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Recently, department member Carolyn Fischer, in cooperation with other researchers, had their article on ‘Policy design for the Anthropocene’ published in Nature Sustainability, a special edition of Nature. The authors investigate the complexities of the complexities of designing policies that can keep Earth within the biophysical limits favourable to human life.

Abstract: Today, more than ever, ‘Spaceship Earth’ is an apt metaphor as we chart the boundaries for a safe planet1. Social scientists both analyse why society courts disaster by approaching or even overstepping these boundaries and try to design suitable policies to avoid these perils. Because the threats of transgressing planetary boundaries are global, long-run, uncertain and interconnected, they must be analysed together to avoid conflicts and take advantage of synergies. To obtain policies that are effective at both international and local levels requires careful analysis of the underlying mechanisms across scientific disciplines and approaches, and must take politics into account. In this perspective, we examine the complexities of designing policies that can keep Earth within the biophysical limits favourable to human life.

Thomas Sterner, Edward Barbier, Ian Bateman, Ottmar Edenhofer, Inge van den Bijgaart, Anne-Sophie Crépin, Ottmar Edenhofer, Carolyn Fischer, Wolfgang Habla, John Hassler, Olof Johansson-Stenman, Andreas Lange, Stephen Polasky, Johan Rockström, Henrik G. Smith, Will Steffen, Gernot Wagner, James Wilen, Francisco Alpízar, Christian Azar, Donna Carless, Carlos Chávez, Jessica Coria, Gustav Engström, Sverker C. Jagers, Gunnar Kohlin, Åsa Lofgren, Håkan Pleijel, and Amanda Robinson (2019). Policy design for the Anthropocene. Nature Sustainability 2: 14-21.

 

March 2019