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Title
Systems thinking
Category
general
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922bb833731d4faa8c2f9bc8cdd002c3
Source URL
https://learninglab.rmit.edu.au/university-essentials/sustainability/systems-thi...
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https://learninglab.rmit.edu.au/university-essentials/sustainability/
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2026-03-18T05:17:14+00:00
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Systems thinking

Source: https://learninglab.rmit.edu.au/university-essentials/sustainability/systems-thinking/ Parent: https://learninglab.rmit.edu.au/university-essentials/sustainability/

We can think about the world we live in as a series of connected systems, from the solar system down to your local transport systems.

Systems thinking is used in science to describe complicated relationships between parts of a whole. We talk about the 'solar system' to describe the group of planets and objects that orbit our sun. The solar system is a whole and each planet and the sun are the parts. There are also gravity, asteroids, heat, moons and more in this system.

What is a system?

Image attribution: Hilch on Adobe Stock.

Systems thinking in sustainability is a way of thinking about how we make goods and deliver services. It considers the environmental and social impacts for different businesses.

In the solar system, we know that changes in the sun or other objects in the system, have effects on Earth. In business, we know that changing how much workers are paid or what materials we use affects social and economic systems. We also know that what happens in business affects the system we all live in — the Earth.

The environment is a planet-wide system that affects us all. The economy is another system, a way of deciding value and exchanging goods and services. People live in societies in which there are also systems though these might not be as obvious as in a physical system.

All these different systems interact with each other. A change in the solar system can cause a change on Earth. A big solar storm causes blackouts. A change in the environment causes a change in society. Increased temperatures make people spend more time in their homes and less time socialising.

The United Nations Sustainable Development Goals are a way of making changes that have positive outcomes in many systems.

We have economic, social and environmental problems that are related to each other. The United Nations includes poverty, equality and justice in the Sustainable Development Goals because we cannot fix one system and cause a problem in another.

Image attribution: adapted from a diagram by flyalone on Adobe Stock.

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Image attribution: petovarga on Adobe Stock.


Further resources

[### Minimising festival waste with a systems thinking approach

Explore these topics in a real world context](https://rmit.pressbooks.pub/llcc/chapter/minimising-festival-waste-with-a-systems-thinking-approach/)


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