ABSTRACT

This concise and informative text provides a critical history of the concept of sustainability and the various institutional measures taken to promote, implement and enforce sustainable development, proposing new organizational solutions to deal with the crisis of sustainability.

Crisis of Global Sustainability provides for the first time a compact insider description of the evolution and impact of the Club of Rome, a global think tank that produced a groundbreaking 1972 study "The Limits to Growth" which highlighted the dangers of unrestrained economic growth and possible collapse of global economy during the first decades of the 21st century. With recent research confirming the validity of these concerns, Kanninen asks whether our overarching concept of thinking on world development today should continue to be "global sustainability", which implies that we still have enough time to make adjustments in our future policies and action. Or should the main paradigm of our thinking shift to "global survivability", a concept that stresses the absolute necessity of immediate and drastic change both in institutions and policies?

Many environmentalists, green politicians and think tanks are speaking today more loudly than ever about the necessity for a major policy, institutional and paradigm change and this work is essential reading for students and scholars alike.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

chapter |22 pages

The Birth and Evolution of the Club of Rome

Early Identification of a Global Crisis

chapter |17 pages

A New Way of Thinking

The MIT Study The Limits to Growth

chapter |23 pages

Intergovernmental Action 1972–2012

From Stockholm to Rio Plus 20

chapter |23 pages

Planetary Boundaries

Doomsday Prophecies or Scientific Projections?

chapter |9 pages

A Crisis of Institutions

How to Manage Our Interconnected Future

chapter |13 pages

Overcoming the Crisis of Mind and Action

Creating New Institutions and Strategies for a Global Emergency

chapter |16 pages

The Future

Thinking Big about Global Institutions and World Governance

chapter |3 pages

Epilogue

What should be Done?