• The Sustainable Development and CSB teams posing in front of the Reflection Pool at Angkor Wat
    Cambodia The Sustainable Development and CSB teams posing in front of the Reflection Pool at Angkor Wat
  • Charlie Baldwin, Connor Luther, Eleni O'flarity,  Kevin Hoogenboom, Amberlyn Alualu, Emma Fried, and Melanie Grinnel at our favorite taco stand!
    Nicaragua Charlie Baldwin, Connor Luther, Eleni O'flarity, Kevin Hoogenboom, Amberlyn Alualu, Emma Fried, and Melanie Grinnel at our favorite taco stand!
  • Fracking Well Pad
    Pennsylvania Fracking Fracking Well Pad
  • The people in the rural village do not own cars so they must use other means of transportation and find alternative yet efficient ways of carrying heavy items along the dirt road and in the hot sun.
    Nicaragua The people in the rural village do not own cars so they must use other means of transportation and find alternative yet efficient ways of carrying heavy items along the dirt road and in the hot sun.

About

What does SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT mean?

“Development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs” (the Brundtland Commission)

While the definition above is the most commonly quoted response, Sustainable Development can be more succinctly summed up in the following four words: inclusive and sustainable growth.

Development is the noun; sustainable is the adjective.

But what does it mean to develop sustainably?  Most people associate sustainability with the environment, but this is actually just one of three pillars to sustainability. Indeed, to be truly sustainable, not only must ecological protection be ensured, but also economic well-being must ensure that humans are able to meet their own needs, and social inclusion must ensure that this well-being extends to all in an equitable manner.

So, according to this definition, how are we doing? Well, if you look at economic growth as accounted for by GDP per capita over the years, you might at first glance be encouraged. Billions have moved out of material poverty in a matter of generations, with access to longer, healthier lives and things that would have been unimaginable just decades ago. Yet too many humans are still unable to meet their basic needs, a first indicator that economic development to date has not occurred in a sustainable manner.  Moreover, even this limited economic growth has come at a high cost to the natural environment, calling into question yet again the sustainability of our development to date. 

By the year 2050, the global population is expected to reach 9 billion persons.  The challenge of sustainable development is how to proceed in such a way that each of these 9 billion persons can enjoy a dignified quality of life in an equitable way that does not compromise our natural surroundings. 

Indeed, this task is as complex as it is urgent, which is why we choose to focus our attention on it here at Lehigh University through the Sustainable Development Program.

Don Morris
Director of Sustainable Development / Director of Environmental Initiative / Professor of Earth and Environmental Sciences

Sustainable Development Program  |  101 Williams Hall  |  31 Williams Drive 

 Bethlehem, PA 18015  |  phone 610-758-3996  |  fax 610-758-2131