Rio+20: where it should lead

Thu, Jun 28, 2012

Global Posts, News

Rio+20: where it should lead

The report is available as a free download

 The Rio+20 Earth Summit, coming during a prolonged global economic downturn, served as a rare opportunity to reconnect with our hopes for the world. It initialises a chance to think beyond the acute phase of the financial crisis to consider how we want to embed sustainable development and stability into the decision making of governments, businesses, and civil society.

The RSPB (BirdLife in the UK) and Green Alliance have asked leaders from politics, business, NGOs, economics, science and the youth movement, including the UK Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg who was head of the UK delegation at the summit, to give their views in a collection of essays, Rio+20: where it should lead.


Although progress has been made since 1992, sustainable development has not gained the traction those at the original summit would have hoped. The authors give opinions about why this is, the lessons we have learned and where we go next. Taken together they make a powerful case for sustainable development being at the centre of any new settlement that emerges from the current economic crisis. 

The full list of essays is as follows –

What’s changed since Rio 92? – Tony Juniper, sustainability and environment adviser

Three UK priorities – Rt Hon Nick Clegg MP, deputy prime minister

New economics for a new world – Ian Johnson, The Club of Rome

The climate challenge – Sir Brian Hoskins and Alistair McVicar, Grantham Institute for Climate Change

A time for action – Paul Polman, Unilever

Planetary and social boundaries: a compass for the voyage ahead? – Barbara Stocking, Oxfam

An equitable green economy: a southern perspective on a global challenge – Tara Rao, FairGreenSolutions

From Rio+20 to Rio+40: what needs to happen in the next 20 years – Matt Williams, Isobel Tarr and Sarah Arnold, UKYCC

 

This post was written by:

- who has written 39 posts on BirdLife Community.

BirdLife comprises more than 100 conservation organisations working together to promote sustainable living as a means to conserve biodiversity. The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds is the BirdLife Partner in The United Kingdom.

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One Response to “Rio+20: where it should lead”

  1. majid Says:

    نحن شاهدنا ازدیاد سکان هازجة القصب البصریهbasra reed warbler فی اهوار المجاوره مع العراق فی اهوار الحویزه
    و ایضاً شاهدنا سکانٌ من iraq babbler فی هذه الاهوار
    نحن التقطنا صورٌ و افلام ذا جوده عالیه منهم.

    Reply


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