Critiquing the Pursuit of Island Sustainability

| October 9, 2014 | Leave a Comment

Item Link: Access the Resource

Year of Publication: 2014

Publisher: Division of Research, Southern Cross University, Australia

Author(s): Godfrey Baldacchino, Ilan Kelman

Journal: Shima: The International Journal of Research into Island Cultures

Volume: 8:2

Blue and Green, with hardly a colour in between.

ABSTRACT: This article critiques a focus on ‘sustainable development’ which highlights a liveable ‘future’ without paying adequate attention to what, we argue, are more pressing issues for a liveable present. We contend that, while inherently commendable, the thrust of many current initiatives related to sustainable development, especially those associated with climate change, promote an ethos which crowds out other pressing policy pursuits with more immediate relevance – although often also associated with sustainable development – such as health, basic education, poverty reduction, and productive employment and livelihoods. Small Island Developing States (SIDS) are at the forefront of these initiatives, given their prominence in discussions on sustainable development, but especially climate change, alongside the basic challenges that they face in maintaining viable economies. Long-term thinking and planning is needed and welcomed; but we may now have gone too far in the opposite direction in terms of aiming for sustainable development in, and for, a distant future that emphasises climate change, without better balancing of that concern with the pressing needs of the moment.

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