Flinders University School of the Environment Research Colloquium, Adelaide, Australia
May 25, 2016
Slides here Video here
Abstract
In recent decades, an ideology often called neoliberalism
has become dominant in most high-income countries. It can be characterised as the
view that freeing market forces will maximise global development and human
well-being. An important component and result of this ideology is laissez faire population growth and
suppressed knowledge of the “demographic dividend”, the development bonus that
accrues to low-income countries from slower population growth, especially through education, an important determinant of fertility. Instead, a “fortress world” has
intensified, with ever-steepening inequality, and with growing recognition by
the middle and working class that they are being left behind, with little power
to change the rules, to restore free education, or to prevent offshore banking rorts.
Environmental resources continue to decline, and in every
month temperatures rise, as does the sea level. Migrants press on Europe,
not only from the Middle East and Afghanistan, but also from
the Sahel. Between 1
and 1.8 million refugees entered Europe in 2015, and millions more appear likely
in future. Burundi
is again flirting with ethnic genocide.
These events are neither random nor inevitable. They are promoted by neoliberalism, the cutting of foreign aid, and because elites, in poor and rich countries, have made insufficient attempt to promote determinants of sustainable development.
Australia's complicity
These events are neither random nor inevitable. They are promoted by neoliberalism, the cutting of foreign aid, and because elites, in poor and rich countries, have made insufficient attempt to promote determinants of sustainable development.
Australia's complicity
For over a decade Australia has evaded the spirit of
the Refugee Convention, which is intended to grant protection to people fleeing
persecution. Most asylum seekers have ceased seeking protection here, as
a result of the cruelty practised in our name and widely supported.
These interlinked and growing global crises are consistent
with long-standing predictions, but which have been rarely heard, including in
the development literature. Affordable technological solutions to greenhouse gas accumulation are emerging but many more fundamental changes are needed, if
civilisation is not only to expand in this century, but even to survive.
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