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International Conference - Lille, France (3-5 July 2019)

Envisioning the Economy of the Future, and the Future of Political Economy

Papers > By author > Hall Stephen

Prioritising well-being on a finite planet: A research manifesto
Julia Steinberger  1@  , Elke Pirgmaier  2, 3@  , William Lamb  4@  , Helga Weisz  5@  , Peter-Paul Pichler  5@  , Lina Brand-Correa  6@  , Daniel Bailey  7@  , Stephen Hall  6@  , Doris Fuchs  8@  , Marlyne Sahakian  9@  , Timmons Roberts  10@  
1 : Sustainability Research Institute, University of Leeds  (SRI)  -  Website
School of Earth and Environment, University of Leeds, Leeds, LS2 9JT -  Royaume-Uni
2 : Vienna University of Economics and Business, Institute for the Environment and Regional Development  -  Website
Nordbergstr. 15, UZA4 B4, 1090 Vienna -  Autriche
3 : Sustainable Europe Research Institute  (SERI)  -  Website
Garnisongasse 7/17 1090 Vienna -  Autriche
4 : Mercator Research Institute on Global Commons and Climate Change
5 : Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research
6 : Sustainability Research Institute, University of Leeds
7 : University of Manchester [Manchester]
8 : University of Muenster
9 : University of Geneva [Switzerland]
10 : Brown University

Intertwined social and ecological conflicts and crises deepen, widen and accelerate around the globe. The dominant political response is driven by rising populism, nationalism, neoliberalism and ‘post-truth' cynicism. The core goals of improving human well-being and preserving planetary biophysical capacity are at best forgotten and at worst pitted against each other.

We aim to establish a research network to tackle the giant societal challenge of ‘living well within limits' based on the principles of deep democracy, equitable distribution and environmental justice. Our ultimate goal is to foster dignified life-chances of current and future human and non-human beings, which can only be achieved by remaining within planetary boundaries.

To address this challenge credibly, we must:

(1) Think big. We acknowledge the systemic and structural causes of social ecological problems and lack of ambition to investigate ‘the bigger picture' in academia. We prioritise research into structures, institutions and systemic change over marginal, individualistic, or market-based “solutions” grounded in moribund economic thinking. 

(2) Face power. We acknowledge the role of power in creating the social ecological problems we experience, and in obstructing solutions to them. Power relations can limit the solution space through manifold channels; they shape everyday patterns of production and consumption (often through obscure fiscal commitments, dominance of particular economic sectors in national economies, and institutional lock-in effects), and reproduce socio-economic inequality. Power also directs prevailing discourses and narratives of progress, such as the primacy of economic growth over human well-being. The threat of power is most insidious when invisible or ignored; it must therefore be studied, exposed and resisted.

(3) Offer credible solutions. We bring forward visionary yet realistic alternatives. We acknowledge the capital importance of socio-political, rather than technological change, and seek meaningful entry points towards systemic change grounded in reality. To understand how and when social and environmental change occurs, we investigate historical, cultural, environmental and social contexts. We recognise that the universal satisfaction of human needs requires both lower and upper limits to consumption.

(4) Act and experiment. Because we are entering unchartered territory for our planetary ecosystems and species, we support new forms of audacious research and teaching: collective and radical participatory experimentation, aiming to identify new ways of promoting and provisioning human well-being within the biophysical capacity of the planet. We will expose systemic economic and political barriers to this goal, and mobilise our research to overcome these.

Our research network offers spaces for expanding this type of research by:

  • Fostering spaces for lucid and collective thinking, through public engagement, joint collaborations, meetings and publications, regardless of academic discipline;
  • Promoting research outcomes whose ambition fulfils the criteria listed above, and are directly aimed at tackling the challenge of “prioritising well-being on a finite planet”;
  • Involving governments, academic societies and funding bodies to support and engage in this research, and take its outcomes forward.

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