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Rethinking growth: Post-Growth, De-Growth, Donuts and Well-Being

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The Law Foyer, Level 2, New Law Building (F10), University of Sydney
Camperdown NSW, Australia
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Wed, 1 Oct, 6pm - 7:30pm AEST

Event description

Rethinking growth: Post-Growth, De-Growth, Donuts and Well-Being


Unpack the growth paradigm and hear from thinkers reimagining economies built around well-being, climate justice, and living within planetary boundaries.

 

This panel will explore the limitations of green capitalism and alternative economic approaches that shift away from growth-driven economies. What would a degrowth or regenerative economy look like? We’ll discuss local and global initiatives challenging the growth paradigm and examine how capitalism and colonialism have contributed to today’s crises.

 

This event is part of SEI’s Climate Justice Series. This panel series brings together leading thinkers and practitioners to explore the urgent intersections of climate action, equity, and systemic change.

Speakers

Danielle Celermajer (Chair), Sydney Environment Institute

Danielle Celermajer is a Professor of Sociology and Social Policy at the University of Sydney, Deputy Director – Academic of the Sydney Environment Institute and lead of the Multispecies Justice project. Her professional life has been characterised by moving between organisations whose principal focus is human rights or more broadly justice policy and scholarship, and seeking a greater integration between these dimensions of justice work. In recent years, she has turned her attention to questions of how institutions could be transformed to support the relational flourishing of all Earth beings, or multispecies justice. With her multispecies community, she lived through the Black Summer fires, writing about the killing of everything or “omnicide.” Summertime: Reflections on a Vanishing Future (Penguin Books, 2021), the creative non-fiction book she wrote from that experience asks us to look around – really look around – to become present to all Earth others who are living and dying through the loss of our shared home.

Julia Steinberger, European degrowth expert

Julia Steinberger is a Professor of Ecological Economics at the University of Lausanne, examining the relationship between between resource use (energy and materials, greenhouse gas emissions) and societal performance (economic activity and human wellbeing). She is the recipient of a Leverhulme Research Leadership Award for her research project 'Living Well Within Limits' investigating how universal human well-being might be achieved within planetary boundaries. She is Lead Author for the IPCC's 6th Assessment Report with Working Group 3. She serves as a Lead Author for the IPCC’s Sixth Assessment Report and, since 2023, has co-directed the EU-funded project “REAL – A Post-Growth Deal.”

Manfred Lenzen, sustainability expert

Manfred Lenzen is Professor of Sustainability Research in the Integrated Sustainability Analysis (ISA) team in the School of Physics at the University of Sydney. He is an international leader in economic Input-Output Analysis and Life-Cycle Assessment, is Associate Editor for the Journal of Industrial Ecology, and Editor-in-Chief of the journal Economic Systems Research. He has contributed major methodological advances as well as numerous applications, in particular on embodied energy and greenhouse gas emissions. He is currently leading a project that is investigating degrowth pathways for Australia's climate and wellbeing goals.

 

Sharon Friel, planetary health expert

Sharon Friel is an ARC Laureate Fellow, Professor of Health Equity and Director of the Planetary Health Equity Hothouse and Menzies Centre for Health Governance at the School of Regulation and Global Governance (RegNet), Australian National University. Her research focuses on the political economy of health; governance and the planetary, social and commercial determinants of health inequities. Her 2019 book “Climate Change and the People’s Health” highlights the importance of addressing the global consumptogenic system.

 

Mengyu Li, sustainable futures researcher

Dr Mengyu Li is a Sydney Horizon Fellow (Senior Lecturer) at the University of Sydney’s School of Physics. Her research focuses on advancing sustainable and equitable futures through data-driven analysis of global energy, climate, and food systems. With a background in engineering and sustainability science, Mengyu integrates methods from economics, environmental science, and systems modelling to explore the environmental and social impacts of consumption and production.

Annette Cowie, climate change specialist

Annette Cowie has a background in soil science and plant nutrition, with particular interest in sustainable resource management. Annette contributes to development of climate change policy and GHG mitigation in the agriculture sector, including GHG accounting for emissions trading at state, national and international levels. Annette was a lead author in the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) Special Report on Climate Change and Land, and is a lead author in the IPCC’s Sixth Assessment Report. Since 2000 Annette has been a member of the International Energy Agency Bioenergy research network, and led the group “Climate Change Effects of Biomass and Bioenergy Systems” in the period 2013-2018. She is currently co-leader in the IEA Bioenergy group “Climate and Sustainability Effects of Bioenergy within the broader Bioeconomy”.

Image by Timothy Dykes via Unsplash

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The Law Foyer, Level 2, New Law Building (F10), University of Sydney
Camperdown NSW, Australia