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Resources to support Chapter 1
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Sharing Nature's Interest Nicky Chambers * Craig Simmons * Mathis Wackernagel |
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ecologicalfootprint.com home page
Chapter 1: Links & Resources Why Bigger Isn't Better: The Genuine Progress Indicator - 1999 Update http://www.rprogress.org/pubs/pdf/gpi1999.pdf mail the authors with your own suggested useful links for Chapter 1
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Chapter 1: Summary
Our understanding of what constitutes real progress is changing. In this
chapter we have explored the meaning of sustainability and identified its Using the IPAT formulation we have also introduced the role that population, lifestyle (or affluence), technology and consumption play in the measurement of environmental impact. The authors have presented their preferred definition of sustainability which can be summarized as ‘delivering quality of life for all within the means of nature’. This, and similar, definitions neatly capture the tension between these two key sustainability goals. Defining in detail what constitutes a sufficient quality of life, and how this might be measured, is outside the scope of this book though the GPI, a candidate indicator, has been presented. What we are primarily concerned with in this book is how we might quantify our use of nature, and compare this with the carrying capacity of our ecosystems, so that we can assess environmental sustainability.
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