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As COVID-19 emerged as a phenomenon of the total environment, and despite the intertwined and complex relationships that make humanity an organic part of the Bio- and Geospheres, the majority of our responses to it have been corrective in character, with few or no consideration for unintended consequences which bring about further vulnerability to unanticipated global events. Tackling COVID-19 entails a systemic and precautionary approach to human-nature relations, which we frame as regaining diversity in the Geo-, Bio-, and Anthropospheres. Its implementation requires nothing short of an overhaul in the way we interact with and build knowledge from natural and social environments. Hence, we discuss the urgency of shifting from current to precautionary approaches to COVID-19 and look, through the lens of diversity, at the anticipated benefits in four systems crucially affecting and affected by the pandemic: health, land, knowledge and innovation. Our reflections offer a glimpse of the sort of changes needed, from pursuing planetary health and creating more harmonious forms of land use to providing a multi-level platform for other ways of knowing/understanding and turning innovation into a source of global public goods. These exemplary initiatives introduce and solidify systemic thinking in policymaking and move priorities from reaction-based strategies to precautionary frameworks.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8861146 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.154029 | DOI Listing |
Environ Manage
August 2025
The Institute for International Business Law, University of Fribourg, Fribourg, Switzerland.
Intergenerational and intra-generational equity have gained increasing significance in the development of international environmental law, particularly in response to the accelerating loss of marine biodiversity. The landmark Agreement on the Conservation and Sustainable Use of Marine Biological Diversity of Areas Beyond National Jurisdiction (BBNJ Agreement) introduces a novel legal framework for global ocean governance, recognizing the shared responsibility of States to manage and sustainably use marine biological diversity for both present and future generations. This article examines how the BBNJ Agreement incorporates and operationalizes sustainable equity principles and assesses the implications of the inter-/intra-generational principles for advancing environmental management across theory, policy, and practice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Bioeng Biotechnol
August 2025
School of Philosophy, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan, China.
The governance approaches for biotechnological risks mainly include the laissez-faire approach, which emphasizes "technology first" but suffers from lagging governance; the preventive approach, which emphasizes "safety first" and uses quantitative risk-benefit analysis as the main method in a single dimension; and the precautionary approach, which also emphasizes "safety first" but has three dimensions of cognition, procedure, and action, and is characterized by forward-looking and proportionality. Emerging biotechnologies are developing rapidly while being filled with a large amount of uncertainty, which increases the complexity of potential biotechnological risks. The precautionary approach, which emphasizes cultivating a cautious awareness and future responsibility in cognition, reversing the burden of proof in procedure, and ensuring that the level of precautionary measures is proportionate to the level of risk in action, is conducive to dealing with various risks including uncertainty risks and meets the needs of biotechnological risks governance, providing a strong theoretical guarantee for the balance between technological progress and social security development.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
August 2025
Institut des Sciences de l'Évolution de Montpellier, Univ. de Montpellier, CNRS, Institut de recherche pour le développement, Montpellier 34090, France.
Fish population biomass fluctuates through time in ways that may be either gradual or abrupt. While abrupt shifts in fish population productivity have been shown to be common, they are rarely integrated into stock assessment or fishery management, in part because of the difficulty of predicting when abrupt shifts may occur and which stocks are prone to such shifts. In this study, we address the latter challenge by designing a mechanism-agnostic context-specific approach that is based on exploiting the dynamical properties of fish population fluctuations for detecting potential abrupt shifts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntegr Environ Assess Manag
August 2025
Water Ecosystem Sciences, Science Division, Department of Environment, Tourism, Science and Innovation, Queensland Government.
Accumulation of perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) has been demonstrated in biota across the globe. Higher trophic-level air-breathing organisms that live in or depend upon aquatic ecosystems are most at risk from PFOS and other bioaccumulative per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS). Nonetheless, there are very few guidelines available for the protection of air-breathing wildlife.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntegr Environ Assess Manag
July 2025
NCASI, Sarasota, FL, USA.
Across all of its program areas, the United States Environmental Protection Agency conducts risk assessments to evaluate the potential adverse effects of environmental hazards on ecological and human health. Traditionally, these assessments rely on deterministic methods that use point estimates for key parameters and incorporate uncertainty factors and precautionary assumptions to account for uncertainties in data and variability in environmental conditions, exposure pathways, and population characteristics. However, these approaches are unnecessarily conservative for the general population yet fail to transparently account for the vulnerabilities of susceptible populations.
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