This article and presentation provides students with an easy-to-understand overview of doughnut economics, a theoretical economic system that is both ecologically and socially responsible.
It incorporates twelve social priorities identified as UN Sustainable Development Goals and nine planetary boundaries identified in a scientific paper published in 2015.
Teaching Tips
Positives
The article links to other resources that could be incorporated into this topic.
This presentation is simple enough for students to understand, even if they do not have much background knowledge in economics.
Additional Prerequisites
Students should have some familiarity with the concepts of gross domestic product, consumerism, and economic growth.
The presentation is available as a Google Doc, PDF, Google Slides presentation, or simply on the webpage. The TED Talk video is only embedded in the Google Slides presentation.
Differentiation
Economics classes could have students work in groups to come up with a business plan that solves an ecological problem and a social problem.
Ethics classes could discuss what living within the doughnut will look like for different groups of people around the world. Students could reflect on the following questions:
Which groups of people will see an improvement in their quality of life if the world begins to operate within the doughnut?
What kinds of things might some groups of people have to give up in order for the world to live within the doughnut?
Who will benefit from staying within the ecological boundaries of the doughnut?
Other resources on this topic include this activity and worksheet on creating a personal doughnut, this article about the UN's 17 Sustainable Development Goals, and this video about human impacts on the Earth's systems.
Scientist Notes
This resource describes the doughnut economy and how it can be personalized. The scope is to reduce the carbon footprint and achieve environmental sustainability in the current economic realities. This tool is recommended for teaching and use.
Standards
Science and Engineering
ESS3: Earth and Human Activity
HS-ESS3-1 Construct an explanation based on evidence for how the availability of natural resources, occurrence of natural hazards, and changes in climate have influenced human activity.
HS-ESS3-3 Create a computational simulation to illustrate the relationships among management of natural resources, the sustainability of human populations, and biodiversity.
Social Studies
Personal Finance & Economics
Global Connections (F2): Students understand economic aspects of unity and diversity in Maine, the United States, and the world, including Maine Native American communities, by analyzing how resource distribution effects wealth, poverty, and other economic factors.