What is the Doughnut?
An introduction to the concept at the heart of Doughnut Economics
Version 1.0 (September 2020)
Overview
This tool is an introduction to the concept at the heart of Doughnut Economics. It's been designed as both a document that can be shared and a presentation that can be given in a classroom, a workshop or a meeting. Either download it as a pdf (below), open it within Google drive (links below) or scroll down to read on this page.
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What is the Doughnut?
Think of it as a compass for human prosperity in the 21st century, whose goal is to meet the needs of all people within the means of the planet.
It consists of two concentric rings:
- A social foundation – to ensure that no one is left falling short on life’s essentials.
- An ecological ceiling – to ensure that humanity does not collectively overshoot planetary boundaries.
Between these two boundaries lies a doughnut-shaped space that is both ecologically safe and socially just – a space in which humanity can thrive.
The essence of the Doughnut
1. The social foundation – below which lies critical human deprivation
2. The ecological ceiling – beyond which lies critical planetary degradation
These two boundaries are foundational in the sense that humanity should always seek to avoid critical human deprivation and critical planetary degradation. But how best to define their specific dimensions and measure their current status relative to desired outcomes will keep evolving over time.
The Doughnut’s dimensions
(as of 2017)
The Social Foundation
The 12 dimensions of the social foundation are derived from the social priorities agreed in the Sustainable Development Goals (UN, 2015).
The Ecological Ceiling
The 9 dimensions of the ecological ceiling are the nine planetary boundaries defined by Earth-system scientists (Steffen et al., 2015).
Quantifying the Doughnut
The image below reveals the current state of humanity and our planetary home: think of it as humanity’s ‘selfie’ in the early days of the 21st century.
Each dimension is measured, where possible, with 1 or 2 indicators, and the red wedges show the extent of shortfall and overshoot of the Doughnut’s social and planetary boundaries.
It shows us that millions of people still fall short on all 12 of the social dimensions, and that humanity has already overshot at least four planetary boundaries (air pollution and chemical pollution are currently unquantified).
To achieve the 21st century goal of meeting the needs of all within the means of the living planet means eliminating all of the red from the Doughnut diagram, and this must be done from both sides at the same time.
Find out more
- Explore the dimensions of the social foundation and ecological ceiling
- Explore the selection of these dimensions, including their limitations
- Read chapter one of Doughnut Economics: Seven Ways to Think Like a 21st-Century Economist
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Cristina Arciniegas
Reading, England, United Kingdom
a lifetime learner
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Jessica Hardy
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Catalina Hoyos Restrepo
Culver City, California, United States of America
I am a filmmaker and restaurant chain partner in Colombia. I have a BA in Molecular Biology from UC Berkeley and an MFA in Filmmaking from NYFA in Los Angeles. I have owned several companies and am on the board of my family's restaurant chain which operates in my native Colombia.
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Brian Dowling
Hacienda Heights, California, United States of America
I serve as Treasurer for the California Doughnut Economics Coalition (CalDEC.org).
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Marija Katrina Dambe
Riga, Vidzeme, Latvia
I am a young architect currently working in Riga. My work is dedicated to combine design with sustainability and affordability.
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Richard Carter
Suffolk
Lecturer in finance and sustainability. Previously responsible for finance and sustainability at Adnams plc, where we halved our carbon footprint, halved distillery water use and achieved zero waste to landfill, all of which earnt us 16 major awards in seven years (including HRH Queen's Award for sustainability). Director at IEMA (Institute of Environmental Management and Assessment - the global professiobal body for sustainability). Board member on ICAEW sustainability committee and at several not-for-profits.
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Marte Ulltveit-Moe
Kristiansand, Vest-Agder, Norge
I work as a local councillor for the Green Party in Kristiansand, southern Norway. Currently writing a book about the repair business. This sector of the economy create jobs and minimizes the use of the earth's resources. How can we create a system where reuse and repair is the norm?
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Kate Lock
York, England, United Kingdom
I work in climate change communications and policy at the University of Leeds in the UK. I'm involved with two funded projects: the Place-Based Climate Action Network (PCAN) and the UK Climate Resilience Programme. My work is very action-oriented and includes trialling a new collaborative form of governance involving place-based partnerships, bringing together the public, private and civic sectors. I'm very involved in sustainability where I live, too, and am a member of One Planet York as well as York Environment Forum and York Green Party.