PCDForum Column #58,   Release Date September 1, 1993

Sustainability: Principles Behind the Vision

by Stephen Viederman

Most discussions of sustainable development overlook a simple human reality: the environment is the basis for all life and all production. It is not just another special interest competing for attention. It is the playing field on which all interests compete. This reality puts in perspective the substantial body of data indicating that continued growth in our consumption of environmental resources is inherently unsustainable.

This environmental distress is a direct consequence of the quintupling of the global economy's output since 1950.

Consistently our approach to using environmental resources, i.e., our management of the economy, has failed to recognize that the economic system is an open system in a closed and finite ecosystem. Until recently, the scale of the economic system was sufficiently small compared to the ecosystem that we could easily overlook the unsustainable consequences of our actions. This is no longer the case.

As poet, novelist, essayist, and farmer Wendell Berry has suggested, "The answers to human problems of ecology are to be found in the economy. And answers to the problems of the economy are to be found in human culture and character."

Actualizing the principles of the new vision will require deep psychological changes in individuals, as well as a significant restructuring of society's institutions. We cannot wait for leaders intent on pursuing the unsustainable economic path we currently tread to chose a different one. We must be prepared as citizens to move ahead with creating the new society of our vision, leaving our leaders with the choice either to follow or to step aside.


Steve Viederman is president, Jessie Smith Noyes Foundation, 16 East 34th Street, New York, NY 10016, U.S.A.; and vice president, International Society of Ecological Economics. This column was prepared and distributed by the PCDForum based on his article "Sustainable Development: What Is It and How Do We Get There?" Current History, April 1993.

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