Humanism and Sustainability
Back in 2009 I went for
training at the United Nations Centre in Vienna, Austria. This was to be certified in being a
consultant for the United Nation’s Global Compact within the developing
countries. This was the only agency of
the United Nations that is tasked with promoting businesses in the developing
countries. Developing Countries are
those countries who are more economically stable than the Least Developed
Countries, but are not at the level of the Most Developed Countries like the
US. Least Developed Countries is a
preferred name to “Third World Countries” which sound like they are “Third
Class Countries. I had a mentor, a
candidate for the Nobel Peace Prize on year, who preferred calling them
“Two-Thirds World Countries” as that was a better representation.
Shortly after I returned, I
wrote this blog but didn’t have a blogging site at that time. So I am including it here and now. This will be used as a basis for several
blogs I plan to publish on the United Nations’ Sustainability Development Goals
(SDGs) for the their 2015 and Beyond program scheduled to replace the Millenium
Development Goals for the civil sector combined with their Global Compact for
the business sector.
Humanism and Sustainability
I have just returned from one week of intensive training for
Sustainability
consulting and Sustainability reporting for Small and Medium Sized Enterprises
(SMEs). This was through the United
Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO)
in Vienna , Austria . UNIDO is the only United Nations agency
tasked with developing jobs and work opportunities in the developing
countries. (The other agencies, like
UNICEF, WHO, etc give aid and assistance to people in the least developed
countries.) Of the 20 attendees, 4 were
from Croatia ,
3 were from Bosnia ,
and one each from several countries including Ecuador , Moldova , Ukraine , Greece , Austria , Germany , etc. I was the only representative from the United States
and was also the only one there not involved in consulting in a developing
country. I was there not because of my
job, but just because I have become very involved in many aspects of the United
Nations as a personal interest and as a hobby – especially with their Global
Compact. As such, I have become quite
involved with the United Nations Global Compact which is the UN’s work with the
business sector in assuring that businesses are run in a Sustainable fashion.
As a quick explanation of business Sustainability, it is
determining how a business should operate now so that it will be viable 50
years from now. (Later, I will discuss
how this can apply to us as individuals who are Humanists.) This approach has evolved to be centered on
what is called Triple
Bottom Line Accountability (TBL) Instead of just “the bottom line” of a
business, which infers just the financial bottom line, TBL includes a bottom
line accountability of Environmental and Corporate Social Responsibility
(CSR). (Triple Bottom Line
accountability is also known as Profit/Planet/People accountability for those
who like alliterations.) A company is
not considered a viable company if it is successful financially, but
irresponsible environmentally. At the
same time, a company cannot do something for the environmental that is good if
that means it will fail financially. The
same is true with Corporate Social Responsibility. A company must operate responsibly in all
three areas.
A company must perform environmentally in such a way that it
will be viable in the future – that is, it cannot be depleting resources which
will adversely impact the business later.
As an example, I work for a large Fortune 200 company. They performed an energy audit and discovered
that they could not continue to use their energy resources in the same trend
and be viable later. They discovered
that within 25 years, between the increase in energy consumption and the
increase in energy prices, they would not be viable. They would not be able to afford the energy
that would be consumed if they did not resort to energy conservation and/or
energy alternatives. And they can look
at other environmental aspects and see that they need to change their whole
approach to include issues such as recycling, etc.
The same was true with Corporate
Social Responsibility (CSR). CSR involves both the external stakeholders
(shareholders, supply chain companies, customers, etc.) as well as internal
stakeholders (employees and middle management).
They discovered that projecting ahead 50 years, they would not be able
to draw on the available workforce the people they would need unless they
changed. There will not be the
demographics of white, male engineers available for them. So they have instituted many changes to
become an “Employer of Choice” to appeal to many of the minority groups, and
women. They have also seen that of the
four generations of workers now in the work force, the youngest generation is
motivated most by “making a difference”.
The younger generation wants to work in jobs where they can make a
difference (in the environment or socially) and/or work for a company that is
socially and environmentally responsible.
My company has also seen that to be the Employer of Choice, they must
reach out and become a sustaining member of the community – not as PR efforts,
but as sincere efforts to remain viable.
These assumptions of environmental and social responsibility
are because of business sense and not because they are showing themselves to be
“progressive” or a “tree-hugger”. The
shareholders are demanding that companies be more transparent so that the
investors can see how a company is operating in a sustainable fashion. Investors want to make sure a company is not
operating in an unsustainable manner and so TBL has become a business
imperative. I have been told that the
SEC is thinking of requiring companies to publish an annual Sustainability
Report by the year 2015.
How does this apply to us as individuals who are
Humanists? As a Humanist, I have the
ability and the responsibility to develop all that it means to be human both in
myself and in others. This definition
includes the word “responsibility”. Humanism
is more than a belief system, it is also a value system and one of our values
should be Responsibility.
As a Humanist, I have a responsibility to my
environment. There is a Native American
saying that says “We do not inherit the Earth from our ancestors, we borrow it
from our children.” As Humanists, we
need to insure that the environment will be just as viable for our future
generations as it is now. There is a
movement in some of the religious circles (especially among the young) that
mankind has a caretaker responsibility assigned by a god. We don’t need to take this direction from a
god to recognize our own responsibility for environmental sustainability. We can be good without a god and we can and
should do the right thing environmentally.
And as a Humanist, we should recognize our social responsibility. We have the responsibility to do what we can
to care for the vulnerables in our society, to narrow the gap between the haves
and the have-nots, to care for those who are in our first degree of separation
(family and friends) as well as those who are six degrees separated from
us. To sustain the global society, we
need to recognize our responsibilities in all of our social milieus. The continuation of the increase of the gap
between the haves and the have-nots is not sustainable.
It is striking to see how Business Sustainability has become
so prevalent in Europe while only beginning to
be used here in the States. (If I had
not known beforehand how much more prevalent this is in Europe, it would have
been embarrassing for me as a person from the United States at this training
session.) Although many of the top
Fortune US companies are now publishing annual Sustainability Reports, it is a
concept that has not become popular in the United States culture like it has
in Europe – even in the European developing
countries formerly of the Soviet Union . The whole concept is part of the general
vernacular in Europe and several European CEOs
were meeting and discussing what they could do to attract the best talent. They came to the decision that although most
young people looking for a job do not read the company’s annual Financial
Report, almost all of them (in Europe) will read the company’s annual
Sustainability Report. Over there, in
order to broaden the scope of the approach beyond that of corporations, they
are now using the term Responsibility Reporting.
Perhaps we as Humanists should include Responsibility
Reporting as some of our Key Performance Indicators at the individual
level. Imagine the branding image if
Humanists were known for their Environmental responsibilities and their Social
responsibilities as so many more businesses are becoming known.
David Kimball
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