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María Novo bets on a XXI century characterized by the small, the close and the slow.

The president of the association Slow People gave the second lecture FORUN2014

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María Novo, during her speech. She was accompanied by Fares Ibrahim Sami, delegate of the students.
PHOTO: Manuel Castells
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Public attending the lecture.
PHOTO: Manuel Castells
16/01/14 15:53 Chus Cantalapiedra

"The 20th century was the century of the large, the distant and the fast. If the 21st century is to have a human face, it must be a century characterized by the small, the near and the slow," said María Novo, president of association Slow People and UNESCO professor of Environmental Education and sustainable development at UNED, during the second lecture of congress Forun 2014.

During the session, which was attended by a hundred students and professors of the University, he spoke of the importance of reflecting on the relationship between time and ecological sustainability, social and political sustainability, and sustainability staff: "Time is a non-renewable resource : we spend our lives thinking about how to use our money, which in the end is a renewable resource , and yet we often make a frivolous use of time, which is a resource that cannot be recovered".

On the problem of ecological sustainability, among other things, he explained that human beings, like any other species, have to impact nature with their actions, "the problem is that we destroy nature faster than it takes to regenerate. If we continue with this rate of extraction of resource and pollution, in the first twenty years of the 21st century we will have consumed as many resources as in the entire 20th century".

The world as a big factory

In the area of social and political sustainability, María Novo stressed that happiness is a word that is not in fashion, "productivity is in fashion". "Increasingly," she said, "a "chinization of the world" is taking place, China is seen as a great factory and the world tends to that, to impose a productivism at all costs. "Therefore, there is a risk in our societies: to forget that the richness of life is to live to live," he said.

Regarding sustainability, staff emphasized that the ends of the market usurp the ends of our own lives: "The human being has become a machine at the service of the market and the well-being of people has taken a back seat. He added: "If we want to move towards global sustainability, each person is challenged to take ownership of their own time (...) The challenge is to build a new normality in which normality is not running around, stress and being busy".

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