Transformative Research for a Just World and a Habitable Planet
Societies are confronted with the urgent task of achieving a ‘good life’ for over 9 billion people in 2050 while safeguarding planetary boundaries. Humanity has, however, been surpassing critical planetary processes at a pace far exceeding its efforts to meet the fundamental needs of the population. Furthermore, the pursuit of a ‘good life’ in the wealthiest regions has impeded the prospects for others, and for future generations and nature, to achieve the same.
A good life requires, as a minimum, the fulfillment of basic needs such as clean air and water, adequate nutrition, housing, mobility, healthcare, education and social participation. While the ways these can be fulfilled are highly dependent on socio-cultural contexts, basic needs are universal. Creating the conditions for a good life for all and for improving our planet’s habitability means providing everyone with their basic needs and protecting our climate and ecosystems. Technological change is part of the response. However, technical solutions continue to neglect the root issues fostering environmental destruction. They fall short in challenging the power dynamics and inequalities embedded within the broader social, cultural, and political dimensions inherent in sustainability and habitability concerns. Our growth-dependent global economy continues as status-quo. The necessary degrowth in global production and consumption to safeguard our planet’s boundaries should go hand in hand with social justice.
Achieving these multiple goals requires transformations at all levels. For the research community, contributing to these transformations takes many forms that will be at the core of the 2024 Pathways Autumn School: reassessing our modes of social, economic and institutional organization and understanding why they continue to deepen the environmental crisis and to impede our capacity for action; redefining how we relate to and live within nature; learning from, designing and experimenting with other modes of inhabiting the planet and fulfilling basic needs; exploring new ways of influencing decision making and engaging with society beyond reiterating evidence-based warnings; contributing to amplify the impact of potentially transformative options.
Important Information
- Where? Centre Paul-Langevin, 24 rue du Coin, 73500 Aussois, France
- When? 25-29 November 2024
- Participants: 29 early career researchers and 16 members of the organising committee and speakers. Total of 52 participants
- Programme? Click here
Steering Committee
- Cristina O’Callaghan Gordo, Open University of Catalonia, Barcelona Institute for Global Health
- Guntra Aistara, Central European University
- Helmut Haberl, Institute of Social Ecology, BOKU Vienna, Global Land Programme
- Nathalie Blanc, CNRS, Centre des Politiques de la Terre, Université Paris Cité
- Nigel Yoccoz, University of Tromsø, Global Mountain Biodiversity Assessment Programme
- Pavel Kambersky, CNRS, Future Earth
- Sandrine Paillard, CNRS, Future Earth
- Shonali Pachauri, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis
- Victoria Reyes-García, Institute of Environmental Science and Technology, Autonomous University of Barcelona
- Wolfgang Cramer, CNRS, French National Committee for Future Earth
Speakers
- Bruno Locatelli, CIRAD, University of Montpellier
- Cristina O'Callaghan Gordo, Open University of Catalonia, Barcelona Institute for Global Health
- Hermann Ott, University of Sustainable Development Eberswalde
- Ilona Otto, University of Graz
- Nigel Yoccoz, University of Tromsø, Global Mountain Biodiversity Assessment Programme
- Noemi Gonda, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
- Shonali Pachauri, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis
- Vally Koubi, ETH Zurich, University of Bern
- Victoria Reyes-García, Institute of Environmental Science and Technology, Autonomous University of Barcelona
- Nils Ferrand, INRAE
Programme
Click on the picture for our detailed programme!