Current:Home > ScamsWe asked, you answered: More global buzzwords for 2023, from precariat to solastalgia -FundWay
We asked, you answered: More global buzzwords for 2023, from precariat to solastalgia
View
Date:2025-04-17 23:47:31
This week we published a list of 9 global buzzwords that will likely be in the headlines of 2023. Some definitely sound new(ish) — like polycrisis, referring to the overlapping crises that the world is facing. Others are ancient — like poverty, which is on the rise again because of the pandemic, conflicts, climate change and more.
We asked you to nominate more buzzwords for 2023. Thanks to all who sent in contributions. Here are five more terms to watch for in the year ahead.
Elite-directed growth
Savanna Schuermann, a lecturer in the anthropology department at San Diego State University, proposes:
"One buzzword or concept I see missing from your piece is 'elite-directed growth.'
The problems you write about in the story — poverty, climate change, child wasting — stem from the same cultural cause. Power has become concentrated among elites — decision makers who make decisions that benefit themselves but are maladaptive for the population and environment ("maladaptation" could be a buzzword too) because these decision makers are insulated from the impacts of their policies. So they are either unaware of the adverse human consequences their policies have or they don't care."
Microplastics
Those tiny bits of plastic — some too small to be seen with the naked eye — are popping up all over the globe, in nature and in humans, raising concerns about their impact on both the environment and health. The small pieces of plastic debris can come from many sources — as a result of industrial waste as well as from packaging, ropes, bottles and clothing. Last year, NPR wrote about a study that even identified microplastics in the lungs of living people, adding that "the plastics have previously been found in human blood, excrement and in the depths of the ocean."
Submitted by H. Keifer
Precariat
Someone who lives precariously, who does not live in security. Wikipedia notes that the word precariat is "a portmanteau merging precarious with proletariat." It can be used in a variety of contexts. "Migrants make up a large share of the world's precariat. They are a cause of its growth and in danger of becoming its primary victims, demonized and made the scapegoat of problems not of their making," according to the book The Precariat: The New Dangerous Class. And, in 2016, NPR wrote about "the ill-paid temps and contingent workers that some have called the 'precariat.' "
Submitted by Peter Ciarrochi
Solastalgia
Solastalgia is, according to Wikipedia and other sources, "a neologism, formed by the combination of the Latin words sōlācium (comfort) and the Greek root -algia (pain, suffering, grief), that describes a form of emotional or existential distress caused by environmental change." NPR used this term in a story describing the emotional reaction of Arizonans who had to flee their homes due to a lightning-sparked wildfire. It has to do with "a sense that you're losing your home, even though you haven't left it. Just the anticipation of a natural disaster can produce its own kind of sadness called solastalgia."
Submitted by Clara Sutherland
Superabundance
The word itself is a lot like it sounds. Webster's says: "an amount or supply more than sufficient to meet one's needs." The libertarian think tank Cato Institute uses the term in what it calls a "controversial and counterintuitive" new book, Superabundance: The Story of Population Growth, Innovation, and Human Flourishing on an Infinitely Bountiful Planet. The thesis: "Population growth and freedom to innovate make Earth's resources more, not less, abundant."
Submitted by Jonathan Babiak
veryGood! (8)
Related
- Hackers hit Rhode Island benefits system in major cyberattack. Personal data could be released soon
- Private jet was short on approach to Virginia runway when it crashed, killing 5, police say
- Olympian Scott Hamilton Shares Health Update After 3rd Brain Tumor Diagnosis
- Rangers' Matt Rempe kicked out of game for elbowing Devils' Jonas Siegenthaler in head
- Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
- Sen. Bob Menendez and wife plead not guilty to latest obstruction of justice charges
- Q&A: California Nurse and Environmental Health Pioneer Barbara Sattler on Climate Change as a Medical Emergency
- Louisiana lawmakers set out on a clear path for conservative priorities
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Oil sheen off California possibly caused by natural seepage from ocean floor, Coast Guard says
Ranking
- 2 killed, 3 injured in shooting at makeshift club in Houston
- Man bitten by a crocodile after falling off his boat at a Florida Everglades marina
- Angela Chao, shipping industry exec, died on Texas ranch after her car went into a pond, report says
- Report: New Jersey and US were not prepared for COVID-19 and state remains so for the next crisis
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- After deadly Highway 95 crash in Wisconsin, bystander rescues toddler from wreckage
- Buffalo Wild Wings 'beat the buffalo' challenge among free wings, deals for March Madness
- RHOBH's Garcelle Beauvais Weighs in on Possible Dorit Kemsley Reconciliation After Reunion Fight
Recommendation
This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
'Despicable': 2 dogs collapse and die in Alaska's Iditarod race; PETA calls for shutdown
Firefighters booed NY attorney general who prosecuted Trump. Officials are investigating
Suspected shooter, driver are in custody in Philadelphia bus stop shooting that injured 8 teens
Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
Mother of child Britt Reid injured during DUI speaks out after prison sentence commuted
TEA Business College:Revolutionizing Technical Analysis
Inside Robert Downey Jr.'s Unbelievable Hollywood Comeback, From Jail to Winning an Oscar