Laudato Si’ and Integral Ecology: A Reconceptualization of Sustainability

This study analyzes sustainability concepts through the lens of Roman Catholic Social Teaching (CST) with a special emphasis on Laudato Si’. CST expands the focus of sustainability to include social justice through its emphasis on human dignity, the common good, and caritas. In CST, justice is under...

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Main Authors: IMANAKA, JESSICA LUDESCHER, PRUSSIA, GREG, ALEXIS, SAMANTHA
Format: text
Published: Archīum Ateneo 2017
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Online Access:https://archium.ateneo.edu/jmgs/vol5/iss1/4
https://archium.ateneo.edu/context/jmgs/article/1056/viewcontent/laudato_si_rsquo_and_integral_ecology_a_reconceptualization_of_sustainability.pdf
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Institution: Ateneo De Manila University
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spelling ph-ateneo-arc.jmgs-10562023-09-14T09:42:03Z Laudato Si’ and Integral Ecology: A Reconceptualization of Sustainability IMANAKA, JESSICA LUDESCHER PRUSSIA, GREG ALEXIS, SAMANTHA This study analyzes sustainability concepts through the lens of Roman Catholic Social Teaching (CST) with a special emphasis on Laudato Si’. CST expands the focus of sustainability to include social justice through its emphasis on human dignity, the common good, and caritas. In CST, justice is understood as structural while environmental obligations are connected to integral human development and peace. In Laudato Si’, Pope Francis calls on us to counter prevailing unjust systems with a structural reordering of multiple ecologies: environmental, economic, social, cultural, and daily life. Based on this reordering, he developed the notion of integral ecology, and we show how it encompasses a set of existing sustainability ideas in CST and, more importantly, how it changes the focus and scope of sustainability. Unfortunately, and despite supposed good intentions, some institutions misrepresent and use the term “sustainability” to justify systems that result in “un sustainable” consequences. We thus show how Laudato Si’ offers an antidote to such unsustainable practices by reconceptualizing the sustainability construct through the notion of integral ecology. 2017-06-30T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://archium.ateneo.edu/jmgs/vol5/iss1/4 info:doi/10.13185/2244-6893.1056 https://archium.ateneo.edu/context/jmgs/article/1056/viewcontent/laudato_si_rsquo_and_integral_ecology_a_reconceptualization_of_sustainability.pdf Journal of Management for Global Sustainability Archīum Ateneo Laudato Si’ Roman Catholic Social Teaching integral ecology human ecology sustainable development social justice business unsustainability
institution Ateneo De Manila University
building Ateneo De Manila University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider Ateneo De Manila University Library
collection archium.Ateneo Institutional Repository
topic Laudato Si’
Roman Catholic Social Teaching
integral ecology
human ecology
sustainable development
social justice
business unsustainability
spellingShingle Laudato Si’
Roman Catholic Social Teaching
integral ecology
human ecology
sustainable development
social justice
business unsustainability
IMANAKA, JESSICA LUDESCHER
PRUSSIA, GREG
ALEXIS, SAMANTHA
Laudato Si’ and Integral Ecology: A Reconceptualization of Sustainability
description This study analyzes sustainability concepts through the lens of Roman Catholic Social Teaching (CST) with a special emphasis on Laudato Si’. CST expands the focus of sustainability to include social justice through its emphasis on human dignity, the common good, and caritas. In CST, justice is understood as structural while environmental obligations are connected to integral human development and peace. In Laudato Si’, Pope Francis calls on us to counter prevailing unjust systems with a structural reordering of multiple ecologies: environmental, economic, social, cultural, and daily life. Based on this reordering, he developed the notion of integral ecology, and we show how it encompasses a set of existing sustainability ideas in CST and, more importantly, how it changes the focus and scope of sustainability. Unfortunately, and despite supposed good intentions, some institutions misrepresent and use the term “sustainability” to justify systems that result in “un sustainable” consequences. We thus show how Laudato Si’ offers an antidote to such unsustainable practices by reconceptualizing the sustainability construct through the notion of integral ecology.
format text
author IMANAKA, JESSICA LUDESCHER
PRUSSIA, GREG
ALEXIS, SAMANTHA
author_facet IMANAKA, JESSICA LUDESCHER
PRUSSIA, GREG
ALEXIS, SAMANTHA
author_sort IMANAKA, JESSICA LUDESCHER
title Laudato Si’ and Integral Ecology: A Reconceptualization of Sustainability
title_short Laudato Si’ and Integral Ecology: A Reconceptualization of Sustainability
title_full Laudato Si’ and Integral Ecology: A Reconceptualization of Sustainability
title_fullStr Laudato Si’ and Integral Ecology: A Reconceptualization of Sustainability
title_full_unstemmed Laudato Si’ and Integral Ecology: A Reconceptualization of Sustainability
title_sort laudato si’ and integral ecology: a reconceptualization of sustainability
publisher Archīum Ateneo
publishDate 2017
url https://archium.ateneo.edu/jmgs/vol5/iss1/4
https://archium.ateneo.edu/context/jmgs/article/1056/viewcontent/laudato_si_rsquo_and_integral_ecology_a_reconceptualization_of_sustainability.pdf
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