Glossary

These are the definitions that I live by, discovered after deeply researching the science, philosophy, and systems behind each topic for the last 10 years. The definitions were written by me, unless otherwise quoted. Each definition’s scientific grounding and main inspirations are cited as sources.


Sustainability

Sustainability is a dynamic system with three main interconnected sub-systems: 

  • human behaviour (people)

  • environmental (ecological, planet)

  • industrial (economic, profit). 

The field of sustainability science studies the interconnections in the sustainability system. Sustainability can be achieved when the three sub-systems co-exist in balance.

SOURCES

Circularity

Circularity has existed for millennia. It’s an approach and mindset of keeping materials and the Earth’s resources in use for as long as possible before disposing of them. 

Today, circularity is generally used to refer to the 3 principles of the circular economy:

  • Design out pollution, toxicity and waste

  • Keep products and materials in use to preserve value

  • Regenerate natural systems

The circular economy is an economic system that decouples economic growth from resource use by reducing waste and recirculating resources. There are two sides to the circular economy: regenerative and technical.

The circular economy offers strategies to implement circularity, is an alternative to the currently dominant linear economy, and is a tool to achieve sustainability.

SOURCES

Regeneration

Fitting within the circular economy, there is the regenerative economy, which focuses on biological, natural, and renewable resources, materials, and practices. 

“A regenerative economy, solution, practice, or business is designed to generate value while restoring the biosphere, and its capacity to provide ecosystem services.” - Manuel Maqueda (Harvard professor)

The biosphere is all organic life on Earth (including humans), which means it encompasses all ecosystems. 

An ecosystem, according to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), is “a functional unit consisting of living organisms, their non-living environment and the interactions within and between them.”

Ecosystem services are defined by the IPCC as “ecological processes or functions having monetary or non-monetary value to individuals or society at large.” Examples include purifying water and air, sequestering (storing) carbon, and providing food and resilience. 

Unhealthy soil cannot naturally perform ecosystem services. 

Therefore, regeneration looks at how to actively improve the health of ecosystems, and that can be done by boosting soil health and biodiversity so that ecosystem services can naturally occur. Regenerative materials can biodegrade and safely return to the earth.

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Systems Thinking

According to Donella Meadows, a system is "a set of elements or parts that is coherently organised and interconnected in a pattern or structure that produces a characteristic set of behaviours, often classified as its 'function' or 'purpose'”. 

Therefore, systems thinking looks at the interconnected relationships of a system’s elements or parts rather than looking at them in isolation, which allows us to see how the elements or parts interact to produce a system’s behaviour. 

Systems thinking allows us to solve, or at least understand, the root causes of complex problems while identifying unintended consequences. 

(Generally speaking, a system is unsustainable if it consumes resources more quickly than they can regenerate.)

SOURCES

  • DE VRIES, B. J. M. (2012). SUSTAINABILITY SCIENCE. CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS. HTTPS://DOI.ORG/10.1017/CBO9780511794469

  • MEADOWS, D. (2008). THINKING IN SYSTEMS: A PRIMER (D. WRIGHT ED.). CHELSEA GREEN PUBLISHING.

Ecodesign

Ecodesign, relating to the European Union’s Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation, looks at how a product can be designed to be more sustainable by having a lower environmental impact and be more circular by improving quality, durability, repairability, upcyclability, and recyclability. 

Designing products and systems for circularity and regeneration prioritises eco-effectiveness (how to have a positive impact on the environment and actively improve the health of ecosystems) instead of eco-efficiency (which looks at reducing negative environmental impact while efficiently using resources).

SOURCES

If you’re curious to know my definition for other terms on the website, I recommend contacting me so that I can keep the Glossary updated, and while you wait for the update, explore The Sustainable Fashion Glossary by Condé Nast.