About the GSG
The Global Scenario Group was founded in 1995 as an independent, international and interdisciplinary body to examine world prospects and ways of fostering a more sustainable and equitable future.
Why scenarios? Sustainable development seeks to reconcile development and environmental goals over the long-term: it is concerned with the future. Scenario analysis offers a structured approach for illuminating the vast range of possibilities. A scenario is a story, told in words and numbers, describing the way events might unfold. If constructed with rigor and imagination, scenarios help us to explore where we might be headed, but more, offering guidance on how to act now to direct the flow of events toward a desirable future.
Why a global perspective? Sustainable development must be pursued at many levels - regional, national, and global - with each posing unique sets of issues. Globalization takes multiple forms – stresses on the biosphere, impacts of communication technology, expansion of worldwide commerce, financial entanglements, and the rise of new geopolitical tensions. We have entered the planetary phase of civilization. In this turbulent moment of transition, the world system faces an uncertain branch point. Understanding the human condition today and possible future paths requires an integrated global panorama.
Activities
GSG research includes analysis of the driving forces, critical uncertainties and stresses on social and environmental systems for each scenario. The Tellus Institute's PoleStar System provides a comprehensive data base and accounting framework for quantifying alternative scenarios, including economic, social, resource and environmental patterns for eleven world regions. The research identifies the policies, values, institutions, technologies, and life-styles required for a sustainable future.
GSG scenarios have been used in numerous global assessments, including UNEP's Global Environmental Outlook series, the US National Academy of Science Board on Sustainable Development, the OECD Environmental Outlook, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment.
In addition, the GSG has conducted national and regional scenario projects throughout the world in collaboration with local partners. These studies serve as catalysts for discussions on the meaning of sustainability, alternative visions, and policy implications.
Organization
The Tellus Institute, along with the Stockholm Environment Institute, convened the influential Global Scenario Group in 1995 as an international and interdisciplinary body to examine alternative futures and the requirements for a transition to sustainability. GSG's work continues on an expanded scale through the Tellus Institute's Great Transition Initiative, a network of several hundred scholars and activists.
Dr. Paul Raskin and Dr. Gilberto Gallopín served as co-coordinators of the Global Scenario Group, and Dr. Raskin directed the GSG's coordinating unit at the Tellus Institute. Major funding was provided by the Nippon Foundation, the Stockholm Environment Institute, the United Nations Environment Programme, the Rockefeller Foundation, and the Global Industrial and Social Progress Research Institute.
Why scenarios? Sustainable development seeks to reconcile development and environmental goals over the long-term: it is concerned with the future. Scenario analysis offers a structured approach for illuminating the vast range of possibilities. A scenario is a story, told in words and numbers, describing the way events might unfold. If constructed with rigor and imagination, scenarios help us to explore where we might be headed, but more, offering guidance on how to act now to direct the flow of events toward a desirable future.
Why a global perspective? Sustainable development must be pursued at many levels - regional, national, and global - with each posing unique sets of issues. Globalization takes multiple forms – stresses on the biosphere, impacts of communication technology, expansion of worldwide commerce, financial entanglements, and the rise of new geopolitical tensions. We have entered the planetary phase of civilization. In this turbulent moment of transition, the world system faces an uncertain branch point. Understanding the human condition today and possible future paths requires an integrated global panorama.
Activities
GSG research includes analysis of the driving forces, critical uncertainties and stresses on social and environmental systems for each scenario. The Tellus Institute's PoleStar System provides a comprehensive data base and accounting framework for quantifying alternative scenarios, including economic, social, resource and environmental patterns for eleven world regions. The research identifies the policies, values, institutions, technologies, and life-styles required for a sustainable future.
GSG scenarios have been used in numerous global assessments, including UNEP's Global Environmental Outlook series, the US National Academy of Science Board on Sustainable Development, the OECD Environmental Outlook, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment.
In addition, the GSG has conducted national and regional scenario projects throughout the world in collaboration with local partners. These studies serve as catalysts for discussions on the meaning of sustainability, alternative visions, and policy implications.
Organization
The Tellus Institute, along with the Stockholm Environment Institute, convened the influential Global Scenario Group in 1995 as an international and interdisciplinary body to examine alternative futures and the requirements for a transition to sustainability. GSG's work continues on an expanded scale through the Tellus Institute's Great Transition Initiative, a network of several hundred scholars and activists.
Dr. Paul Raskin and Dr. Gilberto Gallopín served as co-coordinators of the Global Scenario Group, and Dr. Raskin directed the GSG's coordinating unit at the Tellus Institute. Major funding was provided by the Nippon Foundation, the Stockholm Environment Institute, the United Nations Environment Programme, the Rockefeller Foundation, and the Global Industrial and Social Progress Research Institute.
Members
Tariq Banuri
Khaled Mohamed Fahmy Tibor Farago Nadezhda Gaponenko Gilberto Gallopín Gordon Goodman Pablo Gutman Allen Hammond Roger Kasperson Bob Kates Laili Li Sam Moyo Madiodio Niasse H.W.O. Okoth-Ogendo Atiq Rahman Paul Raskin Setijati D. Sastrapradja Katsuo Seiki Nicholas Sonntag Rob Swart Veerle Vandeweerd |
Pakistan
Egypt Hungary Russia Colombia UK Argentina USA Sweden USA China Zimbabwe Senegal Kenya Bangladesh USA Indonesia Japan Canada Netherlands Belgium |