Environmental Sustainability Post-COVID-19: Scrutinizing Popular Hypotheses from a Social Science Perspective
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. How Does the Pandemic Affect the Progress of Transitions Towards Environmental Sustainability?
3.1.1. Crises Generally Open Up for Societal Change Towards Environmental Sustainability
3.1.2. COVID-19 Mitigation Measures May Induce Enduring Individual Behavioral Changes Towards Greener Modes of Consumption
3.1.3. Public Recovery Programs Should Be Targeted Towards Green Investments
3.2. What Are the Structural Similarities between the COVID-19 Crisis and Environmental Crises?
3.2.1. The COVID-19 Crisis Is Structurally Similar to Environmental Crises
3.2.2. To Mitigate Environmental Crises, Policy Makers Should Act as Immediately and as Ambitious as They Have to Mitigate the COVID-19 Pandemic
3.2.3. The COVID-19 Crisis Has Demonstrated How Scientists May Engage Successfully with Decision-Makers
3.3. How Do Transitions Towards Environmental Sustainability Affect the Ability to Cope with Potential Future Pandemics?
3.3.1. Societal Solutions to Mitigate Environmental Crises May Also Help to Prevent the Emergence of Future Pandemics
3.3.2. The Socio-Techno-Ecological Resilience Needed to Cope with Environmental Crises May Also Help to Cope with Future Pandemics
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Hypothesis | Social Science Indication |
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“Crises generally open up for societal change towards environmental sustainability.” | Crises are generally beneficial for initiating change processes because lock-ins may be weakened. Strength and direction of change, however, depend on political will, leadership and resources. For the COVID-19 crisis, empirical results are mixed so far and may only be judged ex-post. |
“COVID-19 mitigation measures may induce enduring individual behavioral changes towards greener modes of consumption.” | The COVID-19 crisis has questioned behavioral routines, e.g., in work practices and mobility. Corresponding changes can be observed and have brought about positive as well as negative environmental impacts. It is at present unclear whether these are temporary or longer lasting. From theory it has been argued that awareness for environmental protection and risk aversion may have been increased. |
“Public recovery programs should be targeted towards green investments.” | Mitigation of the COVID-19 crisis has stimulated massive public investment, containing a huge chance to support the transition towards sustainability. However, green stimuli have to be targeted appropriately and be accompanied by measures to phase out unsustainable practices such as fossil-fuel usage. Empirical evidence is mixed so far. |
Hypothesis | Social Science Indication |
---|---|
“The COVID-19 crisis is structurally similar to environmental crises.” | Both crises are non-linear global challenges featuring time lags, irreversibility, wide-spread and unevenly distributed social consequences and the prevention paradox. However, the COVID-19 crisis is less fundamental concerning time scale, level of fundamental change required and features more incentives for individual risk-prevention. |
“To mitigate environmental crises, policy-makers should act as immediately and as ambitious as they have to mitigate the COVID-19 pandemic.” | Policy responses to the COVID-19 crisis throughout the world have been mixed in ambition, appropriateness and timeliness. While direct and immediate impacts of a crisis—such as COVID-19—seem to foster fast and extensive action, the appropriate policy response is sensitive to the details of the situation at hand and numerous societal determinants. |
“The COVID-19 crisis has demonstrated how scientists may engage successfully with decision-makers.” | While scientific advice into policy making clearly played an important role, the importance and reception of even epidemiologic advice has been mixed in various countries and in the course of time. It is argued that policy makers and society tend to prefer under-complex techno-scientific solutions, and that social sciences, arts and humanities have been underrepresented at times. Science–policy interactions have been discussed and reflected upon in public in an unprecedented depth, intensity and publicity. |
Hypothesis | Social Science Indication |
---|---|
“Societal solutions to mitigate environmental crises may also help to prevent the emergence of future pandemics.” | It is argued that preserving biodiversity and limiting human impacts on ecosystems may help to prevent emerging zoonoses such as COVID-19. However, it remains unclear how much power this argument linking the pandemic to environmental issues can gain. Hence, policy making for sustainability should consider co-benefits for disease prevention but their actual contribution as compared to other options of prevention remains uncertain. |
“The socio-techno-ecological resilience needed to cope with environmental crises may also help to cope with future pandemics.” | Both pandemics and environmental crises may produce shocks to the socio-techno-ecological systems our society relies upon. Hence, synergies in building resilience to cope with environmental and pandemic crises can be expected. However, a better understanding is needed regarding aspects and types of resilience needed and the appropriate governance framework. |
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Lehmann, P.; Beck, S.; de Brito, M.M.; Gawel, E.; Groß, M.; Haase, A.; Lepenies, R.; Otto, D.; Schiller, J.; Strunz, S.; et al. Environmental Sustainability Post-COVID-19: Scrutinizing Popular Hypotheses from a Social Science Perspective. Sustainability 2021, 13, 8679. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13168679
Lehmann P, Beck S, de Brito MM, Gawel E, Groß M, Haase A, Lepenies R, Otto D, Schiller J, Strunz S, et al. Environmental Sustainability Post-COVID-19: Scrutinizing Popular Hypotheses from a Social Science Perspective. Sustainability. 2021; 13(16):8679. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13168679
Chicago/Turabian StyleLehmann, Paul, Silke Beck, Mariana Madruga de Brito, Erik Gawel, Matthias Groß, Annegret Haase, Robert Lepenies, Danny Otto, Johannes Schiller, Sebastian Strunz, and et al. 2021. "Environmental Sustainability Post-COVID-19: Scrutinizing Popular Hypotheses from a Social Science Perspective" Sustainability 13, no. 16: 8679. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13168679
APA StyleLehmann, P., Beck, S., de Brito, M. M., Gawel, E., Groß, M., Haase, A., Lepenies, R., Otto, D., Schiller, J., Strunz, S., & Thrän, D. (2021). Environmental Sustainability Post-COVID-19: Scrutinizing Popular Hypotheses from a Social Science Perspective. Sustainability, 13(16), 8679. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13168679