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Getting Started With Global Issues Answer Key 5 Characteristics of a Global Issue • Persistent • Widespread • Affects large #’s of people • Is an underlying cause of events • Is connected to other global issues Mobile as a metaphor for relationship between global issues • As with a mobile, changes with one part of the system affect other issues and the entire system Darfur, Sudan crisis & interconnected issues • Desertification, poverty, migration & high fertility rates heightened competition between Arab herders and African farmers for the scarce resources of wood, food, & water Good Quality of Life Factors • • • • • • • • Food Water Shelter Health Education Family Community Political & Religious Freedom, • Happiness • Security Developed vs. Developing Countries • Developed countries have higher average per capita income than developing countries Sustainability • Ability to meet our needs without limiting the ability of future generations to meet their needs in the areas of economy, environment, & society Renewable Resources • Can be restored or replenished at basically the same rate they are consumed Ex: forests, fish, wind, water, tides, solar energy Non-renewable Resources • Exist in fixed amounts and cannot be readily restored through human or natural processes Ex: metal, minerals, fossil fuels Carrying Capacity • The maximum number of people the Earth can support without permanent ecological damage or resource depletion • Increased by the agricultural revolution’s food production technology • Decreased by higher population, pollution, & resource consumption rates GDP vs. GPI • GDP calculates economic growth as the total amount of goods & services produced annualy in a country; GPI also adds desirable nonmaterial services such as volunteerism and childcare and subtracts negative factors such as crime & pollution Pg. 11 Graph comparing GDP & GPI betweebn 1970 & mid 1990’s • GDP up, GPI down “No Exit” Cartoon • “The grass is always greener on the other side” - our notion of “happiness” is sometimes driven by what other people have Personal vs. Structural Solutions • Personal solutions are individual actions that can contribute to sustainability, but structural solutions attempt to address underlying causes and often involve government decisions and policies that encourage or discourage certain behaviors Tax Policies or Subsidies on Fossil Fuel Use • Governments can reduce gas consumption by raising the gas tax or subsidizing the auto industry to develop higher mileage vehicles System (living/non-living) • Non-systems approach: a quick fix, doesn’t consider the interrelations, alternative, or mobile affect • Systems approach: a sustainable approach that considers causes & multiple effects, now and in future Worldview + influences • A person’s basic assumption & beliefs about how the world works • Influenced by culture, history, family, religion, & education Real World Event (Iceberg Model) • Events = tip of iceberg, what we first hear or see in the news • Patterns = recurring events • Structures = the underlying cause of patterns & events Multiple Perspectives & Critical Thinking for Sustainability • Multiple perspectives leads us to appreciate & benefit from the viewpoints of diverse peoples. • Critical thinking demands that we gather necessary information and credible evidence to reach wise solutions. End