@Article{RanaÁDFGMMPSTTVBP:2020:VoYoEn,
author = "Rana, Sakshi and {\'A}vila-Garc{\'{\i}}a, Daniela and Dib,
Viviane and Familia, Lemuel and Gerhardinger, Leopoldo Cavaleri
and Martin, Emma and Martins, Paula Isla and Pavanelli, Jo{\~a}o
Arthur Pompeu and Selomane, Odirilwe and Tauli, Josefa Isabel and
Tran, Diem H. T. and Valle, Mireia and von Below, Jonathan and
Pereira, Laura M.",
affiliation = "{Wildlife Institute of India} and {UNESCO Chair on Sustainability}
and {International Institute for Sustainability} and {Republica
Dominicana. Ministerio de Medio Ambiente y Recursos Naturales} and
{Universidade de S{\~a}o Paulo (USP)} and {United Nations
Environment Programme World Conservation Monitoring Centre} and
WWF-Brasil and {Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas Espaciais (INPE)}
and {Stellenbosch University} and {Global Youth Biodiversity
Network} and {The Norwegian Environment Agency} and {University of
the Basque Country (UPV-EHU)} and {Consejo Nacional de
Investigaciones Cient{\'{\i}}ficas y T{\'e}cnicas (CONICET)}
and {Stellenbosch University}",
title = "The voices of youth in envisioning positive futures for nature and
people",
journal = "Ecosystems and People",
year = "2020",
volume = "16",
number = "1",
pages = "326--344",
month = "Jan.",
abstract = "The unpredictable Anthropocene poses the challenge of imagining a
radically different, equitable and sustainable world. Looking 100
years ahead is not easy, and especially as millennials, it appears
quite bleak. This paper is the outcome of a visioning exercise
carried out in a 2-day workshop, attended by 33 young early career
professionals under the auspices of IPBES. The process used Nature
Futures Framework in an adapted visioning method from the Seeds of
Good Anthropocene project. Four groups envisioned more desirable
future worlds; where humanity has organised itself, the economy,
politics and technology, to achieve improved nature-human
well-being. The four visions had differing conceptualisations of
this future. However, there were interesting commonalities in
their leverage points for transformative change, including an
emphasis on community, fundamentally different economic systems
based on sharing and technological solutions to foster
sustainability and human-nature connectedness. Debates included
questioning the possibility of maintaining local biocultural
diversity with increased connectivity globally and the prominence
of technology for sustainability outcomes. These visions are the
first step towards a wider galvanisation of youth visions for a
brighter future, which is often missing in the arena where it can
be taken seriously, to trigger more transformative pathways
towards meeting global goals.",
doi = "10.1080/26395916.2020.1821095",
url = "http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/26395916.2020.1821095",
issn = "2639-5908",
language = "en",
targetfile = "rana_voices.pdf",
urlaccessdate = "27 abr. 2024"
}