“it’s not a priority for the electorate.” - it’s worth diving deeper here, rather than stopping at this surface level of thinking.
For example:
- Why is concern about climate change and the environment less of priority in Australia than other highly educated, OECD countries?
- What is the role of our media environment; in particular, the narratives from dominant NewsCorp and Sky News?
- How has the Overton Window shaped what people pay attention to in terms of public policy and possible futures?
- Acknowledging that mining and extraction have played a large part in the history of Australia’s economic development but we now need to transition to renewables and cleaner industries, what changes do we need to make to policies, public discourse, science education, jobs-ready training, systems and structures?
- What narratives, systems and structures are favouring short termism and limiting our ability as a nation to address long term issues? Experts and government agencies are fully aware that the climate crisis already impacting (and will have massive effects on) global trade, the economy, jobs and growth, health, education, cost of living, home ownership. The Insurance industry is sounding the alarm already.. Impacts on communities worldwide through bushfire, flood and other natural disasters are just the starting point. So, thinking broadly, how might we improve our systems so that we don’t just keep throwing money at short-term fixes, and start to make change that will could massively change the future for Australians?
These are complex issues that need layers of analysis. Systems Thinking is a useful approach, rather than thinking about just the citizens, politicians, and industry in isolation
**More about Aus attitudes to climate issues: ** www.abc.net.au/news/2020-02-05/…/11878510--- tps://…lowyinstitute.org/…/australian-attitudes-t…
Systems thinking and climate change: “In the context of climate change, a systems thinking approach refers to understanding and predicting people’s response to the crisis by exploring the factors and vulnerabilities that influence them. It involves simultaneously seeing the overall climate picture and how it intersects with health, gender, livelihoods, and other sectors–this helps achieve a more comprehensive understanding of the issue.” idronline.org/…/connecting-the-dots-systems-think…
Short online course: futurelearn.com/…/using-systems-thinking-to-tackl…
null_dot@lemmy.dbzer0.com 5 days ago
Really? I think people are too busy being terrified about the US descent into fascism and tearing down global trade. That has ultimately had a much stronger impact on this election than either parties climate change policies.
sarahsquirrel@aussie.zone 5 days ago
Yes, and systems thinking would encourage us to explore why that is: Starting with understanding the patterns, systems and structures, mental models that cause ppl (especially in Aus) to treat Climate Change like a less important problem than the rise of fascism.
Hallokas@pawb.social 5 days ago
I mean as someone who is deeply concerned about climate change… our main military ally becoming a Fat poorly run Nazi state with nukes is kind of a big deal…
Both are problems one is like a fire on a cooktop the other is like a more like a leaking pipe in a wall both will ruin your home… But you put out the fire before you call the plumber
sarahsquirrel@aussie.zone 3 days ago
Agreed, we must direct a lot of attention to what’s happening in the US. But we have multiple government departments to work on concurrent crises (not one person with one phone).
null_dot@lemmy.dbzer0.com 5 days ago
Amazing.