Sustainability Research: International Development - Global Institute of Sustainability at ASU Arizona State University

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International Development
PROGRAMS
We work with our peers at academic institutions around the globe to address problems common to rapidly growing cities worldwide. We also incorporate comparative studies of different world regions in order to understand patterns and processes of human-environment interactions, and to develop best-practice models that can be replicated.

Urbanization and Global Environmental Change
This collaborative project is building greater knowledge and understanding of the bidirectional interactions between global environmental change and cities, present at local, regional, and global scales, and integrating the work of decision makers, practitioners, and academic researchers.

Advancing Conservation in a Social Context
This project investigates the tradeoffs between human well-being and biodiversity-conservation goals, and between conservation and other economic, political, and social agendas at local, national, and international scales.

Mediterranean Landscape Dynamics Project
This project examines long-term socioecological processes that shaped Mediterranean landscapes from the beginning of farming to the beginning of complex civilization.

100 Cities Project
This project uses remote-sensing technology to detect patterns of urbanization and their environmental consequences in 100 cities around the globe.

Integrated Analysis of Robustness in Dynamic Social Ecological Systems
This project asks: "Why are some socioecological systems more successful in navigating environmental disturbances and change than others?"

Long-Term Coupled Socioecological Change in the American Southwest and Northern Mexico
In this project, archaeologists, mathematical modelers, ecologists, and environmental scientists are applying archaeological and ecological analyses, resilience theory, and formal dynamical modeling to identify variables that foster stability and promote transformation in coupled socioecological systems.

DID YOU KNOW...?

The United Nations defines 20 liters per person per day as the minimum amount of water necessary to meet basic needs. 1.1 billion people in developing countries fall below this minimum. Most of these people use about five liters of water per day—about one tenth of the average daily amount used in rich countries to flush toilets.

(Human Development Report 2006. Beyond Scarcity: Power, Poverty and the Global Water Crisis.
New York: The United Nations Development Program)