Contact: Sue Nichols, Center for Systems Integration and Sustainability, Office: (517) 432-0206, nichols@msu.edu
Published: Feb. 18, 2011 E-mail Editor
Jack Liu, director of the MSU Center for Systems Integration and Sustainability.
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WASHINGTON, D.C. — Understanding and managing how humans and nature sustainably coexist is now so sweeping and lightning fast that it’s spawned a concept. Meet “telecoupling.”
Joining its popular cousins telecommuting and television, telecoupling is the way Jack Liu, director of the Human-Nature Lab/Center for Systems Integration and Sustainability at Michigan State University, is describing how distance is shrinking and connections are strengthening between nature and humans.
The “Telecoupling of Human and Natural Systems” symposium was held Friday, Feb. 18, at the American Association for the Advancement of Science annual meeting.
“This is a beginning of exploring the new frontier,” said Liu, who holds the Rachel Carson Chair in Sustainability at MSU. “Telecoupling is about connecting both human and natural systems across boundaries. There are new and faster ways of connecting the whole planet – from big events like earthquakes and floods to tourism, trade, migration, pollution, climate change, flows of information and financial capital, and invasion of animal and plant species.”
Liu said that telecoupling is a way to express one of the often-overwhelming consequences of globalization – the way an event or phenomenon in one corner of the world can have an impact far away. In effect, systems couple – connecting across space and time.
Increased trade, expanding transportation networks, the Internet, invasive species – all have made everything seem closer. That has enormous consequences for environmental and socioeconomic sustainability.
Thomas Baerwald, National Science Foundation program director, observes that traditional analyses in the natural and social sciences presumed that many phenomena were predominantly the product of local conditions and processes.
"While local factors remain significant,” Baerwald said, "the researchers participating in this symposium highlighted ways in which geographic scales of interaction have changed significantly in recent decades. NSF and the research community now are exploring these new dynamics in order to enhance basic understanding and consider ways to enhance the lives of people and the environment we inhabit."
In addition to Liu, other presenters at this symposium were:
Liu leads CHANS-Net: Human-Nature Network, an international network of research on coupled human and natural systems. It facilitates communication and collaboration among scholars from around the world interested in coupled human and natural systems and strives to find sustainable solutions that both benefit the environment and enable people to thrive. It is funded by the NSF. Liu's research is also supported by AgBioResearch at MSU.
The Human-Nature Lab/Center for Systems Integration and Sustainability at MSU integrates ecology with socioeconomics, demography and other disciplines for ecological sustainability from local, national to global scales.
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