential for sustaining industrial civilisation. This potential is highly uncertain, because it is hard to know how long the ‘technology treadmill’, of substituting accumulated tools and knowledge for declining natural resource inputs to production, can continue. Policies to make the treadmill work more efficiently, by controlling its pervasive environmental, social and psychological external costs, and policies to control population, will help to realise this potential. Unprecedented levels of global co-operation, among very unequal nations, will be essential for many of these policies to work effectively. Even then, tougher action may be required, motivated by an explicit moral concern for sustainability. An evolutionary analysis of history suggests that technology and morality can and will respond to a clearly perceived future threat to civilisation; but we cannot easily predict the threat, or whether our response will be fast enough.Keywords
This publication has 50 references indexed in Scilit:
- Towards an ecological economics of sustainabilityEcological Economics, 1992
- ECONOMIC PRINCIPLES IN THE EMERGENCE OF HUMANKINDEconomic Inquiry, 1992
- Economics of sustainability or the sustainability of economics: Different paradigmsEcological Economics, 1991
- Why are there so many of us? Description and diagnosis of a planetary ecopathological processPopulation and Environment, 1990
- The New View of Minerals and Economic Growth*Economic Record, 1989
- Poverty, Inequality and WelfareThe Economic Journal, 1988
- The economic theory of technology policy: an introductionPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,1987
- Optimal depletion with resource amenities and a backstop technologyResources and Energy, 1986
- Science as a Way of Knowing—Human EcologyAmerican Zoologist, 1985
- Utility and economicsDe Economist, 1985