Unit 1 Sustainable Development: Concept and Scope: Stmcture
Unit 1 Sustainable Development: Concept and Scope: Stmcture
Unit 1 Sustainable Development: Concept and Scope: Stmcture
1.0 INTRODUCTION
We all know that most societies aspire to achieve economic development to secure
higher standards of living, both for themselves and for future generations. They also
seek to protect and enhancethe quality of their environment, now and for their children.
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Reconciling these two aspirations is at the heart of sustainable development.Sustainable
development aims at meeting the basic needs of all people in general and the poor
majority in particular- their employment, food, energy, water, housing, etc., by ensuring
the growth of agriculture,manufactures,power and services with due considerationfor
environmental concerns.
Therefore, in this Unit, we attempt to present you the concept, meaning and scope of
sustainable development with focus on its purpose and dimensions, and set out some
I basic principles and essential ingredients of good vision for sustainable development.
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1 . OBJECTIVES
After studying this unit, you should be able to:
@ Explain the concept and meaning of sustainable development;
@ Describe the scope and purposes of sustainable development;
@ Appreciate the underlying principles and premises of sustainable development;
Introduction to Sustainable Analyse various dimensions of sustainabledevelopment and the need for integration
Development of the various dimensions of sustainability; and
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Appreciate the nature of our concern for sustainable development.
by the then prime minister of Norway, Gro Harlem Brundtland.It stated that "sustainable
development is development that meets the needs of the present generation without
compromisingthe ability of future generations to meet their own needs.
It is now considered to be one of the most widely recognised definitions. As we can
notice, it contains within it two key concepts:
the concept of 'needs', in particular the essential needs of the world's poor, to
which overriding priority should be given; and
the idea of limitationsimposed by the state-of-art technology and socialorganization
on the environment's ability to meet present and future needs."
The United Nations 2005 World Summit outcome document refers to economic
development, social development and environmental protection as the "interdependent
and mutually reinforcing pillars " of sustainabledevelopment.
Many definitions and images (visualizing sustainability) of sustainabledevelopment may
coexist. Broadly defined, the sustainabledevelopment mantra enjoins currentgenerations
to take a systems-approach to growth and development and to manage natural,
produced and social capital for the welfare of their own and future generations.
T~hnology
Toxic Chemicals
Trade and Environment
Transport
Waste (Hazardous)
Waste (Radioactive)
Waste (Solid)
Waste Water
During the last ten years, different organizations have tried to measure and monitor
those in proximity to what they consider sustainabilityby implementingwhat has been
called sustainability matrix and indices.
iii) Real Purpose (Agenda) of Sustainability Development: Various writers have
commented on the population control agenda that seems to underlie the concept of
sustainabledevelopment. Maria SophiaAguim (2002) writes: "Sustainable development
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is a policy approach that has gained quite a lot of popularity in recent years, especially
! in international circles. By attaching a specific interpretationto sustainability,population
t control policies have become the overriding approach to development, thus becoming
the primary tool used to "promote economic development in developing countries and
to protect the environment."
Mary Jo Anderson (2002) suggests that the real purpose of sustainable development is
to contain and limit economic development in developing countries, and in so doing
control population growth. It is suggested that thls is the reason the main focus of most
programmes is still on low-income agriculture. Joan Veon (2004), a business-woman
and international reporter, who covered 64 global meetings on sustainable development
posits that: "Sustainable development has continued to evolve as that of protecting the
world's resources while its true agenda is to control the world's resources.It should be
noted that Agenda 2 1 sets up the global infrastructureneeded to manage, count, and ,
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control all of the world's assets."
Sustainable development is said to set limits on the developing world. While current
1-mtworld countries polluted sigdicantly during their development, the same countries
encourage third world countries to reduce pollution, which sometimes impedes growth.
IntroductiontoSustainable In fact, all these broad aspects together give us an idea of the scope of sustainable 1
Development development. In order to understand the scope of sustainable development in its Mle 14
perspective, let us discuss its dimensions,principles and concernsin the followingsection.
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Check Your Progress
Notes: a) Space given below the question is for writing yow answer.
b) Check your answer with the one given at the end of this unit under
"Answers to 'Check Your Progressi Questiofis."
1) Explain the concept of sustainable development.
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2) That the present generation should meet its needs without compromisingthe ability
of future generations to meet their needs, i.e. to ensure that the productive assets
available to future generations are not unfairly diminished.
3) That those who enjoy the fruits of economic development today must not make
future generations worse-off by excessively degrading the Earth's exhaustible
resources and polluting its ecology and environment.
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That economic development which erodes natural capital is often not successful.
That sustainable development in the long run has to do with ecology, resources
and people, along with their service agencies, institutions and other aspects of
Sustainable Deyrelopment:
Concept and Scope
I1 ' f i e critiques of development, also ling the alarming bells, not only for conveniently
ignoring the environmentalconsiderations in the development planning but also for the
distortions of development, i.e. unjust and inequitable development.
'I'he facts they (critiques) present are highly disturbing:
D More than 200 million people in the country live below the poverty line. 15 I
Intrductionto Sustainable More than 200 million people have no access to safe drinking water.
Development
More than 500 million people have no access to proper sanitation.
More than 150million people are without proper shelter.
More than 500 million people are illiterate.
More than a million children die each year before they see their first birthday.
In the face of such a grim scehario, the question 'development for whom' needs an
honest answer. There is no place here to present a detailed critique of development.
But, at least a one-line statement is necessary - that development has failed the poor,
and they need a development which is participatory, equitable and infused with strong
considerationsof socialjustice. Labels of such a development- sustainableor whatever
-do not matter to the poor; what matters to them is the equitability,call it sustainability,
if one likes.
This is the backdrop that constitutes really the concerns of the current debates and
discussions on sustainabledevelopment. The concerns are essentially related to:
global and transnational nature of threats (for example, climate change, ozone
layer depletion, etc);
degradation of natural habitats (for example, forests and other eco-systems);
a depletion of non-renewable natural resources (for example, stock of water, soil,
minerals, wilderness areas);
diminution of land for agriculturalpurposes;
migration of people fiom rural to urban areas;
pollution of rivers, ponds and other water sources; and
environmentalpollution in urban industrial areas, especially in large cities.
Check Your Progress
Notes: a) Space given below the question is for writing your answer.
b) Check your answer with the one given at the end of this unit under
"Answers to 'Check Your Progress' Questions."
2) What are the dimensions and premises of sustainable development?
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. 1.3.3.2 Essential Ingredients of Good Vision of Sustainable Development
Towurds a Good The current explorations on sustainable development in our
midst today exemplify an approach that will permit continuing improvements in the
present qualify of life at a lower intensity of resource-use, thereby leaving behind for
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future generations an undiminished or even enhanced stock of natural resources and Sustainable Development:
other assets. The search is basically on for that process of development by which Concept and Scopc
people develop themselves and their institutions in ways that enhance their ability to
mobilize and manage available resources to produce sustainable and justly distributed
improvements in the quality of life, consistent with their own aspirations.
For us (in India), sustainable development is both a challenge and an opportunity.The
obstacles are, however,great and making the concept of sustainability precise is difficult.
It is not possible to argue that there should be zero or bare minimum use of natural
resources for development; successful development will inevitably involve some amount
of depletion of natural resources, resulting in some degree of environmental damage.
Further, policies and programmes of accelerating environmentally-responsible
development will not happen by themselves. It is, therefore, important to seize the
current opportunity to bring about real, if not radical, change. The challenge can be
converted into opportunity when due consideration is given to its essential ingredients
that determine our vision of sustainable development.
Ingredients of good vision: Some ingredients identified are presented below.
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cannot maintain its sustainability.
Attending to Problenzs Created by Accelerated Pace of Industrialization uric1
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1x Urbanization:While there is a lot of breast-beating on sustainable development
in the quarters that play a major role in the planning and execution of economic Sustainable Dt!velopment:
growth and industrial expansion, there is little regard to attending to the problems Concept and Scope
arising out of the pace and processes of industrial growth.Also, while there is no
dispute about the need for industrialization,the cause of worry is the environmental
degradation on a frightening scale.The industrial units, no matter big or small, are
pollumt in nature. Most of these units flout the regulatory controls with impunity
and care little about the problems of pollution they create in the short- and long-
run. The obsession with growth-oriented strategy has side-tracked the vital issues
of environmental protection and desirable modes of production. Besides problems
of pollution, there is another awesome problem of industrial growth, namely, the
problem of "project displaced persons" (PDPs). There are many instances of
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development projects -factories, mines and dams -that have resulted in bringing
I untold misery to poor people whose land has been acquired in the name of 'public
interest' without paying adequatemarket price. The ousted are always those people
for whose interests nobody cares. The pet argument is that, displacement and
human sacrifices are always unavoidable in economic development.
The mad rush to cities, i.e. the menacing pace of urbanization, the booming of
cities and towns, has created mounting problems of sewage disposal, environmental
sanitation, scarcity of space, paucity of safe drinking water, congestion on roads,
sproutingof big slums and squatter colonies, large number of motor vehicles causing
deafening noise and immense air pollution, and conversion of agricultural lands
into habitation lands. The crisis of cities is growing each day and the pattern of
urbanization seems frightening.
There are no easy answers to the twin problems of industrialization and urbanization.
These are linked with different models of growth that we have pursued in the past ,
sustainabilityof development.
Though sustainable development means different things to different peo;le9 the widely-
used, accepted, most-frequently quoted international definition of sustainable
development is from the report Our Common Future (also known as the Brundtland
Report): "Sustuinuble development is developmelzt that meets the needs of the
preserlt without compromisi~zgthe ability offuture generations to meet their own
needs. " But, surprisingly, globally we are not even meeting thejust needs of the present
in just manner, let alone considering the needs of future generations.
Sustainabledevelopment focuses on improving the quality of life of all of the Earth's
citizens without increasing the use of natural resources beyond the capacity of the
environment to supply them indefinitely. It requires an understanding that inaction has
consequences and that we must find innovative ways to change institutional structures
and influenceindividualbehaviour. It is about taking actiori, changing policy and practice
at all levels, from the individual to the international.
Sustainable development is not a new idea. Many cultures over the course of human
history have recognized the need for haqnony between the environment, society and
economy. What is new is an articulation of these ideas in the context of a global, industrial
and information society.
Progress on developing the concept of sustainable development has been rapid since
the 1980s.In 1992,leaders at the Earth Summit built upon the framework of Brundtland
Report to create agreements and conventions on critical issues such as climate change,
desertification and deforestation. They also drafted a broad action-strategy -Agenda
2 1- as the work-plan for environment and developmentissues for the coming decades.
Throughout the rest of the 1990s, regional and sectoral sustainability plans have been
developed.Awide variety of groups -ranging from businesses to municipal governments
to internationalorganizations such as the World Bank - have adopted the concept and
given it their own particular interpretations. These initiatives have increased our
understanding of what sustainable development means within many differentcontexts.
Unless we start to make real progress towards reconciling these contradictions we face
a future that is less certain and less secure. We need to make a decisive move toward
more sustainable development. Not just because it is the right thing to do, but also
because it is in our own long-term best interests. It offers the best hope for the future
and whether at school, in the home or at work. we all have a part to play. Our small,
every-day actions add up to make a big differe!iue in this regard.
can be converted into opportunity when due consideration is given to its essential
ingredients, some of which are identified here.
Without adequate environmentalprotection, development will be undermined;
and, without developmentenvironmentalprotection will fail. Economic growth
need not be an enemy of environment and the best policies for environmental
protection will help, not hurt, economic development.
Alleviatingpoverty is both a moral imperative and a requisite for environmental
sustainability, and there exist substantial synergies between alleviating poverty
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and protecting environment.
Without population control sustainable development is neither possible nor
feasible, however great may be the efforts.
Sustainable development is equitabledevelopment; the development that does
not bypass the poor and does not deceive the disadvantaged.
Attending to the problems created by accelerated pace of industrialization
and urbanization is very essential for sustainabledevelopment.
1.7 REFERENCES
Gale, Robert J. P. 1991. Environment and Development:Attitudinal Impediments to
Policy Integration, Environmental Conservation, Vo1.18, No.3.
Hasna Vancock, A. M. 2007. Dimensions of sustainability.Journal of Engineering
for Sustainable Development: Energy, Environment, and Health, 2(1): 47-57.
Herman Daly. (Ed). 1973. Toward a Steady-State Economy. San Francisco, CA:
Freeman.
Herman Daly, and Cobb, J. 1989.For the Common Good: Redirecting the Economy
Toward Community, the Environment and a Sustainable Future. Boston: Beacon
Press.
Joan Veon. 2004. Sustainable Development, Agenda 2 I and Prince Charles.August
13,2004 NewsWithViews.com
Maria SophiaAguirre. 2002. Sustainable Development: Why the Focus on Population,
International Journal of Social Economics, 29: 12.