Planetary Health: Urgency and Agency for Systems Change. Including Submissions Associated with the 2025 Planetary Health Annual Meeting (PHAM2025)

A special issue of Challenges (ISSN 2078-1547).

Deadline for manuscript submissions: 31 December 2026 | Viewed by 2241

Special Issue Editors

1. Business School, University of Western Australia, Perth, Australia
2. Sunway Business School, Sunway University, Sunway City, Selangor, Malaysia
Interests: planetary health; regenerativity; societal and public policy marketing with a specific focus on the well-being; quality of life; happiness of populations; health care; poverty alleviation; contentment; materialism; consumer well-being; spirituality; religiosity and moral self-regulation
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Guest Editor
1. inVIVO Planetary Health, University of Western Australia, Nedlands, WA 6009, Australia
2. Scholar, Nova Institute for Health, 1407 Fleet Street, Baltimore, MD 21231, USA
Interests: planetary health; ecological and social justice; systems change; inner development goals; spirituality; emotional intelligence; value systems; food systems; commercial determinants of health; child health; immunology and inflammation; microbiome science; NCDs; life-course wellness; integrative approaches to wellness and disease prevention; art and narrative medicine

Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

We are pleased to invite contributions for a Special Issue of Challenges featuring the proceedings of the Planetary Health Annual Meeting 2025, to be held in Rotterdam, The Netherlands, from 7 to 10 October 2025.

Planetary health is a solutions-focused, transdisciplinary field that addresses the impacts of human activities on Earth’s natural systems in order to foster a world where both people and the planet can thrive. It acknowledges the deep interdependence between human well-being and the health of ecological systems and calls for urgent, transformative action at all levels of society.

The 2025 Annual Meeting, themed “Planetary Health for All and In All: Boosting Urgency and Agency for Systems Change,” aims to accelerate collective momentum toward sustainability and resilience. It recognizes that transformational science must be designed for impact—driven by real-world challenges, accessible to the public, and actionable by communities, policymakers, and institutions.

This Special Issue will spotlight new knowledge and practice from across disciplines—including science, policy, the humanities, and the arts—that advance the planetary health agenda.

As we face escalating planetary challenges, this Special Issue invites bold ideas, practical solutions, and diverse voices working to chart a course toward a more just and thriving future for all life on Earth. It is our hope that this Special Issue will facilitate collaborative vision and shared agendas that drive activity to link virtually every endeavor aimed at solving the interconnected challenges of our time—large and small alike—for the flourishing of people, places, and planet.

We look forward to your contributions.

Articles in this Special Issue will be published without charge in this open access journal. For Malaysian researchers, please refer to funding guidelines by MOHE on publishing before submission to journals.

Dr. David Webb

Prof. Dr. Susan Prescott

Scope and Article Types:

We warmly welcome submissions on any topic relevant to planetary health, including full papers based on conference presentations, abstracts, discussions, workshops, satellite events and/or ideas arising from the event. We also invite other submissions from the wider community that focus on understanding and improving the complex relationships between human health and environmental change—from any researchers, clinicians, practitioners, educators, students, community groups, and artists, seeking to advance the planetary health agenda.

Submissions may include original research, perspectives, case studies, initiatives or projects (either complete or still in progress), protocols, new proposals or ideas, and more creative works. We encourage all authors to articulate the ways in which their submission is relevant to some (or preferably, many) of the grand challenges of our time, and/or ways in which the work could contribute to planetary health. Examples of topics may be found below in the “keywords” below.

Dr. David Webb
Prof. Dr. Susan Prescott
Guest Editors

Manuscript Submission Information 

Manuscripts should be submitted online at www.mdpi.com by registering and logging in to this website. Once you are registered, click here to go to the submission form. Manuscripts can be submitted until the deadline. All submissions that pass pre-check are peer-reviewed. Accepted papers will be published continuously in the journal (as soon as accepted) and will be listed together on the special issue website. Research articles, review articles as well as short communications are invited. For planned papers, a title and short abstract (about 100 words) can be sent to the Editorial Office for announcement on this website.

Submitted manuscripts should not have been published previously, nor be under consideration for publication elsewhere (except conference proceedings papers). All manuscripts are thoroughly refereed through a single-blind peer-review process. A guide for authors and other relevant information for submission of manuscripts is available on the Instructions for Authors page. Challenges is an international peer-reviewed open access quarterly journal published by MDPI.

Please visit the Instructions for Authors page before submitting a manuscript. Submitted papers should be well formatted and use good English. Authors may use MDPI's English editing service prior to publication or during author revisions.

Keywords

  • planetary health
  • ecology, biodiversity, ecosystems, microbiomes, anthropogenic ecosystems
  • value systems, indigenous knowledges, cultural shift, narrative medicine, storytelling, belief systems, traditional cultures, spirituality
  • healthy finance, finance and wellbeing, doughnut economics
  • education transformation, education revolution
  • just transition, governance, transformational change
  • science based communication, social media
  • mental health, emotions and wellbeing, solastalgia, ecological grief
  • noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) and infectious diseases
  • food systems, nutrition, food processing and nutritional ecology, planetary diets
  • lifestyle and the exposome, systems biology, machine learning, preventive medicine, bio-psychosocial medicine, high-level wellness
  • environmental degradation, biodiversity loss, climate change
  • urban landscapes, natural environments, nature-relatedness, green space, green prescriptions, biodiversity interdependence, cooperation, integration
  • social and ecological justice, intergenerational justice, health disparities, socioeconomic inequalities, displacement and conflict, migration, economic, political and commercial determinants of health
  • life-course (developmental origins), transgenerational perspectives, epigenetics

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Further information on MDPI's Special Issue policies can be found here.

Published Papers (2 papers)

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20 pages, 880 KB  
Article
Planet B: A Systems Engineering Framework for World Peace and Planetary Health
by Sailesh Krishna Rao and Gerard Wedderburn-Bisshop
Challenges 2025, 16(4), 58; https://doi.org/10.3390/challe16040058 - 8 Dec 2025
Viewed by 118
Abstract
Planetary boundary transgressions occur as the result of a conflict between human-engineered systems and the natural life-support systems on Earth. In this paper, we validate the Berkana Institute’s Two Loops Theory of Change which posits that big living systems cannot be changed from [...] Read more.
Planetary boundary transgressions occur as the result of a conflict between human-engineered systems and the natural life-support systems on Earth. In this paper, we validate the Berkana Institute’s Two Loops Theory of Change which posits that big living systems cannot be changed from within. We can only abandon them and start over. We show that the desired objectives of world peace and planetary health can be attained through a “Planet B” style engineering of human systems to meet the 17 UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDG), sans SDG #8 (Economic Growth) and with the addition of Beyond Cruelty Foundation’s SDG #18 (Zero Animal Exploitation). We show that the transition to fully plant-based systems as envisioned in SDG #18 mitigates all seven planetary boundary transgressions and aids in the development of a regenerative, equitable, and sustainable civilization that we call Planet B. Full article
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32 pages, 3142 KB  
Review
The Planetary Health Impacts of Coffee Farming Systems in Latin America: A Review
by Emiliano Hersch-González and Horacio Riojas-Rodríguez
Challenges 2025, 16(4), 57; https://doi.org/10.3390/challe16040057 - 20 Nov 2025
Viewed by 876
Abstract
In Latin America, coffee is cultivated in distinct coffee agroecosystems (CASs), ranging from traditional agroforestry (“shade”) systems (CAFSs) to intensive, unshaded (“sun”) monocultures (UCASs). While various socioenvironmental impacts of these systems have been studied, their implications have not yet been integrated within a [...] Read more.
In Latin America, coffee is cultivated in distinct coffee agroecosystems (CASs), ranging from traditional agroforestry (“shade”) systems (CAFSs) to intensive, unshaded (“sun”) monocultures (UCASs). While various socioenvironmental impacts of these systems have been studied, their implications have not yet been integrated within a planetary health perspective. This review of 146 studies applies the Planetary Boundaries and Nature’s Contributions to People frameworks and the DPSEEA (Drivers, Pressures, State, Exposure, Effects, Actions) model to map the relationships between socioenvironmental drivers of change, different CASs, the state of natural systems at local and global scales, and human health and well-being. The analysis shows that conventional intensification, driven by low revenues for producers, climate change, and disease outbreaks, has accelerated deforestation, biodiversity loss, greenhouse gas emissions, agrochemical use and leakage, and water pressures. These changes create health risks for coffee-growing communities, such as pesticide exposure and increased vulnerability to external shocks. Conversely, agroecological practices can mitigate environmental pressures while reducing exposure to health hazards and improving resilience, food security, and income stability. However, mainstreaming these practices requires addressing structural inequities in the global coffee value chain to ensure fairer revenue distribution, stronger institutional support, and the protection of coffee-growing communities. Full article
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