Global Institute of Sustainability Arizona State University: Perspectives on What Sustainability Is

   
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SUSTAINABILITY LINKS

Here you'll find a list of other sustainability-related organizations, websites, contacts, events, and lectures.

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What Is Sustainability?

"A sustainable society considers the interconnectedness of environmental, economic, and social systems; reconciles the planet's environmental needs with development needs over the long term; and avoids irreversible commitments that constrain future generations."

- Global Institute of Sustainability

"development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs."

- Brundtland Report 1987

"Sustainability is a way to grow and prosper while reducing the stress on the planet."

- Arizona State University President Michael Crow

"Sustainability is the [emerging] doctrine that economic growth and development must take place, and be maintained over time, within the limits set by ecology in the broadest sense - by the interrelations of human beings and their works, the biosphere and the physical and chemical laws that govern it.It follows that environmental protection and economic development are complementary rather than antagonistic processes."

- William D. Rukelshaus, "Toward a Sustainable World" Scientific American, September 1989

"The emergence of 'sustainability science' builds toward an understanding of the human-environment condition with the dual objectives of meeting the needs of society while sustaining the life support systems of the planet."

- A framework for Vulnerability Analysis in Sustainability Science Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, July 8, 2003, Vol.100:3

"If you get right down to it, sustainability is really the study of the interconnectedness of all things."

- Barbara Lither, US Environmental Protection Agency

FROM OUR FACULTY AND STAFF

Sustainability is...

Living in harmony with our social and natural environment, based on a sense of justice and equity.

- Sander van der Leeuw, School of Human Evolution and Social Change


• riding my bike and leaving the
  car at home;
• living in a walkable
  neighborhood;
• not being consumed by
  consumerism;
• buildings that are energy and
  resource efficient in their
  design, construction, and
  operation;
• trying to eat mostly food that
  my great grand-parents would
  recognize.

- Rod Groff, Global Institute of Sustainability


The goal of living in a manner that I can be proud of — making choices that work for me without denying resources to others — now and in the future.

- Brenda Shears, Global Institute of Sustainability