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Chapter 4:

Towards a Sustainable World

Name of Presenter: Lovely Khaye Anas Name of Instructor: Eldrich T. Guarino


Jhon Cris Salazar
Marcel Ignacio
Mary Joy Zaulda
Kail Cortes
Rosamie Ricaforte
Jenamea Isuga
Year & Major: BEEd 2-2 Rating:
Presenter Number:
Date of Presentation:

Sustainable Development
efforts must be made to produce good
 Green policies aim to balance current food to ensure our well being
benefits with future environmental,
social, and personal health benefits, Environmental Health Challenges
focusing on limiting development’s
impact on the environment.  The Philippines is a major global
 Sustainability has three pillar: economic, contributor to plastic waste, contributing
environmental and social informally significantly to water pollution due to
known as profits. the widespread use of single-use
plastics.

Global Food Security Here are the common environmental problem of


the countries in the world:
 Food security, as defined by USAID and
WHO, refers to the continuous 1. Climate change: global warming and
availability, access, and utilization of greenhouse effect.
sufficient food for a productive and
healthy life. 2. Overpopulation

 Global population growth challenges 3. Deforestation which led to the reduction of


food supply, with Asian countries facing oxygen and increase in carbon dioxide.
hunger and malnutrition. Philippines
faces challenges like natural calamities, 4. Pandemic and other health problems due to
unregulated fishing, and insufficient polluted environment such as dengue,
processing capacity. leptospirosis and malaria.
 The FAO, UN, and USDA are all 5. Alteration in the food system due to
working to combat poverty and genetically modified food products.
strengthen agricultural production
through various programs and
Women and Reproductive Rights
initiatives.
 Some countries with growing economies
 Food security is crucial for survival, as
have struggles also in their growing
it is the basic need for life. Poor quality
population which motivated them to
food affects our quality of life, and
introduce or strengthen their
reproductive health laws, including citizenship, economic global citizenship,
abortion. cultural global citizenship, social global
citizenship, environmental global
 Women were given the power to choose citizenship, spiritual global citizenship,
whether they will have children or critical global citizenship, and moral
sometimes abortions were allowed by global citizenship.
the government upon the request of the
mother (like in North America and
Europe).
What Does It Mean To Be A Global Citizen?
 In the Philippines abortion is a crime.
A “global citizen” is someone who identifies
 Muslim county do not condone abortion. with being part of an emerging world
community and whose actions contribute to
 The Neo-Malthusian theory was building this community’s values and practices.
popularized in the late 18th century by an
English political economist, Thomas Global citizenship nurtures personal respect and
Malthus, who wrote his “Essay on the respect for others wherever they live.
Principle of Population” (Mellos, 1988).
A Global Citizen is someone who:
 In the Feminist perspective, advocates
are against any form of population  is aware of the wider world and has a
control which are compulsory by nature. sense of their own role as a world
citizen
Global citizenship
 Respects and values diversity
The idea of global citizenship is not new.
Socrates previously referred to his country of  has an understanding of how the world
origin as “the world” in the year 450. Diogenes works
proclaimed himself a “citizen of the world” a
century later. Despite the fact that the global
 is outraged by social injustice
aspect of citizenship has existed for a while.
 participates in the community at a range
Global citizenship allows individuals to live,
of levels, from the local to the global
work, and play within trans-national norms,
challenging national boundaries and
sovereignty. Traditional citizenship is being  is willing to act to make the world a
remolded by trans-national activism. more equitable and sustainable place

Global reformers, elite global businesspeople,  takes responsibility for their actions.
global environmental managers, politically
astute regionalists, and transnational activists The central tenet of globalization is international
with grassroots activism at its center are among economic integration (Claudio and Abinales,
Falk’s categories of global citizens from 1994 2018.

Types of Global Citizenship:. Globalization could be anchored in economy,


culture and politics. Because of the globalization
 There are eight different types of global of politics, foreign affairs were conducted to
citizenship, according to Oxley and cement the relations between and among other
Morris (2013), cited by Miller and states (Claudio and Abinales, 2018).
Reysen (2018): political global
Governments must continue to devise ways of
minimize the most damaging effects of
economic globalization while ensuring the
benefits for everyone.

Global Filipino

The Philippines is a diverse country with


millennials and millenniors adopting American,
Japanese, Korean, and Mexican popular culture.
However, Filipinos also practice customs from
their home countries, including returning
overseas workers and migrant families. Despite
this, there is a call to preserve and revive
Filipino culture, with Pinoy music and arts being
promoted as a “reverse flow” from local to
overseas. Globalization has benefited the
Philippines, but it’s important to remember who
they are.

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