Skip to main content
Login | Suomeksi | På svenska | In English

Browsing by study line "Global hållbarhet"

Sort by: Order: Results:

  • Schroderus, Carl Samuel (2024)
    This master's thesis examines the Finnish financial media's experience with the European Union's taxonomy for sustainable finance in 2021 and 2022, using Goffman's (1974) frame analysis. The study looks at the parties involved in the framing process in Kauppalehti and Helsingin Sanomat, as well as the themes, tones, and their connections in headlines and texts. The aim of the research is to increase understanding of the framing of topics related to sustainability in the media. There has been no previous research on the framing of the European sustainable finance taxonomy in Finland, which is why the research results fill a gap in a subject that has potentially significant effects on the operations of European companies in the future, especially in terms of mitigating and adaptation to climate change. The research results show that political actors are clearly the most active group in framing the topic, although individual journalists have a larger role in comparison to individual political actors. The European sustainable finance taxonomy has been framed in the media mainly around forests, energy, and biodiversity, often in a neutral or negative light in the years 2021 and 2022
  • Virtanen, Tia-Maria (2020)
    Earth’s overshoot day marks the date when humanity’s ecological footprint exceeds Earth’s biocapacity for the year. As the day fell on earlier every year it shows that our current consumption pattern is unsustainable. One of the main human sources of greenhouse gas emissions is related to household consumption and thus companies play an important role in developing consumption practices more sustainable for consumers as they are the main providers of products and services. This research examines the ways three Finnish companies guide consumers towards environmentally sustainable choices as well as drivers and barriers related to consumer guidance. The objective is to enlighten companies’ consumer guiding methods as part of corporate responsibility and understand which factors encourage and hinder companies to guide consumers. The research was conducted as a qualitative multiple-case study. The case companies were Valio, S Group’s grocery stores and Fazer. The research data was collected via companies’ sustainability reports and focused semi-structured interviews by interviewing the case companies’ employees working with corporate responsibility, environmental management and communication. The data was analyzed by data-driven content analysis. The findings show that the case companies use guiding methods to steer consumers to environmentally sustainable choices: information provision, choice editing, nudging and financial incentives. The current trends related to sustainability and responsibility as well as a potential competitive advantage, the protection of brand image, the benefits of a forerunner, and a corporate strategy in which sustainability is an integral part encourage companies to guide consumers. Whereas, the principle of consumers’ freedom of choice, the responsibility of a big operator as well as risks related to the development of innovations and being a forerunner cause tensions in consumer guidance. The results confirm that various tensions are related to guiding consumers towards sustainability. Especially, the concept of consumers’ freedom of choice is firmly embedded in the mindset of business. Therefore, future research could examine the ways to bring these tensions and underlying contradictions more strongly into the public discussion to find solutions to promote sustainable consumption for consumers among companies.
  • Pakarinen, Tytti (2019)
    On a global scale the amount of meals consumed outside home setting continues to increase, which means that food service sector has a significant role in reaching global sustainability goals. Finland has a long tradition of public food services and a significant part of Finnish people enjoy a government-subsidized daily lunch. As a student restaurant UniCafe participates in Kela-funded meal scheme, thus UniCafe’s meals follow Finnish Nutrition Recommendations’ nutritional criteria for meals. This research examines the ways UniCafe guides its customers to making environmentally sustainable choices in their restaurants. This thesis also reviews UniCafe’s environmental sustainability measures, most significant of which are offering sustainable meal options, sourcing responsible ingredients and products, proper waste sorting and reducing food waste. This research also dwells in to the reasons behind these environmental measures and examines UniCafe as a forerunner company in the food service sector. The level of acceptability of different customer guidance ways are also evaluated on a general level and within UniCafe clientele. This research was conducted via qualitative case study research approach. The data for this research was col-lected via semi-structured theme interviews by interviewing UniCafe and Ylva restaurant and support services staff. Additionally, primary research data also comprised of Ylva’s online publications on responsibility and business operations. The data was analyzed by qualitative theory-guiding content analysis. According to the results, UniCafe is a forerunner company due to its unique customer and ownership base. UniCafe is expected to take environmental sustainability into account in their daily operations and selections. Five different customer guidance ways used by UniCafe were identified in this research: forced choice re-striction, choice editing, nudging, financial incentives and informational strategies. Most UniCafe customers accept the use of these different customer guidance methods but UniCafe perceives forced choice restriction as problematic, particularly on campuses that do not have many UniCafe restaurants. The results show that UniCafe guides its customers in many ways to promote environmental sustainability of their operations and their customers. In addition, the results confirm that methods such as informational strat-egies are perceived as more acceptable but simultaneously less effective than methods that restrict freedom of choice. In general, UniCafe customers approve environmental sustainability measures and customer guidance. On the other hand, UniCafe’s unique position in the student lunch market in Helsinki metropole area means that the results of this research cannot be generalized to apply to other food service sector operators.
  • Huuskonen, Heli (2020)
    Socio-ecological transition refers to a fundamental change in the structure, culture, and practices of a socio-ecological system. Socio-ecological transitions have been studied especially from an ecological perspective. In recent years, cities have been studied more as socio-ecological systems. The role of individual actors in socio-ecological transitions has not been on a focus of previous research of socio-ecological systems. The study intends to fulfill this gap. This master's thesis examines two cases in Helsinki, namely the evacuation of the residents of Myllypuro Alakiventie in 1999 and the Kyläsaari waste incineration plant in 1983 as socio-ecological transitions. The purpose of the study is to describe the progress of the socio-ecological transition in both cases by placing the course of cases in adaptive circles. The second aim of the study is to find out whether the Helsinki City Administration was able to promote or slow down the progress of the socio-ecological transition, which is being studied in relation to other actors in the socio-ecological transition. As research material consist article from Helsingin Sanomat newspaper and documents from the City of Helsinki Archives. The Master’s thesis describes the progress of the socio-ecological transition in both cases, as well as the role of the actors in the transition. The results show that the City of Helsinki administration had a limited opportunity to promote and slow down the progress of the socio-ecological transition. Other actors in the socio-ecological transformation, such as the townspeople, were also able to influence the progression of the socio-ecological transformation, which made it difficult for city governments to slow down or promote the transformation. In particular, the conflict between the city government and the Helsinki citizens slowed or prevented the city government from reaching its goals. However, the study finds that the city administration was not able to prevent the complete socio-ecological transition in the study cases. Better communication with the citizens and the avoidance of conflicts would help the City of Helsinki's administration to influence the progress of the socio-ecological transition more effectively in the future.
  • Goldsmith, Felicity (2024)
    Cameroon’s forests and forest lands are home to diverse indigenous peoples and local communities. Cameroon has endured many colonial administrations and missionary influences throughout its history with British, French, and German rule having all left their mark on the nation’s land, plantation, and forestry sectors while realising their interests. In particular, the representation of indigeneity remains tainted within and beyond today’s land use sector and forest policy arena, and its related businesses and financial services. This thesis analyses the British colonial business media landscape to examine the dominant discourses surrounding the indigenous within the context of Cameroon’s land, forests, and plantations. Through understanding the narratives that have historically been broadcast to society and the public via business media, a greater understanding of the current status quo within the forestry sector, and therefore the workings of ‘inequality machines’ and neocolonialism, can be investigated. Furthermore, business media such as newspapers and magazines historically played a central role in the colonial enterprise, informing and shaping entrepreneurial activities but also legitimising the colonial project and providing narratives to enable the realisation of interests and profits. This research examines local and indigenous narratives and considers how these representations link to the colonial enterprise. Qualitative research methods are adopted, using a systematic literature search to identify articles from four prominent British business media sources (The Economist, The Guardian, The Observer and The Times). Search criteria, in the form of two key word search strings, selected 303 relevant articles and constructed the archival landscape of Cameroon in British colonial business media from the 1850s through to the early 2010s. Newspaper articles were inductively coded using Atlas TI software with the aim to explore the main research questions: • How does British business media represent and legitimise the treatment of indigenous peoples in the context of Cameroon’s land, forests, and plantations? • How has this evolved over time? Results from coding demonstrate the emergence of 4 main code groups that aid the legitimisation and justification of indigenous exploitation in the context of indigenous representation: Comparing, Centring, Controlling and Fearing. Power dynamics, temporality, and the linkages between these core themes, also play a predominant role. What emerges as most influential is the way in which British business media shifts its representation and legitimisation of the treatment of indigenous peoples through time, whilst continuing to reinforce power inequalities. Ultimately, indigenous representation and narratives within the British business media ‘seem’ to improve, but this is largely from the colonisers’ perspective, or to be received by the colonial gaze.
  • Lammensalo, Linda Sofia (2021)
    The intersections of climate change and sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) have increasingly received attention from international organisations but also from academia. For some, establishing these intersections is about reducing human pressure on the Earth systems, while for others it is about the human rights of vulnerable individuals and communities. Many have lauded these connections for providing a win-win solution for both. While these benefits are championed, there has been little reflection on the underlying motives and justifications for establishing these connections in the first place. Given the problematic past of population control policies, understanding these justifications is necessary to break away from the neo-colonial practices of the past. This thesis investigates the motives and justifications for establishing such intersections between SRHR and climate change. Specifically, the thesis addresses two questions, namely: 1) In what ways are the interconnections between SRHR and climate change justified in academic literature? 2) What are the implications of the ways in which these interconnections are justified? By drawing on a postcolonial feminist theoretical framework rooted in understanding this nexus critically, and carefully reflecting on the implications of these discourses, the thesis answers these questions by systematically drawing on a sustained body of research. The data consist of 88 academic publications that are systematised through discourse analysis. The findings identify six distinctive intersectional discourses which reflect the ways in which SRHR, and climate change are justified, namely: public health, population dynamics, reproductive rights, critical, sustainable development and environment discourses. Largely reflecting adherence to liberal feminist and populationist frameworks, these findings imply that the discourses, justifications, and motives do not sufficiently address the neo-colonial practices and structural inequalities that shape intersections between SRHR and climate change. Analytically, therefore, this thesis suggests that postcolonial feminism offers a more effective way for understanding intersectional discourses because it recognises how power inequalities manifest in the discourses, while contributing towards more justice-based approaches to sustainability.
  • Mäkiö, Elisabeth (2024)
    This thesis explores the political decision-making process related to a cancelled PV park development in the city of Järvenpää, Finland. A PV park planned by the energy company Helen in Järvenpää was cancelled due to city council’s opposition of the project. Serving as an illustrative case study, this thesis highlights the political process, discourses and arguments used from both by the supporters and opponents of the project in the city council. This thesis sets out to explore how different political agents operate in the decision-making process regarding energy projects, and which factors, including whose voices, influence their behaviour. By utilising semi-structured interviews with local Järvenpää city councillors, as well as publicly available materials, including opinion pieces and council’s records, this thesis analyses the discourses and arguments used in this local political decision-making process. Using the framework of energy justice and evaluating the discourses and arguments put forward by the supporters and opposers of the project, this thesis shows three crucial differences discourses about the planned PV park put forward by the local politicians, which relate to the different arguments made for or against the park. These three discourses are broadly categorised as: The Nature of the PV Park; The Participation of Residents; and Political Positionalities. The opponents and supporters of the project put forward fundamentally different arguments about the nature of the PV park, as well as of the current nature of the space without the park. The negative reaction of the residents was also seen differently, as either organic resistance or as politically manufactured. Pre-existing political positionalities were used by both parties as explaining factors of the others’ behavior and beliefs, either due to ideological “obsession” or populism. Additionally, the high socio-economic status of the nearby residents was brought up as a significant factor. These findings connect to previous literature, by showcasing that financial incentives are not always enough to gain approval of energy development projects as well as questioning whether a public hearing is enough to guarantee procedural justice if the voices of high-ranking socio-economic group members dominate over others.
  • Kettunen, Anni (2019)
    Environmental problems are usually complex in nature, encompass uncertainties and affect multiple actors and groups of people in multiple ways. Hence, managing these problems requires transparent decision making that takes into consideration diverse values, perceptions and knowledge of those groups. Decisions that are made in a participatory decision-making process are more likely to express public values and local knowledge than decisions made in top-down management processes. Collaboration has become a ubiquitous concept within the context of participatory planning and environmental management. It is used in describing a wide array of participatory approaches and it is often used as a tool in managing wicked problems. However, participatory approaches do not guarantee better success in solving environmental problems. Hence, it is crucial to deliberate what kind of approach is used and what kind of situations it suits. This master’s thesis examines Metsähallitus’ participatory natural resource planning (NRP) process through the concept of collaboration. The study encompasses two mutually supporting parts: a case study about Metsähallitus’ natural resource planning process for Southern Finland 2017-2022 and an equality analysis encompassing altogether four cooperation groups from natural resource planning processes. The aim of the study is to find out how trust building, commitment, social capital and stakeholders’ opportunities to influence decision-making were realized in the NRP process of Southern Finland. In addition, aspects of equality in natural resource planning are examined. Data of the case study consists of seven qualitative semi-structured interviews. Data is analyzed according to the principles of qualitative content analysis. Data of the equality analysis consists of six NRP cooperation groups’ participant lists and the data is analyzed with quantitative content analysis. Based on the results, opportunities to participate actualize most efficiently in the operational level of the cooperation group. The methods used and facilitator’s contribution enhance the realization of equality within the cooperation group. Stakeholders reported a few defects concerning equal processing of values and interests. For example, topics regarding forestry overweighs other topics. The representativeness of stakeholders was considered good. Representatives of public agencies are most frequently participating of all stakeholder groups. Every fifth participant was a woman. What comes to social capital, one of the main results was increased mutual understanding among stakeholders that resulted from learning from each other in the process. Stakeholders’ perceptions of their opportunities to influence decision-making were labeled partly by contentment and realism, but partly by a low level of expectations. Opportunity to influence in decision-making is a remarkable factor for commitment and motivation to participate. The context of NRP-process also affects the planning and its results, but further research on this topic is needed and I propose this as one future research topic. More research is also needed to evaluate on how one of the main principles of collaboration, sharing decision-making power, affects natural resource planning and its results, if adopted.
  • Kareoja, Kaisla (2024)
    The Finnish forestry sector today faces multiple pressures for renewal, demands of climate change and biodiversity loss being the most recent and pertinent ones. The pressures are expected to materialize in the mid-term future: significant structural changes in the forest sector will most likely take place by 2040 (Kulvik et al., 2022). The Finnish forest sector is already in a state of flux, aiming for a transformation, with the state also seeking to reform it through various policies (Donner-Amnell, 2022). However, the concept of just transition has not been widely applied to the industry. This work uses qualitative content analysis to analyze strategies, roadmaps, programmes, action plans and other textual materials where actors of the forest policy arena envision the future of the sector. Recognizing that these expressions of the desired futures are not mere observations of what might happen, but strategic, political actions building those very futures, this study understands them as sociotechnical visions (Longhurst & Chilvers, 2019). This research seeks to articulate what kind of futures are promoted in these visions, how questions of justice are addressed in them, and discover patterns of politicization and depoliticization related to justice. Based on earlier research (Harrinkari et al., 2016), actors are assigned into three coalitions. The forestry coalition envisions a future where Finnish forestry products satisfy global demand and are seen as one solution to climate change. It prefers to frame ecological and social issues through the frames of responsibility and sustainability. The administrative coalition prioritizes the well-being of the Finnish nation and sees the forest industry as an important means to do so, thus wishing to maintain its operating conditions. The environmental coalition aims to maintain the values of nature and frames the environmental and social issues of forestry as questions of justice. Actors within the environmental coalition tend to choose frames that politicize the discourse, whereas the forestry coalition tends to choose depoliticizing ones. The present study demonstrates that actors employ the frame of justice to a varying extent. The academic literature on just transition often departs from the starting point of defining the limits of what is just. However, the present study shows that there are pertinent questions to be asked already before that. Future research is invited to pay attention to what makes actors embrace the concept of just transition and others reject it.
  • Kaivosoja, Arttu (2021)
    Planning process for the Arctic Railway was initiated by the Ministry of Transport and Communications in 2017 and lasted until early 2019. The proposed railway line would cut through the homeland of the indigenous Sámi, which received harsh criticism from the Sámi Parliament for its adverse effects on the traditional Sámi culture and livelihood, both protected by the Constitution of Finland. In this thesis the claims of these two actors are analysed using the Justification theory and Justification analysis to gain insight into the underlying justifications that were used to either oppose or support the Arctic Railway. The results will also illuminate how the MTC’s use of justifications resulted in the constitutional rights of the indigenous Sámi being disregarded during the planning process. At the end of this thesis the reader should have a greater understanding of the Arctic Railway’s planning process, the main arguments and justifications of the two key actors, and how they were used to either resist or support the railway’s construction.
  • Sellman, Oona (2021)
    Several studies have stated that social media has the potential to promote sustainable lifestyles. The purpose of this master’s thesis was to study the contents made by “eco-influencers” who make video blogs about sustainable lifestyles on YouTube. This thesis investigated what topics eco-influencers' videos deal with and what kind of means of argumentation are used. The theoretical background included research on sustainable lifestyles and consumption as well as the potential role of social media in promoting sustainable lifestyles. The study was conducted as a qualitative study and the video material was collected from YouTube according to criteria defined by the researcher. The channels of 20 influencers were selected for the final data. From each channel 1-2 videos were selected. At the end, a total of 39 videos were selected. The material was selectively transcribed, and that text served as the basis for the data-driven content analysis. The results show that the contents of the videos emphasize sustainable consumption and responsibility, especially individual responsibility. However, the videos had only a little content about the three most important aspects of a sustainable lifestyle: housing, mobility, and food. According to eco-influencers, sustainable lifestyles are closely linked to the concept of well-being. Sustainable consumption was considered a very important aspect of sustainable living. Eco-influencers mainly use their own experience, opinions, and comparison as a means of argumentation in their videos. Often the arguments were not substantiated with many scientific references. The results suggest that eco-influencers perceive complex sustainability themes as important but want to communicate them in a way that even laypeople understand. This will also make it easier for more non-experts to approach the matter and change their lifestyles. Justifying arguments with opinions and personal experiences can be based on the personal, even entertaining, format of the video blog, or on the fact that experiential knowledge or expertise is valued in social media. Based on the contents of the videos examined in this study, it seems unlikely that they would contribute to great lifestyle changes.
  • Koutonen, Heini (2018)
    Globaali väestönkasvu ja lisääntyvä kulutus ovat johtamassa muiden ongelmien ohella luonnonvarojen ehtymiseen ja maa- ja vesiekosysteemien saastumiseen. Eräs tapa ratkaista näitä ongelmia on siirtyä kohti resurssitehokkaampaa kiertotalousperiaatteiden mukaista luonnonvarojen käyttöä. Sekä taloudellisten ohjauskeinojen kautta syntyvät kannustimet että yritysten oma aloitteellisuus ovat keskeisiä kiertotalouden mukaisiin toimintatapoihin siirtyessä. Kokonaisvaltaisen muutoksen edistymistä helpottavat konkreettiset kiertotalouden indikaattorit ja mittaustavat. Ramboll Finland Oy:n ja Luonnonvarakeskuksen luoma alueellinen resurssivirtamalli huomioi kattavasti sekä raha- että materiaalimääräisten resurssien liikkeet tarkastelualueella. Tämän tutkielman tavoitteena on laajentaa kyseistä mallia ottamaan huomioon myös yksittäisen yrityksen näkökulma. Tutkimuksessa noudatettiin konstruktiivista lähestymistapaa, jossa luotiin alueelliseen resurssivirtamalliin uusi ulottuvuus yritystason analyysin muodossa. Keskeisenä menetelmänä käytettiin alueellista ympäristölaajennettua panos-tuotosanalyysiä. Tutkielmassa kehitettiin teoreettinen yritystasolle laajennettu alueellinen resurssivirtamalli, jonka toimintaa testattiin numeerisesti Lapin maakunnan kattavasti käyttäen esimerkkiyrityksenä kuvitteellista paperiteollisuuden yritystä. Muodostettuun malliin kytkettiin kiertotaloutta edistäviä taloudellisia ohjauskeinoja, joita olivat maa-ainesvero, vedenottovero, vedenkäyttövero, sekä arvonlisäverokannan lasku valituilla toimialoilla. Lisäksi tutkittiin yrityksen oma-aloitteista muutosta energianlähteiden käytössä. Mallilla pystyttiin havainnollistamaan, kuinka alueen raha- ja materiaalimääräiset resurssivirrat muuttuvat uuden yrityksen tullessa alueelle. Lisäksi muodostetun mallin avulla pystyttiin tarkastelemaan kiertotaloustoimien vaikutuksia sekä yrityksen että aluetalouden raha- ja materiaalimääräisiin resurssivirtoihin. Tutkielman tulosten mukaan ohjauskeinojen vaikutukset sekä yrityksen että alueen talouteen jäivät varsin pieniksi. Ympäristövaikutusten mallinnuksessa huomattiin, että mallin jatkokehittelyssä tulee tehdä rahamääräisen kokonaistuotannon irtikytkentä ympäristövaikutuksista todenmukaisempien tulosten saamiseksi. Vastaava malli voidaan tutkielmassa käytetyllä menettelyllä muodostaa kuvaamaan haluttua aluetta ja siihen voidaan kytkeä minkä tahansa yrityksen tiedot.
  • Virtanen, Mimmi (2024)
    We have long been invited to engage in climate action in different forums, without specifying what is actually expected of us to solve the accelerating climate crisis. Traditionally, individual citizens have only been seen as consumers in climate action. Although citizen participation in climate work has also been studied more and more in recent years, there is a little research on how citizens themselves perceive their own role in climate action. Climate action at local level and small municipalities, as smaller administrative units, could also provide better opportunities to support individuals in their own climate actions. In this thesis, I examine the climate agency and participation of residents in local climate action through their perceived roles and means of participation. I am conducting a review at the level of one small Finnish municipality by carrying out a qualitative case study. The case municipality is Kokemäki in the Satakunta region, with a population of about 7000. My research questions are (1) how the municipal representatives and local residents perceive the roles of the municipality and local residents in local climate action, and (2) what means are identified by municipal representatives and local residents to strengthen the climate agency of local residents. The research material consists of thematic interviews of the municipal representatives, group discussions of the residents and a survey conducted for the residents. As a method of analysis, I have used qualitative content analysis. The results show that municipal representatives and local residents have a similar perception of the roles, even though there are differences. In total, six different roles were identified for the municipality, and communication as a cross-cutting role. A key finding is that local residents perceived their own role more active than the municipal representatives did. A total of five roles were outlined for the residents, two of which emerged mainly in the experiences of the residents: the role to support each other and the role to activate the municipality to act. The roles of the municipality and the residents are strongly linked, and instead of looking individual means to support climate agency, it might be useful for small municipalities to shift the examination more strongly to their own role in relation to the residents. The development of communication and interaction is a key means of supporting climate agency. In addition to communication based on positive tone and examples in particular, the need for encounter and discussion emerged. Discussions with local residents, also on the topic of climate change, could bring new knowledge, understanding and ideas to the municipality, and at the same time provide a forum for communicating the importance of climate action, which also supports sustainable choices in everyday life. Strengthening the experience of working together increases the potential for self-motivated action and also enables peer learning and interaction between residents. The desire to take care of one's own home region could also support local climate action, as long as the objectives and actions are set at a local scale.
  • Posio, Seriina (2024)
    The planetary health approach emphasizes the interconnectedness between human health and natural systems. Urban planners also have the opportunity to promote planetary health through their work by reducing the negative environmental impacts of planning solutions and by increasing decisions that support residents' health and wellbeing. Numerous studies have shown that nature promotes human physical, mental, and social health, underscoring the importance of accessible nearby nature, especially in growing cities. This thesis examines urban planning in the city of Lahti from the perspective of planetary health. The study aims to investigate how nearby nature and its health and wellbeing effects, particularly for children and young people, have been considered and identified in land use planning. Additionally, the goal is to determine how conflicting land use interests are prioritized in decision-making. The research material consists of interviews with officials from the Lahti Urban Environment service area, and the data is analyzed with qualitative content analysis and thematization. The results indicate that nearby nature is perceived as an important part of Lahti's urban structure. Urban greenspaces and nearby nature areas are most concretely taken into account by zoning them as green areas in general and detailed plans. Furthermore, urban planning utilizes surveys of nearby nature conducted in early childhood education institutions and schools to ensure accessibility of nearby nature for children and adolescents. The appreciation of Lahti's planners, nature-friendly organizational culture, functional planning practices, and the recognition of the city's environmental efforts support the preservation of nearby nature areas in the urban structure. However, green areas without zoning are constantly at risk of being allocated for other land use purposes in a growing city. Planners describe their work as a continual search for compromises between conflicting desires, goals, and land use interests. They hold a central position of power and responsibility in making sustainable planning decisions, which can also be guided by planners' own values, attitudes, and expertise. Systems thinking required by planetary health approach along with research findings on the health and wellbeing effects of nearby nature, should be more effectively integrated into urban planning, political decision-making, and public discourse. Although this study focuses on planners in one city, it offers interesting insights into effective urban planning practices and current challenges within the framework of planetary health.
  • Pitkälä, Salla (2021)
    Aviation emissions are on the rise as a result of growing numbers of air passengers and more efficient emission reductions in other industries. There are, however, a number of different means to achieve emissions reductions in aviation as well: these include, for example, technological solutions, taxes and different emissions compensation systems. In addition to these, a change in air travel behaviour has been suggested as a means to achieve emission reductions. However, there is no agreement about which solution or solutions should be prioritized. My thesis examines attitudes related to air travel and climate change in 17 Finnish blog texts. The blog texts were analysed using a qualitative attitude approach. The texts were analysed as collections of reactions to the claim that because of climate change, individuals should fly less. Based on the differences and similarities in reactions, or arguments, I categorized them and formed four groups of attitudes which highlight different ways of thinking about reducing individual air travel. The four groups of attitudes are the following: 1) attitudes that agree that individuals should fly less, 2) attitudes that question the claim, 3) mixed attitudes, and 4) attitudes that attempt to avoid the issue. As a part of the analysis, I also examined the bloggers’ perceptions about who should bear the responsibility for reducing aviation emissions and I also examined how these perceptions differ between the four groups of attitudes. The bloggers’ understandings of air travel vary between air travel as an unnecessary luxury and a view that flying is a crucial part of modern world and giving up air travel is not realistic. To achieve emission reductions, some bloggers are willing to switch from flying to travelling by land and sea, or they are ready to reduce travel altogether. Other bloggers stress the importance of technological solutions and policy measures in reducing emissions. Among the visible themes is also a tendency to stress the importance of doing things in moderation, which also applies to air travel. Some bloggers also wonder whether there are some reasons that could justify air travel from time to time. In any case, it is typical that bloggers show varying attitudes towards air travel and consider counterarguments to their initial arguments. In the blog texts, reducing aviation emissions comes across as a complex issue. Studying attitudes can help build knowledge about which means of reducing emissions are considered fair and desirable. Studying attitudes can also help locate barriers to environmentally friendly behaviour. In Finland, there is little research on attitudes towards air travel, and the results of my thesis can be utilized, for example, in planning transport policies or campaigns that promote sustainable travel. However, it should be noted that using blogs as research material poses some questions about the validity and the generalizability of the results. The public and potentially commercial nature of blogs may affect which kinds of attitudes are expressed. Because of this, it is important to study attitudes towards air travel by using different methods and material as well.
  • Ahonen, Nenna (2020)
    Abandoning carbon intensive lifestyles plays an integral role in mitigating the current climate crisis, especially in wealthy countries such as Finland where citizens’ carbon footprints are large. Mitigative lifestyle change can however be hard as many factors hinder the adoption of low-carbon practices. It can also be hard to recognize factors that could push lifestyle change forward. The significance and range of these factors, often called barriers and enablers, can vary between different places as each place constitutes its unique context. Studying barriers and enablers in different places can help us decide how to best advance the adoption of low-carbon practices in these contexts. In this thesis barriers and enablers are examined in the context of rural Finland. Characteristics that are often connected to rural Finland include long distances, scarcer services, conservativeness, and communality. The aim of this study was to examine what kinds of barriers to and enablers of low-carbon lifestyle change people dwelling in rural Finland experience, and which of these barriers and enablers have special links to the rural context. Eight citizens of Kauhajoki municipality were interviewed. The transcribed interview data was analysed with qualitative content analysis. Barriers and enablers were coded from the data, and 14 barrier and 13 enabler categories were formed. The themes of the barrier and enabler categories coincided well in terms of their content. Barriers were mentioned more often. Both barriers and enablers included factors related to infrastructure, availability of services and products, time, money, knowledge, health, social environment, habit formation, life situation, feelings, and perceptions of difficulty or easiness. They stemmed from the participants’ psychological processes and personal lives, the resources they had, and the physical and social aspects of their environment. Barriers and enablers with links to the rural context were most abundantly connected to infrastructure and availability. Based on the results, rural citizens live in a complicated push-pull environment of different barriers and enablers. Given that barriers appear to be more easily identified, it is important to start highlighting enablers. Even though in rural areas barriers and enablers related to the physical environment are most visible, attention should be paid to all factors to ensure that no potential for change is wasted. The results of this thesis help recognize both hurdles and helpers of low-carbon lifestyle change in rural Finland.
  • Pohjanvirta, Sonja (2020)
    Kaupungistumisen seurauksena arkiset luontokontaktit vähentyvät. Nykyaikaiset elämäntavat, kuten liikunnan puute, altistavat ihmiset kansanterveysongelmille. Esimerkiksi liikalihavuus ja mielenterveysongelmat ovat kasvavia huolenaiheita, joihin luontokontakti ja luonnon virkistyskäyttö voivat tarjota apua. Tutkimuksissa on osoitettu, että luonnossa oleminen rauhoittaa mieltä ja selkeyttää ajatuksia. Luontoaltistuksella on positiivinen vaikutus itsetuntoon, mielialaan, ja se vähentää stressiä. Lisäksi luontokontaktilla on myönteisiä vaikutuksia keskittymiseen ja akateemiseen suorituskykyyn. Psykologisten hyvinvointivaikutusten lisäksi luonnolla on positiivisia vaikutuksia fyysiseen ja sosiaaliseen hyvinvointiin. Luonnossa olo laskee verenpainetta, alentaa sykettä ja vähentää stressihormoni kortisolin veripitoisuutta. On tutkittu, että vuorovaikutus monipuolisen luontoympäristön kanssa edistää hyödyllisten mikrobien esiintyvyyttä ihmiskehossa ja vähentää siten allergioiden ja autoimmuunisairauksien kehittymisen riskiä. Luontoympäristö inspiroi liikkumaan useammin ja pidempiä aikoja kuin rakennettu ympäristö. Sosiaalisen hyvinvoinnin kannalta luontoympäristö edistää sosiaalista kanssakäymistä ja voi lisätä osallisuuden tunnetta. Tässä opinnäytetyössä tarkastelen nuorten aikuisten kokemuksia luonnon hyvinvointivaikutuksista. Tutkimuskysymykset ovat: 1) Miten nuoret aikuiset kokevat luonnossa oleskelun vaikuttavan heidän psyykkiseen, fyysiseen ja sosiaaliseen hyvinvointiinsa? 2) Millainen luonnonympäristö lisää heidän koettua hyvinvointia? 3) Miten he virkistäytyvät luonnossa? Tutkimusaineisto koostuu temaattisista kirjoituksista (n = 47), jotka kerättiin yliopisto-opiskelijoilta maalis- ja huhtikuun 2020 aikana. Kirjoitusten tehtävänanto oli osa ympäristötieteiden kandiohjelman Topical Issues in Urban Research -kurssia, joka pidettiin Helsingin yliopistossa keväällä 2020. Kohderyhmänä olivat 19–33-vuotiaat opiskelijat. Tutkimus toteutettiin kvalitatiivisilla menetelmillä ja aineisto analysoitiin käyttämällä teemoittelua, koodausta ja luokittelua. Tämän tutkimuksen keskeiset havainnot tukevat aiempia tuloksia osoittaen, että myös nuorille aikuisille luonto tarjoaa paikan rauhoittumiseen, rentoutumiseen ja irtautumiseen arjen paineista. Luonnossa oleminen auttaa ajatusten selkiyttämisessä ja stressin lievityksessä. Fyysisen hyvinvoinnin näkökulmasta luonto tarjoaa miellyttävän ja innostavan paikan harrastaa liikuntaa. Luonto tukee sosiaalista hyvinvointia tarjoamalla paikan olla yksin tai tavata ihmisiä. Luonnossa on helpompaa olla läsnä, mikä mahdollistaa syvällisten keskusteluiden muodostumisen. Suosituimmat luonnonympäristöt olivat metsä ja akvaattiset ympäristöt. Alueen koettu luonnollisuus oli tärkeä tekijä. Kaupunkiympäristöön sisältyvien luonnon elementtien koettiin olevan merkittävä kaupunkiympäristön houkuttelevuutta ja miellyttävyyttä lisäävä tekijä. Vastaajien keskuudessa suosituimpia luontoaktiviteetteja olivat juoksu- ja kävelylenkkeily sekä luonnon ja lajien tarkkailu. Tämä tutkielma korostaa luonnon tärkeää roolia ihmisten hyvinvoinnin tukemisessa.
  • Bianchi, Niccolo (2024)
    This thesis investigates the application of machine learning (ML) technologies in the analysis of wildlife images captured by camera traps, focusing on its significance for ecology and conservation. With the advent of digital imaging and the increasing use of camera traps in wildlife monitoring, the volume of data thus generated has presented a significant challenge in terms of processing and analysis. This study aims to address this challenge by systematically reviewing the current state of ML applications in this field, identifying key technologies employed, and evaluating their effectiveness in various ecological and conservation tasks. Through an extensive literature review and analysis, the research reveals a strong preference for the use of convolutional neural networks (CNNs), particularly residual neural networks (ResNet), due to their ability to efficiently process and analyze large visual datasets. The study also highlights the primary ML tasks within this context, namely animal detection and species classification. Moreover, it identifies the main ecological objectives pursued through ML-assisted camera trap image analysis, emphasizing its frequent use in ecological assessments and wildlife population monitoring. The thesis identifies areas for improvement, such as addressing the underrepresentation of numerous taxa and enhancing the quality of the environmental assessments, and suggests directions for future research, including the development of more robust ML models capable of handling more diverse environments and datasets. By showcasing the potential of ML to revolutionize ecological research and conservation efforts, this study hopes to contribute to the understanding of how technology can be harnessed to preserve biodiversity and ensure more effective and efficient management of natural resources.
  • Piiroinen, Anni (2024)
    This thesis is an ethnographic study of glyphosate use in Finnish agriculture. Through interviews and participant observation, it examines how Finnish farmers relate to glyphosate, a herbicide that is widely used in contemporary agriculture but also highly contested. Working with the concept of domestication, I suggest that farmers relate to glyphosate as an indispensable tool that allows them to domesticate fields, maximise harvests, and cope in value chains where they have little power. When using glyphosate, farmers also try to domesticate the chemical itself by turning it into a controllable, knowable and ultimately unproblematic tool. Sometimes these efforts fail, as when glyphosate spills and spreads to unwanted places or fails to produce the clean fields that farmers are after. Despite these risks and limitations, farmers continue to rely on glyphosate to achieve successful domestication. Reworking Donna Haraway’s concept of companion species, I suggest that glyphosate has become a companion chemical, constitutively tied into who farmers are and what they do. In the course of continued glyphosate-based domestication, the skills, practices, and knowledges of farmers have changed as they have learned to live with glyphosate and use it to perform feats of successful domestication.
  • Siivonen, Salla (2020)
    Finnish forests have a major impact on climate change at a national level, as approximately 86 % of Finland's surface area is forest and forests are a significant carbon sink. Continuous cover forestry is better from the point of view of carbon sequestration than even-age forestry. The Finnish Forest Act was reformed in 2014. Forest professionals and forest owners have had time to adapt to the new Act, to consider the use of alternative methods or, possibly, to take these methods into practice. Forest professionals have a clear position of power through information and communication to forest owners and the creation of a prevailing atmosphere of attitudes. Examination of the attitudes and the values of forest professionals are important as their attitudes and values have an impact on the recommendation of forest management methods. The purpose of this study was to examine how familiar continuous cover forestry was to forest professionals and forest owners as well as their perceptions of it. In addition, the values of forest professionals and how different factors influence their perceptions of continuous cover forestry were examined. The data used in this research was from a survey conducted in 2017. According to the results, forest professionals and forest owners are quite familiar with continuous cover forestry. The forest professionals’ perceptions of it were more negative compared to the forest owners’ perceptions. Gender and educational background were factors that were found to impact the attitudes of the forest professionals. Their perceptions of continuous cover forestry also affected the percentage of continuous cover forestry recommended by them. Forest professionals valued the sales proceeds of wood the most and the carbon sequestration of forests the least.