Transformative research for sustainability: characteristics, tensions, and moving forward
Cambridge Core | Global Sustainability
by Horcea-Milcu, Andra-Ioana, Dorresteijn, Ine, Leventon, Julia, Stojanovic, Milutin, Lam, David P.M., Lang, Daniel J., Moriggi, Angela, Raymond, Christopher M., Stålhammar, Sanna, Weiser, Annika, Zimmermann, Silja
1w ago
Technical summary The question of how science can become a lever in achieving the Sustainable Development Goals permeates most recent sustainability research. Wide-ranging literature calling for a transformative approach has emerged in recent years. This ‘transformative turn’ is fueled by publications from fields such as sustainability science, social-ecological research, conservation science, sustainability transitions, or sustainability governance studies. However, there is a lack of a shared understanding specifically of what is meant for research to be transformative in this developing di ..read more
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Research into land atmosphere interactions supports the sustainable development agenda
Cambridge Core | Global Sustainability
by Hayman, Garry, Poulter, Benjamin, Ghude, Sachin D., Blyth, Eleanor, Sinha, Vinayak, Archibald, Sally, Ashworth, Kirsti, Barlow, Victoria, Fares, Silvano, Feig, Gregor, Hiyama, Tetsuya, Jin, Jiming, Juhola, Sirkku, Lee, Meehye, Leuzinger, Sebastian, Mahecha, Miguel D., Meng, Xianhong, Odee, David, Purser, Gemma, Sato, Hisashi, Saxena, Pallavi, Semeena, Valiyaveetil S., Steiner, Allison, Wang, Xuemei, Wolff, Stefan
1w ago
Non-technical summary Greenhouse gas emissions and land use change – from deforestation, forest degradation, and agricultural intensification – are contributing to climate change and biodiversity loss. Important land-based strategies such as planting trees or growing bioenergy crops (with carbon capture and storage) are needed to achieve the goals of the Paris Climate Agreement and to enhance biodiversity. The integrated Land Ecosystems Atmospheric Processes Study (iLEAPS) is an international knowledge-exchange and capacity-building network, specializing in ecosystems and their role in contro ..read more
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The dry sky: future scenarios for humanity's modification of the atmospheric water cycle
Cambridge Core | Global Sustainability
by Keys, Patrick W., Wang-Erlandsson, Lan, Moore, Michele-Lee, Pranindita, Agnes, Stenzel, Fabian, Varis, Olli, Warrier, Rekha, Wong, R. Bin, D'Odorico, Paolo, Folke, Carl
1M ago
Non-Technical Summary Human societies are changing where and how water flows through the atmosphere. However, these changes in the atmospheric water cycle are not being managed, nor is there any real sense of where these changes might be headed in the future. Thus, we develop a new economic theory of atmospheric water management, and explore this theory using creative story-based scenarios. These scenarios reveal surprising possibilities for the future of atmospheric water management, ranging from a stock market for transpiration to on-demand weather. We discuss these story-based futures in t ..read more
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The expansion and remaining suitable areas of global oil palm plantations
Cambridge Core | Global Sustainability
by Zhao, Qiang, Yu, Le, Li, Xiyu, Xu, Yidi, Du, Zhenrong, Kanniah, Kasturi, Li, Chengxiu, Cai, Wenhua, Lin, Hui, Peng, Dailiang, Zhang, Yongguang, Gong, Peng
1M ago
Non-technical summary Oil palm has been criticized for being an environmentally unfriendly oil crop. In recent decades, oil palm plantations have extended into conservation landscapes, causing severe environmental damage and harming biodiversity. Nevertheless, oil palm remains a highly productive oil crop from which most of the world's vegetable oil is produced. Therefore, measuring the environmental impact of oil palm plantations and identifying suitable land to support its sustainable development is crucial. Technical summary To meet the rising global palm oil demand sustainably, we tracke ..read more
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Transdisciplinarity, tempocoupling, and the role of culture in zoonosis research
Cambridge Core | Global Sustainability
by Matias, Denise Margaret S.
1M ago
Non-technical summary The general public became familiar with the term and definition of zoonosis during the COVID-19 pandemic. Because of the pandemic, several responses to mitigate zoonotic risk has been put forward. Often cited are stricter biodiversity conservation and wildlife protection but there are also suggestions to educate people who traditionally consume wildlife for food. This implicit condemnation of culture also manifested explicitly in the form of racism especially against Asians during the height of the pandemic. If the world is to avoid a pandemic, it also needs to work agai ..read more
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Recentering evolution for sustainability science
Cambridge Core | Global Sustainability
by Vázquez-Domínguez, Ella, Kassen, Rees, Schroer, Sibylle, De Meester, Luc, Johnson, Marc T. J.
1M ago
Non-technical summary Evolutionary biology considers how organisms and populations change over multiple generations, and so is naturally focused on issues of sustainability through time. Yet, sustainability science rarely incorporates evolutionary thinking and most scientists and policy makers do not account for how evolutionary processes contribute to sustainability. Understanding the interplay between evolutionary processes and nature's contribution to people is key to sustaining life on Earth. Technical summary Evolution, the change in gene frequencies within populations, is a process of ..read more
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Scoping article: research frontiers on the governance of the Sustainable Development Goals
Cambridge Core | Global Sustainability
by Hickmann, Thomas, Biermann, Frank, Sénit, Carole-Anne, Sun, Yixian, Bexell, Magdalena, Bolton, Mitzi, Bornemann, Basil, Censoro, Jecel, Charles, Aurelie, Coy, Dominique, Dahlmann, Frederik, Elder, Mark, Fritzsche, Felicitas, Gehre Galvão, Thiago, Grainger-Brown, Jarrod, Inoue, Cristina, Jönsson, Kristina, Koloffon Rosas, Montserrat, Krellenberg, Kerstin, Moallemi, Enayat, Lobos Alva, Ivonne, Malekpour, Shirin, Ningrum, Dianty, Paneva, Aneliya, Partzsch, Lena, Ramiro, Rodrigo, Raven, Rob, Szedlacsek, Eszter, Thompson, John, van Driel, Melanie, Viani Damasceno, Jéssica, Webb, Robert, Weiland, Sabine
1M ago
Non-Technical Summary This article takes stock of the 2030 Agenda and focuses on five governance areas. In a nutshell, we see a quite patchy and often primarily symbolic uptake of the global goals. Although some studies highlight individual success stories of actors and institutions to implement the goals, it remains unclear how such cases can be upscaled and develop a broader political impact to accelerate the global endeavor to achieve sustainable development. We hence raise concerns about the overall effectiveness of governance by goal-setting and raise the question of how we can make this ..read more
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Global polycrisis: the causal mechanisms of crisis entanglement
Cambridge Core | Global Sustainability
by Lawrence, Michael, Homer-Dixon, Thomas, Janzwood, Scott, Rockstöm, Johan, Renn, Ortwin, Donges, Jonathan F.
1M ago
Multiple global crises – including the pandemic, climate change, and Russia's war on Ukraine – have recently linked together in ways that are significant in scope, devastating in effect, but poorly understood. A growing number of scholars and policymakers characterize the situation as a ‘polycrisis’. Yet this neologism remains poorly defined. We provide the concept with a substantive definition, highlight its value-added in comparison to related concepts, and develop a theoretical framework to explain the causal mechanisms currently entangling many of the world's crises. In this framework, a ..read more
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Polycrisis in the Anthropocene: an invitation to contributions and debates
Cambridge Core | Global Sustainability
by Lawrence, Michael
1M ago
The popularity of the term polycrisis suggests a growing demand for new thinking about the world's intersecting crises, but loose and haphazard uses of the concept impede knowledge generation. The special issue, ‘Polycrisis in the Anthropocene’, aims to close the gap. This introductory comment first elaborates upon three key contributions of the lead article ‘Global Polycrisis: The Causal mechanisms of Crisis Entanglement’: a conceptualization of crisis as systemic disequilibrium; the distinction between the slow-moving stresses and the fast-moving trigger events that interact to generate a ..read more
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A review of existing model-based scenarios achieving SDGs: progress and challenges
Cambridge Core | Global Sustainability
by Orbons, K., van Vuuren, D.P., Ambrosio, G., Kulkarni, S., Weber, E., Zapata, V., Daioglou, V., Hof, A.F., Zimm, C.
2M ago
Non-Technical Summary In 2015, the United Nations articulated the ambition to move toward a prosperous, socially inclusive, and environmentally sustainable future for all by adopting the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). However, little is known about the pathways that could lead to their concurrent achievement. We provide an overview of the current literature on quantitative pathways toward the SDGs, indicate the commonly used methods and indicators, and identify the most comprehensive pathways that have been published to date. Our results indicate that there is a need for more scenarios ..read more
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