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2026
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| Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18918807 |
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| _version_ | 1866901530940014592 |
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| author | Björkman, Hans Tomas |
| author_facet | Björkman, Hans Tomas |
| contents | <p>This article is part of a series examining key publications shaping the emerging field of inner development for outer change, produced in association with the Inner Development Goals (IDG). The series maps a body of research that has grown substantially since 2019, tracing its key contributors and asking what it means when the institutions of global governance begin to speak its language.</p> <p>The 2024 IPBES Thematic Assessment on the Underlying Causes of Biodiversity Loss and Determinants of Transformative Change represents a quiet but significant shift in the language of global governance. Produced over five years, drawing on nearly 400 case studies and 7,000 sources of evidence, and formally adopted by representatives of 150 governments, the report moves well beyond the technocratic register typical of policy science: biodiversity collapse, it argues, cannot be addressed through structural and regulatory reform alone, but requires transformation in the worldviews, values, and relational orientations through which modern societies understand their place within the living world.</p> <p>This article examines what it means that such a claim now appears inside an official UN-affiliated document, explores the report's framework for transformation, and cautions against mistaking acknowledgement in policy language for the harder work of cultivating inner development at scale — a challenge the emerging field has yet to fully meet.</p> |
| format | Recurso digital |
| id | zenodo_https___doi_org_10_5281_zenodo_18918807 |
| institution | Zenodo |
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| publishDate | 2026 |
| publisher | Zenodo |
| record_format | zenodo |
| spellingShingle | The UN's Quiet Admission: Saving Nature Requires Changing Ourselves Björkman, Hans Tomas <p>This article is part of a series examining key publications shaping the emerging field of inner development for outer change, produced in association with the Inner Development Goals (IDG). The series maps a body of research that has grown substantially since 2019, tracing its key contributors and asking what it means when the institutions of global governance begin to speak its language.</p> <p>The 2024 IPBES Thematic Assessment on the Underlying Causes of Biodiversity Loss and Determinants of Transformative Change represents a quiet but significant shift in the language of global governance. Produced over five years, drawing on nearly 400 case studies and 7,000 sources of evidence, and formally adopted by representatives of 150 governments, the report moves well beyond the technocratic register typical of policy science: biodiversity collapse, it argues, cannot be addressed through structural and regulatory reform alone, but requires transformation in the worldviews, values, and relational orientations through which modern societies understand their place within the living world.</p> <p>This article examines what it means that such a claim now appears inside an official UN-affiliated document, explores the report's framework for transformation, and cautions against mistaking acknowledgement in policy language for the harder work of cultivating inner development at scale — a challenge the emerging field has yet to fully meet.</p> |
| title | The UN's Quiet Admission: Saving Nature Requires Changing Ourselves |
| url | https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18918807 |