How do you reverse a legacy narrative?
Felicity Green
For purpose leaders and advocates often come up against narratives that are outdated and need to be challenged. How do you do that? Felicity Green explains.
In the pursuit of making the world fairer, safer and more sustainable, for-purpose leaders often come up against unhelpful narratives. There comes a time to recognise where this thinking is outdated and needs to be challenged.
This Strategy Spotlight focuses on the work of the Australian Conservation Foundation (ACF) and how it is challenging the narrative that we must choose between economic growth and the health of our planet. Ask CEO Kelly O?Shanassy, as I did for this article, and she?ll argue that we can have our cake and eat it too.
By way of background, O?Shanassy's origin story for becoming an advocate for nature began at an early age, growing up in the country and experiencing multiple droughts. Witnessing livestock with nothing to eat or drink instilled in her the realisation that everything is dependent on nature. O?Shanassy's mother was a schoolteacher, her father a policeman, and people frequently came to their door seeking help on a variety of matters. Early on, O?Shanassy learned the value of not judging what?s happened in the past but focussing instead on ?where to? in the future. She has carried this through to her advocacy work today, changing what is, to what should be.
In that vein, ACF argues for us to reject the narrative that we need deficit thinking to transition to sustainability, and instead embrace abundant thinking. The loudest megaphones have been telling us the story of nature versus economics for a long time ? that protecting nature will cost too much. It?s time to rewrite this story. Mindset is one thing that is 100 per cent up to us, something we can change, and we need to move past the mindset of scarcity and loss. The notion of de-growth is a losing concept, as is that of a steady state economy. For example, we need 2000 per cent more electricity if we?re going to electrify everything with renewables ? we don?t want to de-grow the electricity sector. We need a regenerative economy that is good for people and the planet.
ACF argues that our single planet provides everything we need and we:
- Have the technologies and skills by and large for climate change mitigation
- Know what we need to do to stop the extinction crisis
- Acknowledge that regeneration creates an abundance of jobs across industries.
- Shift the context within which business and politics operates.
- Don?t be afraid of partnering with unusual bedfellows.
- Develop a long-term strategic vision, but remain agile about execution