18 Facts About Social sustainability

1.

Specific definitions of Social sustainability are difficult to agree on and therefore vary in the literature and over time.

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2.

Some example steps humanity can take to transition to environmental Social sustainability include: maintaining nature's ecosystem services, reducing food waste, promoting dietary shifts towards plant-based foods, further reducing fertility rates and thus population growth, promoting new green technologies and adopting renewable energy sources while phasing out subsidies to energy production through fossil fuels.

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3.

In everyday usage of the term, "Social sustainability" is often focused mostly on the environmental aspects, as can be seen in publications by the United Nations Environment Programme .

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4.

Social sustainability used this term in the sense of a long-term responsible use of a natural resource in 1713 in his work Silvicultura oeconomica.

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5.

One distinction that can be made is that Social sustainability is a general concept, whereas sustainable development is a policy.

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6.

Three different areas of sustainability are normally distinguished: the environmental, the social, and the economic.

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7.

Nevertheless, the distinction itself is rarely questioned, and the "three dimension" conception of Social sustainability is a dominant interpretation within the literature.

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8.

In pursuing the protection of ecological integrity, Social sustainability reflects the most basic concern of human existence, namely the desire to live, survive and reproduce.

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9.

Nested ellipses diagram of the three dimensions of Social sustainability gives the environmental dimension a special status: it implies a situation where society is embedded in the environment, and economic conditions are embedded in society.

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10.

Public discussion of the environmental dimension of Social sustainability often revolves around prevailing issues of the time.

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11.

Social dimension of sustainability is the least defined and least understood dimension of sustainability.

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12.

Social sustainability is thought to lead to liveable communities which would be "equitable, diverse, connected and democratic and provide a good quality of life".

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13.

Balance between the environmental, social, and economic dimensions of sustainability is difficult to achieve: environmental and social costs are not generally paid by the entity that creates them, and are not expressed in the market price.

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14.

Political goal of Social sustainability, as formulated in the "2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development", is very comprehensive and ambitious.

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15.

Some Social sustainability barriers have their origins in nature and its complexity .

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16.

Some example steps humanity can take in three areas to transition to Social sustainability include : In the area of reduced consumption: reducing food waste, promoting dietary shifts towards mostly plant-based foods.

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17.

Social sustainability showed that over time, communities using natural resources such as pastures, fishing waters, and forests can establish rules for use and maintenance that can lead to both economic and ecological sustainability.

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18.

Supply chain Social sustainability refers to companies' efforts to consider the environmental and human impact of their products' journey through the supply chain, from raw materials sourcing to production, storage, delivery and every transportation link in between.

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