Swedish Aral Sea Society
Our Work
The Swedish Aral Sea Society wants to contribute to efforts for democracy and development in the Aral Sea region. The overall goal of our business is to increase knowledge in Sweden and the world about the situation in the Aral Sea area. We want to influence politicians and authorities, national and international organizations into concrete action in favour of sustainable development in the Aral Sea area.
Today, virtually all knowledge and opinion is lacking in Sweden. We also want to influence the political decision-making process in Sweden. There is still very little discussion about the Aral Sea area, and few decisions are taken on aid efforts. Our organization wants to see more humanitarian projects in the Aral Sea area.
By having an effective seminar activity, we want to raise interest in the area so that projects for a development that benefits equality and sustainable development can start in the region. The political situation makes efforts more difficult, but we believe that it makes it even more important for our organization to continue operating our business.
The purpose of our work is to:
- Spread information about the Aral Sea area
- Create opinion on the environmental and health situation in the Aral Sea area.
- Influence politicians and authorities, national and international organizations on concrete action.
- Conduct your own projects.
Download, read and learn more on the Aral Sea and the environmental disaster in the Aral Sea region.
The Baltic University Programme
Sustainable Development Course

This course in an update of the earlier BUP course A Sustainable Baltic Region (SBR). The original SBR course was printed and published in 1996 – 1997.
This update was first published on the internet in 2013. Some links and illustrations have been further updated in 2017 and 2023.
Introducing Sustainable Development
You have certainly already many times encountered the term sustainable development. You see it in newspapers, in political discussions and today even in advertisements. It became well known after the United Nations Conference in Rio de Janeiro, 1992. As this was just at the end of the Cold War the nations of the world were unusually united: both East and West, industrialized and developing nations took part. Since then, sustainable development has increasingly become common vocabulary.
Development is perceived as something positive, a qualitative improvement. Sustainable refers to something that can or should last in the long-term. The first reasons for the concern for sustainable development was the fear that the world would not last, that it was on a wrong track. That fear has since then mounted. We see increasing climate change and its consequences: disasters, such as storms, floods, and draughts and a melting arctic ice. We see declining or collapsing fish stocks, biodiversity decline and deforestation. While greenhouse gases in the atmosphere increase unabated, resources such as oil, phosphorus and several metals seem to approach their end. The situation is already an emergency; no wonder that much despair about the future for themselves and their children.
As a counterforce, the idea of sustainable development has become one of the leading aspirations of humankind in our time. Civil society organizations as well as governments all over the world have embraced the concept. It has become the foremost challenge of the 21st century, and the most important tool to address our problems. What is it actually?
Sustainable development is different from many other concepts, as it is so all-inclusive. It includes everything from personal ideas and perceptions, to technical development and political programs. It is based on knowledge, which partly is age-old, e.g. in agriculture, and partly completely new, such as new technologies and social and economic arrangements. As a knowledge-based undertaking, sustainable development is based on a systems approach. One refers to the dimensions of sustainable development as ecological, social and economic, which all are interdependent and all needs to be included. That makes sustainability as a topic of study challenging. In at least some areas, we are all beginners. It also opens up for dialogue and different views and opinions.
But we need this study. We need an ongoing dialogue to foster a shared vision of how to progress to a better future; we need an established theory and practice of sustainable development. With the present course, offered to anyone interested, the Baltic University Programme aims to contribute to this agenda. You are invited as a student to use a part or all of the material. We sincerely hope that you will join the group of those who contribute to a change, and create a better future.
Contents of the BUP
Sustainable Development Course
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