F1ES 4440 - Sufficiency Philosophy, Politics and Economics.

Sufficiency is “a set of policy measures and daily practices which avoid the demand for energy, materials, land, water, and other natural resources, while delivering wellbeing for all within planetary boundaries” (Saheb, 2021) (IPCC, 2022 )
The sufficiency concept is grounded in theories developed in different disciplines ranging from philosophy and earth system science to economics, psychology, physics, political and social science. The inter-disciplinarity of the sufficiency concept make it unique and at the same time difficult to grasp by scholars and policymakers. Our journey will start with an introduction to the sufficiency concept as defined and framed in each of the disciplines where it is considered. This will be followed by a deep dive to governmental comments,
to the latest IPCC report on climate mitigation, on sufficiency and the politics of sufficiency in France, the only OECD country to consider sufficiency in its 2015 energy transition law. The course will end with an overview of the Sufficiency Economy; how it differs from existing concepts such as post-growth and Doughnut economics and how sufficiency could help humanity in addressing the challenges of the 21st century.
------------------------------------------------------- COP26: Sufficiency should be first, Saheb, 2021, Buildings and Cities Journal Climate Change 2022 Mitigation of Climate Change Working Group III Contribution to the Sixth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, IPCC, 2022 -------------------------------------------------- The course will be participatory and co-creative.

Learning Outcomes
1. Understanding the sufficiency concept and what it brings to sustainability and global security
2. Methods to bridge concepts from different disciplines
3. Critical analysis of politics in science

Professional Skills
Strategies to succeed when working in the interface between science and politics
Yamina SAHEB
Séminaire
English
Course workload:
Attendance: 2 hours a week / 24 hours a semester
Reading and Preparation for Class: 30 hours a semester
Research and Preparation for Group Work: 4 hours a semester
Research and Writing for Individual Assessments: 10 hours a semester

Being curious, open-minded and critical of mainstream politics, governance and economics
Spring 2024-2025
Assessment:
- Group evaluation (maximum 3 students per group)
- Assessments of governments' comments on sufficiency in the IPCC mitigation report.
- Individual evaluation
- From the 2nd session onwards, each new session will start with a quiz to assess the learnings of the previous session
- Short essay of maximum 500 words on how to introduce sufficiency in a selected country/region
- Oral presentation, in which students are expected to be as creative as possible, of the essay at the final session.
The final mark will be provided two weeks after the last session and will be calculated as the weighted average of the 4 marks; i) Average mark of the quizzes (30%), ii) group assessment of gvts comments (30%), individual essay and presentation (40%)
1. To sufficiency, and beyond! Liam Shields, 2020
2. The sufficiency politics: making it easier to live a good life, Uwe Schneidewind, Angelika Zahrn, 2016
3. Beyond capitalism: Foundations for Sustainable Prosperity, Tim Jackson, 2016
4. Practice Theory: What It Is, Its Philosophical Base, and What It Offers , Jörgen Sandberg et al. Organization studies, 2018
Supplementary readings: (optional)
6. Generation Z's perceptions of a good life beyond consumerism: Insights from the United States and Finland, Miia Grénman et al. International Journal of Consumer Studies, 2023