Students explore the concept of ecological footprints as a measure of human demand on natural systems, and evaluate the science and politics of sustainability.
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Teach: ecological footprint, biocapacity, overshoot, sustainability, carbon footprint, yield, systemic. The distinction between individual and systemic drivers of unsustainability is the key analytical challenge.
Focus on the concept of the ecological footprint and the key individual factors before introducing political and equity dimensions.
Can students explain what an ecological footprint measures and why the global total is unsustainable? Can they identify two factors that most significantly affect an individual's footprint?
The ecological footprint questionnaire can be completed verbally without printed materials. The discussion requires no resources.
Students often think recycling and turning off lights are the most significant actions an individual can take. Diet (especially meat reduction) and aviation have far larger impacts. Evidence-based thinking about relative impact is the key skill.
Ecological footprint analysis connects environmental science to economics, politics, and ethics. It provides a quantitative framework for discussing sustainability that goes beyond vague exhortations to be green.
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