Sustainability in Engineering. Systems. ESD.83 Discussion. Lecture 12

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Transcription:

Systems Sustainability in Engineering ESD.83 Discussion Lecture 12 1

Outline Outline Preliminary comments Hardin reading Biography and Major Works Tragedy of the Commons Banister Reading Biography and Major Works The Sustainable Mobility Paradigm Discussion 2 2

What is Sustainability? Sustainability? Table 1: Principles of Sustainable Transportation removed due to copyright restrictions. Original image can be viewed here (page 7): http://esd.mit.edu/symposium/pdfs/monograph/sustainability.pdf 3 3

Hardin, The Tragedy of the Commons (1968) 4 4

Garrett Hardin (1915-2003) 2003) Degrees: B.S., Zoology, 1936, U. Chicago Ph. D., Microbiology, 1941, Stanford Major focus of his career: human overpopulation One of the first members of the Society for General Systems Research (now the International Society for the Systems Sciences, isss.org) 5 5

Hardin s Major Works On Ethiopia: Living on a Lifeboat, BioScience magazine, 1974 Summation of his works: Living within Limits, 1993. 1993. Natural sciences: grounded in limits Social sciences: things without limits This is the source of argument Last book: The Ostrich Factor: Our Population Myopia, 1999 Argues for coercive constraints on unqualified reproductive rights 6 6

The Tragedy of the Commons (1968) Premise: 1. There exists a class of problems without a purely technical solution. 2. One of these is the problem of overpopulation. Problem: 1. 2. The Earth has finite physical space and resources. Individuals, left to their own devices, over-consume limited, shared resources. Solution: There should be some form of mutual coercion to to force individuals to take the actions that are beneficial for the aggregate (population control). 7 7

Courtesy of Tim De Chant, Per Square Mile (persquaremile.com). Used with permission. http://persquaremile.com/2011/01/18/if-the-worlds-population-lived-in-one-city/ 8 8

Banister, The Sustainable Mobility Paradi gm 9 9

David Banister, Biography Director of the Transport Studies Unit at Oxford Degrees: B.A., Geography, Univ. of Nottingham, 1971 Ph. D., Univ. of Leeds, 1975 This paper won the Transport Policy Prize for this paper, published in 2008 at the 12 th World Conference on Transport Research 10 10

The Sustainable Mobility Paradigm Premise: Questions two common principles of transport planning. What are the necessary conditions for change? Problem: This is not a technical problem the methods work. How do we effectively promote public acceptability of sustainable transport measures? Solution Seven different methods (next slide) 11 11

Generating Public Acceptance 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Provide the right information Include the public when discussing policy Provide the right packaging Sell the benefits Implement radical changes slowly 6. Work holistically 7. Policies must be adaptive to the unknown n future 12 12

Discussion 13 13

Authority and Information Moral vs. Political Authority There is a need to inform and educate the public concerning their actions. As we know, people are irrational, biased, and do not consider all information. Questions: 1. Attacking Hardin s position is this truly a problem with no technical solution? Is there such a thing as net-zero existence? Now add one more person 2. Is this a problem of information? Is educating the population the solution? What about the people that just don t care, ever? 3. What about the scientist who cried wolf? Is this a role that the scientific community should play? 4. In a response, Crowe described some of these issues as value problems and that the fragmentation of societies into tribes was destroying common values. Do you think that Banister s ideas can overcome this? 14 14

Individuals, Morality, and Decision-making making At the root of each lies the individual human being. Both Banister and Hardin believed that legal architecture, as supported by the majority, should coerce the unruly public. Questions: 5. A question of scale and scope: if this is truly a moral consideration that t we must do this for the sake of mankind should be wait for the majority? Quis custodies ipsos custodes? 6. Can we afford the long view? What if our policies are solely to affect social and moral change? 7. Can we make moral judgments about future conditions of which we are not certain? (see Ehrlich, The Population Bomb in this same year) 8. Can we make systems robust to choice? What would this l look like? 15 15

Global thinking Going back to Selin: what to do about the third world? Questions: 9. Thresholds: what is the critical mass? In Mort Webster s work, how do we account for the fact that X% of nations won t agree to the standards? 10. Enforcement: if we enforce rules on the Third World that t we did not follow at a similar point in our history, how do we answer critics? (see: China) 11. Imperialism: Is it our responsibility s to do so for their own good? Are we then not politically and scientifically imperialist, and can you imagine the pushback that would occur? 16 16

Questions? 17 17

Revisiting Tragedy (Crowe, 1969) 1969) Beryl Crowe wrote a response to Tragedy in 1969 (published in Science). Points out the two cultures of natural and social sciences and references Snow. Both sciences can thus avoid responsibility and protect their respective myths of competence and relevance, while they avoid having to face the awful possibility that each has independently isolated the same subset of problems and given them different names Eroding the myths of Common Values the Monopoly of Coercive Force Force Administrators of the Commons 18 18

Revisiting Tragedy, again (Oostrom, 1999) 1999) Points out the power of information: public goods games, etc. People are generally good at self-organizing, once they recognize the need Four types of people: p 1. 2. 3. 4. those who always behave in a narrow, self-interested manner (free-riders) those who are unwilling to cooperate with others unless assured that they will not be exploited by freeriders; those who are willing to initiate reciprocal cooperation in the hopes that others will return their trust perhaps a few genuine altruists who always try to achieve higher returns for a group. The example of Nepalese Farming 19 19

Publications and Research Foci Foci: 1. Policy Scenario Building 2. Reducing the Need to Travel 3. Climate Change, Energy, and Environmental Modeling 4. Transport Investment and Economic Development 5. Rural Transport and Employment Publications: 2010, Integrated Transport: from policy to practice 2007, Land Use and Transport Planning European Perspectives on Integrated Policies 2005, Unsustainable Transport: city transport in the 21 st Century 20 20

Mutual Coercion Mutual Coercion The morality of an act is a function of the state of the system at the time it is performed. legislating temperance. Conscience is self-eliminating. (Idiocracy, anyone?) Mutual coercion mutually agreed upon. Coercion via social arrangements Compares his desired course to taxes and parking meters Very fatalist view; feels that coercion and somewhat extreme measures are needed. Why not incorporate a rewards structure? 21 21

What is Sustainability? Sustainability? Merriam-Webster: 1. a. of, relating to, or being a method of harvesting or using a resource so that the resource is not depleted or permanently damaged; sustainable techniques or sustainable agriculture b. of or relating to a lifestyle involving the use of sustainable methods; sustainable society 22 22

MIT OpenCourseWare http://ocw.mit.edu ESD.83 Doctoral Seminar in Engineering Systems Fall 2011 For information about citing these materials or our Terms of Use, visit: http://ocw.mit.edu/terms. 23