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ADVANCING THE SCIENCE OF
CITIZEN SCIENCE
A SAFE AND JUST FUTURE FOR
PEOPLE AND PLANET
A new book featuring
contributions by IIASA researchers
Dilek Fraisl and Linda See,
brings together the views and
perspectives of researchers
and practitioners from various
disciplines spanning the
humanities to the natural sciences,
to offer practical support for
implementing citizen science
projects and address important
current and emerging topics in
fields like citizen science and
artificial intelligence.
www.iiasa.ac.at/news/21-citizen-science
IIASA is supporting the Earth
Commission through assessment
and modeling of safe and just
development pathways for
people and the planet by
integrating complex interlinkages
and feedbacks among Earth and
human systems. The work
answers the clarion call from
businesses and cities for putting
science behind the setting of
targets for the global commons
and crucial Earth systems to
safeguard Earth’s resilience.
www.iiasa.ac.at/news/21-future
News
in brief
Measuring sustainable wellbeing
Life expectancy has long been used as an extensive indicator of human
development, with avoiding premature death being a universally shared
aspiration. However, according to a group of researchers led by Senior
IIASA Population and Just Societies Program Advisor, Wolfgang Lutz, mere
survival is not enough to enjoy life and its qualities.
To overcome the lack of benchmarks of objective and subjective wellbeing
in existing indicators, Lutz and his colleagues propose a new, tailor-made
metric that measures development based on long-term human wellbeing:
The Years of Good Life (YoGL) indicator. YoGL only counts a year as a good
year if individuals are simultaneously not living in absolute poverty, are free
from cognitive and physical limitations, and report to be generally satisfied
with their lives.
The researchers say their work presents a first step in the great challenge
to comprehensively assess sustainable human wellbeing that also considers
feedbacks from environmental change. Unlike many other indicators, YoGL is
not restricted to the national level but can be assessed for flexibly defined
sub-populations and over long-time horizons. It also has the potential to
become a broadly used “currency” for measuring the benefits of certain
actions, thus complementing assessments based on purely monetary units.
The social costs of carbon could, for instance, potentially be evaluated in
terms of years of good life lost among future generations, making it a key
indicator to measure sustainable progress in an integrated and tangible way.
When applied to the COVID-19 pandemic, the researchers note that YoGL
represents a major improvement over
conventional indicators in assessing the
long-term success of intervention
measures, as it not only accounts for
material losses and lost life years, but
also for the losses in physical and
cognitive wellbeing and those incurred
by younger generations due to lockdown
measures like school closures.
Further info: pure.iiasa.ac.at/17111
Wolfgang Lutz: lutz@iiasa.ac.at
By Ansa Heyl A NEW FRAMEWORK TO IMPROVE
CLIMATE MITIGATION SCENARIOS
IIASA researchers and
colleagues at the RFF-
CMCC European Institute
on Economics and the
Environment have developed
a systematic framework
that allows identifying the
type, timing, and location of
feasibility concerns raised by
climate mitigation scenarios
to help understand what to
improve in the next generation
of scenarios and explore
how to make ambitious
emission reductions possible
by strengthening enabling
conditions.
www.iiasa.ac.at/news/21-pathways
Years
of Good
Life Positive life
satisfaction
Capable
longevity
3Optionswww.iiasa.ac.at
Summer 2021
zurück zum
Buch options, Band summer 2021"
options
Band summer 2021
- Titel
- options
- Band
- summer 2021
- Ort
- Laxenburg
- Datum
- 2021
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC 4.0
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 32
- Kategorien
- Zeitschriften Options Magazine