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PRINCIPLES OF SUSTAINABLE LIVELIHOODS
A feature of the People-Centered Development Forum
North American Regional Consultation on Sustainable Livelihoods
January 13-15, 1995
In an era of global social crisis characterized by increasing unemployment, jobless growth and ecological destruction, we need a broader vision of how people can meet their needs in a sustainable way. Attempting to solve the world's employment crisis using conventional job creation through sustained economic growth cannot work.
The concept of livelihood - defined as "a means of living or of supporting life and meeting individual and community needs" - provides new perspectives on developing healthy sustainable societies that provide people with secure and satisfying livelihoods. Sustainable livelihoods are based on a web of functional interrelationships in which every member of the system is needed and participates. Sustainable livelihoods provide meaningful work that fulfills the social, economic, cultural and spiritual needs of all members of a community--human, non-human, present and future--and safeguards cultural and biological diversity. The following is not an exhaustive listing of the components of sustainable livelihoods but an attempt to identify the key determinants.
Sustainable Livelihoods:
- Promote equity between and among generations, races, genders, and ethnic groups; in the access to and distribution of wealth and resources; in the sharing of productive and reproductive roles; and the transfer of knowledge and skills.
- Nurture a sense of place and connection to the local community, and adapt to and restore regional ecosystems.
- Stimulate local investment in the community and help to retain capital within the local economy.
- Base production on renewable energy and on regenerating local resource endowments while reducing intensity of energy use, eliminating over-consumption of local and global resources and assuring no net loss of biodiversity.
- Utilize appropriate technology that is ecologically fitting, socially just and humane, and that enhances rather than displaces community knowledge and skills.
- Reduce as much as possible travel to workplace and the distance between producers and users.
- Generate social as well as economic returns, and value non-monetized as well as paid work.
- Provide secure access to opportunity and meaningful activity in community life.
These principles encompass a holistic set of values that are non-exploitative, promote participation in decision-making, emphasize the quality and creative nature of work, place needs over wants and foster healthy, mutually beneficial relationships among people and between people and their environment (especially domesticated animals). It is hoped that these principles and their underlying values can stimulate further discussion.
Public Policy Sustainable livelihoods are supported by political, economic and social policies that enable mutually beneficial relationships to develop among people and the whole community of life. Economic globalization, on the other hand, primarily advances supranational corporate interests, and is often inimical to human and environmental well-being. Current policies externalize social and environmental costs, destroy ecosystems, pit localities into competition with one another, and lower standards. Current measures ignore many of the crucial social functions on which all economies depend, in particular women's tremendous productive and reproductive roles. Policies are now geared toward economic growth based on over-consumption by the few while the needs of the many go unmet. Instead, socio-economic security and equity, meeting the needs of all and promoting authentic human development should be the overall goals of policy formulation.
Policy formulation should begin with visioning processes that involve all sectors of community, as decisions made by all stakeholders better ensure equity, human rights and effective implementation. Central to a broad policy framework that supports sustainable livelihoods are:
- an investment in people and the environment as well as in physical capital;
- explicit recognition that women's empowerment is central to the achievement of broad-
- based socio-economic goals;
- broad public participation in the establishment of research priorities and the assessment and selection of technologies consistent with needs of sustainable communities; and
- new resource accounting and institutional mechanisms for resource allocation and debt management and relief.
Political Priorities
Sustainable livelihoods require public participation and involvement in policy making at all levels to keep government agencies and officials responsive and accountable for their decisions and actions. Political reforms should both limit and make transparent the influence of corporate lobbies and campaign contributions. Corporations should be held accountable to a code of conduct based on principles of social and environmental responsibility. Multilateral trade agreements, treaties, and conventions should not supersede local, state, and national sovereignty. Subsidiarity should be an organizing principle of government, supporting the local rootedness of livelihoods.
Economic Priorities
To promote sustainable livelihoods, power must be rooted in the localized economies. Economic policy should be based on full-cost accounting which incorporates social and environmental costs and benefits. Trade agreements and tax policies should favor local needs over export marketing, encourage sustainable production and consumption, and support renewable resource technologies. Such policies will support worker rights, debt relief, and local control over resources within a framework of broader responsibility to share and protect resources.
Socio-Cultural Aspects
Socio-cultural policies should support principles of sustainable livelihoods in education, health, arts and the media, drawing on the wealth of cultural diversity and encouraging exchange of indigenous and modern knowledge, wisdom and skills. Special attention must be given to transforming structures that perpetuate inequity, injustice and intolerance, including those that perpetuate inequality and injustice toward women.
Consultation Sponsors: Society for International Development (SID), Rome; International Development Conference (IDC), Washington, DC.; Center for Respect of Life and Environment (CRLE), A Division of the Humane Society of the United States, Washington, DC; The People - Centered Development Forum (PCDForum), New York
Participating Organizations: Canada: Canadian Council for International Cooperation (CCIC); Canadian Research Institute for the Advancement of Women; Oxfam/Canada. Caribbean: Development Alternatives with Women for a New Era (DAWN). Mexico: Mexican Action Network on Free Trade; Promocion de Desarollo Popular. United States: American Forum for Global Education; Citizens Network for Sustainable Development; Lummi Tribe Treaty Protection Task Force; The Synergos Institute; Why Magazine/World Hunger Year; Women, Food and Agriculture Working Group; World Sustainable Agriculture Association (WSAA)
For Information:
Tom Rogers, Center for Respect of Life and Environment, 2100 L Street, NW, Washington, DC 20037, U.S.A.. Tel: (1-202) 778-6137; Fax: (1-202) 778-6133
Tina Liamzon, Society for International Development, Palazzo Civilta del Lavoro, 00144, Rome, Italy. Tel: (396) 592-5506; Fax: (396) 591-9836.
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- 1990
- 1991
- NGOs AND THE UN CONFERENCE ON ENVIRONMENT AND DEVELOPMENT
- LEADERSHIP FOR TRANSFORMATION: LESSONS FROM THE GULF WAR
- DEVELOPMENT COOPERATION: SOME BASIC ISSUES
- THE SUSTAINABLE PROJECT: A CONTRADICTION
- ELIMINATING UNDERDEVELOPMENT AT ITS SOURCE
- UNCED: UNASKED QUESTIONS
- LATIN AMERICA: FREE TRADE IS NOT THE ANSWER
- EAST AND SOUTH: CONVERGENT INTERESTS
- THE OTHER ECONOMIC SUMMIT: A PEOPLE'S AGENDA
- THE NEW ECONOMICS MOVEMENT
- GREEN GROWTH: A FALSE SOLUTION
- NGOS AND THE ELECTORAL PROCESS: PHILIPPINE PERSPECTIVES
- BEWARE THE SLOSHING OF LOOSE CAPITAL
- ECOLOGICAL STABILITY, SOCIAL JUSTICE AND FOREIGN ASSISTANCE
- COMMUNITY-CENTERED CAPITALISM: AN NGO ALTERNATIVE
- THE HOPE AND CHALLENGE OF PEOPLE'S FORUM 1991
- ECONOMIC ORTHODOXY AND THE POOR: THE CASE OF AUSTRALIAN AID
- ENVIRONMENT AND INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT: THE ASIAN REALITY
- SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT: Reflections on Japan's Role
- THE IDEOLOGICAL ROOTS OF CRISIS IN AN ARCHIPELAGIC COUNTRY
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- 1992
- BEYOND THE CHATTER OF MONKEYS: GETTING TO ENVIRONMENTAL BASICS
- EDUCATION FOR GLOBAL CHANGE: A NEW AGENDA FOR DEVELOPMENT EDUCATORS
- THE UNISON SNORING OF SUPINE ECONOMISTS IN DEEP DOGMATIC SLUMBER
- TO IMPROVE HUMAN WELFARE, POISON THE POOR: THE LOGIC OF A FREE MARKET ECONOMIST
- SOUTH AFRICAN DEVELOPMENT AND THE THREAT OF FOREIGN AID
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- HUMAN RIGHTS, SOCIAL JUSTICE, ECOLOGY AND EXPORT ORIENTED INDUSTRIALIZATION
- BUILDING A SOCIAL ENTERPRISE ECONOMY
- DETOXIFYING THE GREEN REVOLUTION
- GLOBAL CITIZEN'S DIPLOMACY: QUEST FOR A SUSTAINABLE FUTURE
- REFLECTIONS ON UNCED: A NEW BEGINNING
- HAVING MORE BY CONSUMING LESS
- RESULTS OF RIO: AN EMERGING SOCIAL MOVEMENT
- GREEN DOLLARS MISS THE POINT
- THE EARTH SUMMIT: COMPETING VISIONS OF THE NEW WORLD ORDER
- NEED MONEY FOR YOUR PROJECT? THREE PROVEN RULES
- NGOs AND THE UNCED FOLLOW-UP PROCESS: CONTINUING NEED FOR INDEPENDENT ACTION
- RETHINKING U.S. INTERNATIONAL ASSISTANCE AS IF PEOPLE AND ENVIRONMENT MATTER
- UNDP's HUMAN DEVELOPMENT REPORT: OFFICIAL DEVELOPMENT DOUBLE SPEAK
- DEVELOPMENT HERESY AND THE ECOLOGICAL REVOLUTION
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- SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT: PROSPERITY WITHOUT GROWTH
- NGOs & the World Bank: An Open Letter
- THE PEOPLES' EARTH DECLARATION: A Proactive Agenda for the Future
- SOUTHEAST ASIA CONTRIBUTION TO THE EARTH CHARTER
- 1993
- FREE TRADE AND THE IMAGINARY WORLDS OF ECONOMIC MODELERS
- THE GREENING OF GLOBAL REACH
- WE ARE AFRICANS
- NAFTA: A BAD AGREEMENT
- SUSTAINABILITY REQUIRES NEW ECONOMIC CONCEPTS
- ECOLOGICAL RECOVERY AND THE FEMININE PRINCIPLE
- THE BACKWARD ONES
- Economic Restructuring Through Community and Employee Ownership
- NORTHERN LIFESTYLES: WHAT IS EQUITABLE & SUSTAINABLE?
- From Urban Sprawl to Sustainable Human Communities
- Creating a Community Economy
- Getting Prices Right: Only a Partial Answer
- The Global Economy A Bad Deal for Women
- Sustainability: Principles Behind the Vision
- GRASSROOTS ENVIRONMENTALISTS: THE POOR FIGHT BACK
- BEYOND GROWTH TO MATURITY
- WHY NOT FAIR TRADE AGREEMENTS?
- THE PSYCHOLOGICAL ROAD TO “DEVELOPMENT”
- CORPORATE AGRIBUSINESS: MONOPOLIZING SUSTENANCE
- FROM ECONOMIC GROWTH TO QUALITY OF LIFE
- CITIES, TRADE AND ECOLOGICAL DEFICITS
- POWER, POVERTY, ECONOMIC INTEGRATION & BRETTON WOODS
- TOWARD A PEOPLE'S PACIFIC
- THE COMPASSIONATE AND THRIFTY UNIVERSE
- FREE TRADE AND THE AMERICAN DREAM
- Economy, Ecology & Spirituality
- Small Farmers & Globalization
- What If......?
- Economic Colonialism
- Development and the Youth Culture
- 1994
- Making Commerce Sustainable
- Good Protectionism
- A People's Agenda
- Serious about Sustainability
- Development for People
- Let's Develop Human Societies
- Family Friend Cities
- Anyone Home at WB?
- Rethinking Global Governance
- Overlooked Case of Job Protection
- The GATT and Democracy
- PCD Principles
- Dark Victory of the New World Order
- Saying No to Development
- Sustainable Livelihoods & the Social Crisis
- Sustainable Development: PCD Concensus
- Sustainable Development: Contrasting Views
- Int. Convention on Debt
- The Case Against Globalization
- 1995
- THIRD WORLD WOMEN CHALLENGE THE GIVEN
- SOCIAL CAPITAL
- DEVELOPMENT DISPLACEMENT: WHOSE NATION IS IT?
- MULTILATERAL DEVELOPMENT BANKS: WHO'S THE REAL BOSS?
- BUILDING CITIZENS' AGENDAS
- A WOMEN'S DEVELOPMENT AGENDA FOR THE 21ST CENTURY
- HABITAT II: PREPARING FOR THE 21ST CENTURY
- HELP THE POOR, SAVE THE ENVIRONMENT: ELIMINATE DEBT AND END FOREIGN AID
- ENVIRONMENTAL LENDING MAY BE HARMFUL TO THE ENVIRONMENT
- SUSTAINABILITY AND THE GLOBAL ECONOMY: BEYOND BRETTON WOODS
- THE CITIZENS' AGENDA FOR CANADA
- PRINCIPLES OF SUSTAINABLE LIVELIHOODS
- THE COPENHAGEN ALTERNATIVE DECLARATION
- OUR CITIES, OUR HOMES
- WHAT'S AHEAD FOR THE WORLD BANK? THE BIG PICTURE
- A NOT SO RADICAL AGENDA FOR A SUSTAINABLE GLOBAL FUTURE
- PROPERTY RIGHTS VERSUS LIVING RIGHTS: DEFINING ISSUES FOR HABITAT II
- 1996
- WINNING IN THE GLOBAL ECONOMY: CHILE'S DARK VICTORY
- ECONOMICS WITHOUT ETHICS: THE CRISIS OF SPIRITUALITY
- FOOD SECURITY FOR PEOPLE
- UNDERSTANDING MONEY
- THERE'S A DANGEROUS FLAW IN “GLOBAL ECONOMY” CONCEPT
- GLOBALIZATION AND THE DISMANTLING OF CANADIAN DEMOCRACY, VALUES AND SOCIETY
- ECO-HABITATS: FULFILLING A DREAM FOR HUMANITY
- LIMITS TO THE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY OF BUSINESS
- Profile of MARILYN MEHLMANN
- Profile of SARA LARRAIN R.
- Profile of VANDANA SHIVA
- 1997
- Political and Spiritual Awakening
- Rights of Money vs Persons
- Solutions Via Global Dialogue
- Money as a Social Disease
- Business Responsibility
- UN & the Corporate Agenda
- Profile of Nicanor "Nicky" Perlas
- Civil Society & Regional Security
- India's Popular Movements
- Learning Locally to Act Globally
- Why the Fuss About Stockholders?
- UN Partnerships
- Let's Try a Market Economy
- The UN Relationship to TNCs
