Sustainability and Eco-Justice in Everyday Research - RE4GREEN
Sustainability and Eco-Justice in Everyday Research - RE4GREEN
Research shapes the world – not just through big discoveries, but through the everyday choices we make: what questions we ask, which methods we use, how we share our work. The RE4GREEN micromodules can be used individually or together to guide students, researchers, citizen scientists, people reviewing research proposals and those teaching research ethics on how to embed sustainability and eco-justice knowledge, skills and values in research.
Related Initiative
Sustainability and Eco-Justice in Everyday Research
- Understand the concept of environmental justice
- Recognize how environmental harms and benefits are often distributed unequally across different communities.
- Reflect on the responsibility researchers hold in shaping sustainable and fair outcomes and how disparities may arise within the context of their own research or professional practice.
- Describe five key ethical principles related to Environmental Justice and their implications for research practice: 1) Leave No One Behind; 2) Do No Significant Harm (DNSH); 3) Precautionary Principle; 4) Polluter Pays Principle; 5) Informed consent
- Apply each principle to one’s own research practice.
- Understand the role of ecofeminist principles in research;
- Apply relevant ecofeminist principles to various research dilemmas.
Embracing Complexity
By the end of the module participants will be able to:
- Understand the wicked nature of sustainability and recognize the complexity of balancing environmental, social, and economic dimensions in engineering decisions.
- Apply transversal skills — Perspective Taking, Systems Thinking, and Negotiation — to analyze and solve complex sustainability challenges in engineering contexts.
- Evaluate material and design choices considering environmental impacts, societal wellbeing, and ethical responsibilities to promote sustainable engineering practices.
- Reflect on the broader responsibilities of engineers in creating solutions that are socially responsible, environmentally sound, and technically effective.
- Identify and distinguish key types of justice (e.g., recognition, spatial, distributive, epistemic, intergenerational) that shape environmental justice debates.
- Recognize how certain green initiatives overlook broader social and historical contexts.
By the end of the module, participants should be able to:
- Identify systemic factors (e.g., public policy, health equity, urban inequality) that shape research impacts and responsibilities.
- Map research linkages to climate justice, interspecies justice, and gendered (urban) contexts using the “Crisis Tree”.
- Articulate how their research connects with environmental and climate justice using intersectionality-based thinking.
- Identify and reflect on intersectional dimensions (e.g. gender, race, class, disability) in climate and health research.
- Explore how power and privilege operate in environmental and health research design and policy influence.
- Formulate more inclusive and socially just research questions using reflexive prompts.
- Evaluate different approaches to research design in terms of fairness, inclusivity, and responsiveness to underrepresented communities.
- Apply responsible research methods in citizen science or community engagement in climate-affected contexts.
- Evaluate different approaches to research design in terms of fairness, inclusivity, and responsiveness to underrepresented communities.
- Apply responsible research methods in citizen science or community engagement in climate-affected contexts.
