State of the World 2014
calls for bottom-up pressure and greater
government accountability
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Citizens who expect their governments to lead on
sustainability have been badly disappointed in recent years. From largely
ineffectual international climate conferences to the failure to pass
meaningful U.S. climate legislation, governments' progress has often been
lackluster. Leadership has come from the bottom up rather than the top down.
Action on climate change, species loss, inequity, and other crises is being
driven by citizens', women's, and grassroots movements around the world,
often in opposition to the agendas pursued by governments and big
corporations.
State
of the World 2014, which marks the
Worldwatch Institute's 40th anniversary, examines what Governing for
Sustainability really means. Contributing authorshighlight the
responsibility of political and economic actors to achieve sustainability,
emphasizing the strength of citizens to make significant sustainability
changes and showing why effective governance systems need to be inclusive and
participatory, allowing members to have a voice in the collective decision
making.
"Governments
today cannot consistently control themselves because they are decimated by a
plague of corruption that devours the public interest in virtually every
political system," says David Orr, Paul Sears Distinguished Professor of
Environmental Studies and Politics at Oberlin College and State of the
World 2014 contributing author. "Effective government, in its
various forms, will require an alert, informed, ecologically literate,
thoughtful, and empathic citizenry."
In this
edition, contributing authors examine the potential for improving governance
by analyzing a variety of trends, such as local and regional climate
initiatives, energy democracy, and corporate responsibility. They argue that
sustainability depends on action in both the economic and political spheres.
Financial industries need to serve as public stewards again. Unions can help
ensure that the transition to sustainability is socially just. Most
importantly, citizens must take responsibility and empower themselves.
"Ultimately,
it seems to us, all governance begins with individuals in communities. Humans
are no more isolated actors in politics than they are the independent
molecules of mainstream economic theory," says State of the World
2014 co-director Tom Prugh.
"Pressure
to improve governance, at every level, can come only from awakened
individuals, acting together, dedicated to making their communities
sustainable places," adds State of the World 2014
co-director Michael Renner. "From there, it may be possible to build
communities in a way that affords every person on Earth a safe and fulfilling
place to live, and offers future generations the same prospect."
State of the World 2014's findings are being disseminated to a wide range of
stakeholders, including government ministries, community networks, business
leaders, and the nongovernmental environmental and development communities.
For more information on the project, visit
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