170 results
Search Results
2. The World Environmental Education Congress 2007: a critical appraisal.
- Author
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Cutting, Roger and Cook, Robert
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL education ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,SUSTAINABLE development ,ENVIRONMENTAL engineering ,CLIMATE change ,ENVIRONMENTALISM ,CONFERENCES & conventions - Abstract
The breadth and depth of the environmental crisis and the consequently wide and inclusive interpretations of 'sustainable development' has promoted a disparate range of academic responses encouraging a loose interpretation of environmental education and Education for Sustainable Development. This in turn reduces the capacity for the development of a clearly defined discourse and for a sufficiently robust debate conducive of effective change. This paper attempts to assess the current situation within environmental education in this respect, by means of an analysis of papers presented at the recent World Environmental Education Congress in Durban, South Africa (July 2007). By quantifying the use of specific terms and words used in presentations, the authors reveal evidence to suggest that there is not the degree of self critical analysis and academic rigour that the urgency of the environmental crisis might reasonably demand. On this basis a recommendation is made which should lead to greater precision in the identification of relevant themes and research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Understanding design and implementation attributes for strategic policies: the case of Australia's national environment policies.
- Author
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Samnakay, Nadeem
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,SUSTAINABILITY ,NATURAL resources management ,COALITION governments ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Governments develop policies that set strategic directions on matters of national significance, referred to in this paper as strategic policies. Australia's Commonwealth Government develops and influences national environmental and sustainability policies despite having limited constitutional powers in the management of natural resources. The Commonwealth Government has, over the past three decades, developed strategic policies aimed at sustainably managing forests, water, soils and agricultural lands. The design and implementation arrangements of environmental policies that have endured is not well studied, and this paper addresses this knowledge gap in the context of a federal system. The National Forest Policy Statement, the National Water Initiative and the Natural Heritage Trust have endured centre-left Labor and centre-right Coalition Governments, and serve as case studies. These policies have required structural adjustments to industries to varying degrees to limit impacts on the environment, leading to contestations about policy objectives. The policy cycle serves as the primary heuristic for analysis and the research finds that policy objectives are constrained by the Commonwealth Government's limited constitutional powers on environmental matters. Its participation in strategic policies is driven through notions of resolving a crisis and the policies endure in a phase of indifference to the original policy objectives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. A mathematical approach to network contagion regarding greening banks' policies.
- Author
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Donath, Liliana, Mircea, Gabriela, Neamţu, Mihaela, and Sîrghi, Nicoleta
- Subjects
BANKING policy ,TIME delay systems ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,BANK employees - Abstract
Green banking has become dominant in academics' and practitioners' discourse. The purpose of the research is to investigate whether banks' attitudes, in deciding to go green, change under the influence of other banks through their mutual interaction and whether hysteresis plays a part in the process. A mathematical model, described by a differential system with time delay, considering three variables, i.e.: green, outsider and undecided banks, is used as a research method. We investigate the local stability of the two equilibrium points. Moreover, we look for the optimal control strategy targeting the undecided banks so that the outsiders' group diminishes. The main contribution is that the paper sheds more light on the qualitative rather than on the quantitative side of the banking business given that banks' behaviours are examined when it comes to implementing green policies. The research has policy implications since bank managers can decide whether to follow the greening trends of other banks and bank regulators can use the instrument for tracking the overall changes in banks' behaviours in this respect. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Examining the effects of government intervention on the firm’s environmental and technological innovation capabilities and export performance.
- Author
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Joo, Hye-Young, Seo, Yong-Won, and Min, Hokey
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL regulations ,ENVIRONMENTAL protection ,GREENHOUSE gas mitigation ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,SUSTAINABLE development ,SUSTAINABILITY - Abstract
Considering our living environments directly affect the quality of our daily lives, many believe that the environment should only be safeguarded by the mighty hands of the government instead of leaving the environmental stewardship in the hands of profit-making private enterprises. As such, the government often intervenes with the way private enterprises conduct business through many different forms of environmental regulations and business incentives. However, the efficiency and effectiveness of such government intervention are still unknown and unclear at best. Many sceptics still think that economic growth and environmental protection are in conflict with each other and subsequently the firm’s environmental performance and export performance cannot be achieved simultaneously even with active government intervention over the firm’s environmental management. To clarify this misconception, this paper aims to examine whether government intervention leads to the affected firm’s both environmental and export performance (export sales performance). In addition, it investigates whether government intervention enhances the firm’s environmental and technological innovation capabilities and thus makes the firm more competitive in the global marketplace. In so doing, this paper verifies the ecological modernisation theory and institutional theory using the empirical analysis of the survey data obtained from the Korean manufacturing industry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Chasing after the wind? Green economy strategies, path creation and transitions in the offshore wind industry.
- Author
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Gibbs, David and Jensen, Paul D.
- Subjects
WINDS ,ECONOMIC development ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,SUSTAINABILITY ,OFFSHORE wind power plants - Abstract
There has been a growing interest by both academics and policymakers at the local and regional scales in the development of a green economy both to promote economic development and to achieve environmental policy aims. Despite this, there is little evidence about whether either the economic or the environmental aims are being met, nor how local and regional authorities are promoting and developing green economies in their localities. In order to address these issues, this paper explores the development of the offshore wind industry in North West Germany, drawing upon sustainability transitions research and the path creation literature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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7. India's environmental policy paradox: dissecting India's budgetary allocations for environment.
- Author
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Boora, Shailendra and Karakunnel, Meljo Thomas
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,SUSTAINABLE development ,BUDGET ,FOSSIL fuels ,PARADOX ,ENVIRONMENTAL protection - Abstract
This paper examines India's environmental policies and budget allocations from 2016–2024, revealing a focus on infrastructure that may overshadow environmental conservation. Significant discrepancies between policy rhetoric and budgetary commitments suggest that there is a need for realignment. Advocating an 'environment-centric' approach, the study calls for increased budgetary commitments to environmental protection, a strategic shift away from fossil fuels, and stringent regulatory oversight, all essential to ensure sustainable development in India. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. A Green Gambit: The Development of Environmental Foreign Policy in Morocco.
- Author
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Nicolai, Katharina Elisabeth
- Subjects
SUSTAINABLE development ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,SUSTAINABILITY ,SOFT power (Social sciences) - Abstract
The Kingdom of Morocco decisively increased trade and diplomatic interaction with countries of Western and Sub-Saharan Africa since the mid-2000s, supplementing Morocco's long-standing foreign policy orientation toward the 'West'. Under the guidance of King Mohammed VI, the country gradually sought regional political rapprochement after several decades of relative isolation. The push for regional integration is taking place across multiple policy fields and goes hand in hand with a more assertive demeanour on the stage of international diplomacy. Environmental sustainability – encompassing renewable energy production and environmental protection measures – is a policy sector on which the autocratic Moroccan regime places special emphasis. This paper traces Morocco's 'green turn', the development of environmental sustainability policy under King Mohammed VI in context of Morocco's general foreign policy realignment. It analyses Morocco's environmental engagement at the foreign policy level in terms of soft power activity and gives tentative insight on Morocco's path of becoming an influential regional player in Western and Sub-Saharan Africa. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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9. Japan's triple sustainability challenge.
- Author
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Nakai, Tokutaro
- Subjects
CIRCULAR economy ,SUSTAINABILITY ,NUCLEAR accidents ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,ENVIRONMENTAL protection planning ,INTERNATIONAL relief - Abstract
Starting with a broad overview of the need for urgent action concerning climate change globally, this paper then reviews the evolution of environmental policy in Japan up to and including green transformation (GX) measures taken under the Kishida administration, and an assessment of the changes still needed to achieve sustainability in Japan. An integrated approach has been adopted in Japan, encompassing the environment, the economy, and society, to achieve three transitions: first, to a de-carbonized society; second, to a circular economy; and third, to a 'nature-positive', decentralized society which co-exists with nature. This approach was signalled in the Regional Circular and Ecological concept in the Fifth Environmental Basic Plan of 2018, building on extensive discussions within the Ministry of Environment and with other ministries from 2014, in the wake of the 2011 triple earthquake, tsunami and nuclear disasters. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Does improvement in education level reduce ecological footprint? A non-linear analysis considering population structure and income.
- Author
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Wang, Qiang, Li, Lejia, and Li, Rongrong
- Subjects
ECOLOGICAL impact ,NONLINEAR analysis ,HIGH-income countries ,LOW-income countries ,SUSTAINABILITY ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to investigate the non-linear effect of education level on ecological footprint considering changes in population structure and per capita income. The results show an inhibitory effect for the level of education on increases in ecological footprint. In high-income countries, this inhibitory effect is non-linear. The inhibitory effect of education level on ecological footprint increases with increases in education level. In addition, population structure also has an inhibitory effect on the increase in ecological footprint. In both high-income and low-income countries, the inhibitory effect of population structure on the ecological footprint decreases when the population structure exceeds the threshold. However, there is a promotional effect of GDP per capita on the increase in ecological footprint. And the threshold regression results show that this promotional effect is linear in all income groups. Finally, this study suggests that countries should develop environmental sustainability policies according to the threshold range in which their education level, population structure, and per capita income are located. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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11. Impact of tourist arrivals on environmental quality: a way towards environmental sustainability targets.
- Author
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Adebayo, Tomiwa Sunday, Akadiri, Seyi Saint, Asuzu, Obioma Chinenyenwa, Pennap, Nanfa Hamisu, and Sadiq-Bamgbopa, Yetunde
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL quality ,SUSTAINABILITY ,ENVIRONMENTAL degradation ,QUANTILE regression ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,ENERGY consumption ,ELECTRIC power consumption ,INTERNATIONAL tourism ,ECONOMIC globalization - Abstract
This paper examines the impact of tourist arrivals on environmental degradation, as well as highlights the implications of this interaction on environmental sustainability targets, while controlling for globalization, energy consumption and economic growth. The study adds to the existing literature by employing the quantile-on-quantile regression (QQR) to examine the nonlinear relationship between carbon emissions and the regressors over the period 1995-2018, using quarterly data. As a robustness check, the conventional quantile regression (QR) model is also applied to capture the nexus across quantiles (0.1-0.9). Furthermore, quantile causality is utilized to capture the causal interrelationships between CO
2 and the regressors across quantiles (0.1-0.90). Overall, results show that globalization, tourist arrivals, economic growth and energy consumption increase environmental degradation at different quantiles. The quantile causality results also reveal evidence of causality in mean and variance from globalization, tourist arrivals, economic growth and energy consumption to CO2 emissions in majority of the quantiles. From a policy standpoint, it is recommended that policymakers in Thailand should come up with sound and effective environmental policies that would help the economy achieve sustainable environmental quality for both the immediate and future generations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Environmental sustainability in sport: a systematic literature review.
- Author
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Cury, Rubiana, Kennelly, Millicent, and Howes, Michael
- Subjects
SUSTAINABILITY ,ENVIRONMENTAL literacy ,ENVIRONMENTAL education ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy - Abstract
How are bibliographic and methodological patterns, as well current contributions of environmental sustainability in sport literature, shaping a research agenda that informs effective environmental responses? This study surveys previous literature reviews. It then combines a systematic quantitative literature review and meta-synthesis to determine bibliographic, methodological and theoretical patterns of literature and to assess the key contributions and knowledge gaps. Limitations in the scope of previous literature reviews established the need for a more comprehensive examination of knowledge in the field. This systematic review identified environmental sustainability in sport as an emerging field with predominantly North American (in terms of both authorship and geographical settings) studies. Contributions on management and governance of environmental initiatives, shifts in environmental discourses, environmental education in sport contexts, and environmental sustainability through sport are discussed with the purpose to set directions for future research. The international urgency and complexity of environmental issues necessitate the adoption of a global perspective and research approaches that enable sport researchers and practitioners to collaborate closely on knowledge development. Future research may expand on existing managerial and environmental education contributions and explore new theoretical terrains to advance knowledge on environmental policy and innovative approaches for effective design and implementation of sport industry's environmental responses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Assessing impacts of public policies towards environmental sustainability in an EU region: North of Portugal.
- Author
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Medeiros, Eduardo and Valente, Bernardo
- Subjects
- *
CLIMATE change adaptation , *ENVIRONMENTAL policy , *GOVERNMENT policy , *GEOGRAPHIC information systems , *SUSTAINABILITY , *PHYSIOLOGICAL adaptation , *COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Environmental sustainability has been a key policy goal of the European Union (EU), particularly under recent EU Cohesion Policy strategic frameworks. This paper contributes to the analysis of the relevance of EU Cohesion Policy-related environmental sustainability investments, by assessing the impacts of the Operational Programme for Sustainability and Use of Resources (POSEUR 2014–2020), in the Portuguese North NUTS II. In detail, the impact scores of the following five analytical dimensions related to this programme were obtained: (i) low-emissions economy, (ii) adaptation to climate change, (iii) risk prevention and management, (iv) environmental protection and (v) resource efficiency. The analysis was supported by a territorial impact assessment methodology (TARGET_TIA) which was complemented by an online analytic geographic information system (GIS) policy evaluation platform (Impact-WEB_GIS). The results showed that the POSEUR's regional implementation efficiency fell short of the stakeholders' expectations. This can be explained by factors such as the obstacles posed by the prior underdeveloped infrastructural conditions, coupled with the panorama created by the Covid-19 outbreak. Nonetheless, the risk prevention and management dimension had a solid positive impact score that reflected the efficacy of POSEUR in tackling environmental threats, mostly in rural ecosystems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Diversifying in green technologies in European regions: does political support matter?
- Author
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Santoalha, Artur and Boschma, Ron
- Subjects
GREEN technology ,POLITICAL ecology ,SUSTAINABILITY ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,ADMINISTRATIVE & political divisions - Abstract
New green activities in regions tend to build on regional capabilities. This paper makes a first attempt to test the impact of political support for environmental policy at the national and regional scales, besides regional capabilities, on the ability of 95 regions in seven European countries to diversify into new green technologies during the period 2000–12. Evidence is found that related capabilities rather than political support in a region are associated with green diversification of regions. However, while political support at the national scale tends to moderate the role of regional capabilities, political support at the regional scale strengthens it. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. The reformist sustainability discourse and the exclusion of the informal economy from Mexico City's environmental policies.
- Author
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Guibrunet, Louise
- Subjects
INFORMAL sector ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,SUSTAINABILITY ,ADAPTIVE natural resource management ,ENVIRONMENTAL degradation - Abstract
The crucial role of the informal economy in urban environmental management is yet to be acknowledged in policy-making. This paper explores the sustainability discourses that shape urban environmental policies, and how they relate to different conceptualisations of the informal economy. Focusing on Mexico City, this paper analyses the discourses of policy-makers and their reflection in the city's waste management plan. Results show reformist and radical discourses of sustainability are correlated with preferences as to the integration or exclusion of the informal economy in environmental policy. In addressing Mexico City's environmental challenges, policy-makers have embraced a reformist sustainability discourse that focuses on technological fixes to environmental degradation and promotes a techno-managerial mode of governing. This discourse is correlated with a view of the informal economy as a barrier to the sustainability transition, which leads to the exclusion of informal workers from the policy arena and renders invisible their working conditions and their contribution to urban life. The paper concludes that the reformist sustainability discourse obscures and reproduces environmental injustices – repoliticization of the sustainability discourses shaping urban environmental policies is necessary to achieve sustainability transitions that are also socially just. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Using a worldview lens to examine complex policy issues: a historical review of bushfire management in the South West of Australia.
- Author
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Ruane, Simone
- Subjects
WILDFIRE prevention ,WILDFIRES ,CLIMATE change ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,FOREST fire management - Abstract
The scale and intensity of bushfire activity in Australia is likely to increase as a result of climate change. Effective bushfire management policy measures are therefore essential to minimise the interrelated social, environmental and economic impacts of fire in the landscape. This paper presents a historical review of bushfire management in the South West of Australia (SW): a bushfire prone and biodiverse region. Using a worldview framework to analyse key policy documents and literature, the paper demonstrates that the evolution of complex policy sectors such as bushfire management, is influenced not only by scientific and technical developments but also as a result of changing worldviews. Adapting the Integrative Worldview Framework (IWF), seven worldview categories that dominated particular periods of history in Australia are presented. These worldview categories are then used to examine the evolution of bushfire management practice, policy and institutional arrangements relevant to the SW. The argument presented herein is that a better understanding of worldviews and how they influence complex and contentious policy fields such as bushfire management, is useful for policy analysis, reflexive practice and research. The paper suggests an integrative worldview approach, which enables opportunities for exchanges and constructive conflict between stakeholders and agencies with diverse worldviews, could contribute to creating more sustainable bushfire management. Finally, it is argued that opportunities for Indigenous and Western worldview exchanges in the bushfire management sector, through collaborative knowledge partnerships could assist the sector in both management practice and policy formulation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. CITES as Global Governance: Paths to Consensus and Defining Nature Through Uncertainty.
- Author
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Le, Tuyen
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL cooperation ,NATURE ,ENDANGERED species ,ENVIRONMENTAL regulations ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,SUSTAINABILITY - Abstract
As concern over various environmental issues has risen at the international level, questions regarding what constitutes "nature" and how it should be portrayed and treated have gained a greater sense of urgency. This paper explores varying concepts and attributes of nature articulated by the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species ("CITES"). Much of the research on CITES comes from the fields of policy and ecology, exploring matters of biodiversity, sustainability, enforcement, functionality, and evaluation of CITES as a "success" or "failure" of policy, with little focus on issues of cultural context and ambiguities. In contrast, within the social sciences, the contemporary literature is broadly dedicated to critiquing the static, dualistic ideas of nature upon which environmental regulations are based. However, what is often missing from this discourse is how environmental policies often have an implicit understanding that these static conceptions of nature are not accurate – that within the environmental legislation process, there is "an awareness, for example, of the messy, improvised character of knowledges about nature". This paper explores CITES's understanding of nature, how it characterizes nature, and how these conceptions become implemented in legislative practice. It illustrates CITES as a manifestation of what Krueger calls a regulatory process of "coded and recoded text with material implications" (p. 880), wherein a relatively unchanging set of legislation can create "multiple, even contradictory, outcomes coexisting simultaneously in the same system" (p. 872). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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18. Facing the challenges of using place-based social-ecological research to support ecosystem service governance at multiple scales.
- Author
-
Bennett, E. M., Morrison, P., Holzer, J. M., Winkler, K. J., Fraser, E. D. G., Green, S. J., Robinson, B. E., Sherren, K., Botzas-Coluni, J., and Palen, W.
- Subjects
ECOSYSTEM services ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,SUSTAINABILITY - Abstract
Place-based social-ecological research is often designed to improve local environmental governance, but it can also inform decisions at larger scales or in other places. However, the focus on local perspectives in such research creates challenges for transferring insights to other locations, and for aggregating understanding to larger scales. In this paper, we discuss how ResNet, a new pan-Canadian network of researchers working on place-based social-ecological case studies via ecosystem services, will face (and hopefully overcome) these challenges while taking advantage of the unique benefits of a place-based approach. Drawing on insights from the literature and from the first 10 years of the Programme for Ecosystem Change and Society (PECS), we outline solutions to six key challenges to multi-scale knowledge integration across place-based cases, and explore how ResNet is employing some of these solutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. ‘If You Can Make it Here, You Can Make it Anywhere’: Performance Management and PlaNYC Climate Change Initiatives.
- Author
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Jones, Stephen
- Subjects
CLIMATE change research ,GOVERNMENT policy on climate change ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,CLIMATE change & politics ,MUNICIPAL government - Abstract
Copyright of Regional Studies is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Mapping divergent concepts of sustainability: lay knowledge, local practices and environmental governance.
- Author
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Moran, Lisa and Rau, Henrike
- Subjects
SUSTAINABILITY ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,ENVIRONMENTAL management ,SOCIAL ecology - Abstract
This paper examines local sustainability concepts in Connemara, a predominantly rural region in the West of Ireland (in this paper, the term “Ireland” refers to the Republic of Ireland), to show how they are (re-)constituted through people's interactions with socialandbiophysical environments. We argue that these interactions produce diverse forms of lay environmental knowledge and expertise that encompass cognitive and emotional aspects, a fact that is frequently ignored in environmental policy-making which prioritises rational arguments over reactions rooted in people's sense of place and community. Local people's responses to this dominance of “official” rational-technical sustainability concepts are central to recent cases of environmental controversy and lack of compliance to environmental policies that have characterised the study area but that show many parallels to conflicts and disputes elsewhere. Drawing on rich qualitative evidence from interviews and ethnographic fieldwork, this paper demonstrates how communities' responses to environmental policies depend on how well (or poorly) sustainability concepts underpinning these policies match local people's social-ecological practices and related place-specific views of what should be sustained. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Sustainable regeneration: a guiding vision towards low-carbon transition?
- Author
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Hunt, Miriam and de Laurentis, Carla
- Subjects
CARBON & the environment ,ECONOMICS ,SUSTAINABILITY ,SUSTAINABILITY & society ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,ENERGY consumption - Abstract
While the concept of sustainable development brings together concepts of economic, environmental and social sustainability, much has been said regarding inherent tensions between them. Conflicts between economic and environmental objectives, in particular, have been noted as restraining efforts to instigate transitions to environmental sustainability, with growth ambitions limiting environmental policy to “win–win” cases. This paper argues that they can also play complementary roles in managing transitions by creating inclusive visions for rallying actors and resources. This is explored by looking at a case of sustainable regeneration in Wales, UK. Using as a case study the Arbed scheme, an area-based project established in 2009 to retrofit housing stock for energy efficiency, this paper shows how the scheme explicitly addresses economic, environmental and social aspects of sustainability; and, in particular, how sustainable development aims constituted a guiding vision that supported the formation of actor and resource networks necessary for large-scale retrofitting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Education policy mobility: reimagining sustainability in neoliberal times.
- Author
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McKenzie, Marcia, Bieler, Andrew, and McNeil, Rebecca
- Subjects
SUSTAINABILITY ,HIGHER education & state ,NEOLIBERALISM ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,HIGHER education - Abstract
This paper is concerned with the twinning of sustainability with priorities of economic neoliberalization in education, and in particular via the mobility or diffusion of education policy. We discuss the literature on policy mobility as well as overview concerns regarding neoliberalism and education. The paper brings these analyses to bear in considering the uptake of sustainability in education policy. We ask to what extent sustainability as a vehicular idea may be twinning with processes of neoliberalization in education policy in ways that may undermine aspirations of, and action on, environmental sustainability. Toward the end of the paper, we draw on data from an empirical study to help elucidate how the analytic frames of policy mobility can inform our analyses of the potential concerns and possibilities of sustainability as a vehicular idea. In particular, we investigate how sustainability and related language have been adopted in the policies of Canadian post-secondary education institutions over time. The paper closes by suggesting the potential implications of the proceeding analyses for policymakers, practitioners, and researchers concerned with sustainability in education policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
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23. The unsustainability of exurban development in London and New York: calculating transport CO 2 emissions.
- Author
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Focas, Caralampo
- Subjects
SUSTAINABILITY ,EXURBAN regions ,CARBON dioxide & the environment ,REGIONAL planning ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy - Abstract
London and New York have often been hailed for their sustainable planning practices. However, when one focuses on the entire city region, there is ever-increasing car-dependent development. This paper focuses on the exurban region of the two cities investigating transport-created CO2emissions. The research is based on the analysis of data of the National Travel Surveys of Great Britain and the USA through a quantification of personal travel and a top-down estimation of CO2emissions. It is the exurban region that accounts for the vast majority of CO2emissions: 77% for London and 87% for New York. In the wider region for both cities there is a policy vacuum and dearth of regional planning mechanisms to deliver policies to reduce CO2emissions. The paper argues that transport needs to be planned at the city-regional scale.ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHERCopyright of Journal of Environmental Planning & Management is the property of Routledge and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. The Macroeconomic Impact of the Porter Hypothesis: Sustainability and Environmental Policies in a Post-Keynesian Model.
- Author
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Guarini, Giulio
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,SUSTAINABILITY ,GREEN'S functions ,PANEL analysis ,ECONOMIC opportunities - Abstract
The aim of the paper is to propose a post-Keynesian analysis of the Porter Hypothesis (PH) according to which regulation policies can bring about new economic opportunities by generating 'green' environmental innovations. Firstly, I illustrate the main features of the PH. Secondly, a Post-Keynesian growth model is developed by focusing on the macroeconomic impact of the PH. Finally, two equations of the model are estimated, an investment function and a green productivity function, by applying the GMM for panel data to European countries, over the period 1999–2012. The theoretical findings concern the potential rebound effect of regulation if its multiplier effect is greater than its innovation effect and the need for a policy mix to achieve environmental and socio-economic goals together. The empirical section verifies both the weak version of the PH, according to which environmental policies can stimulate green productivity, and (indirectly) the strong version of the PH by estimating the positive impact of green productivity dynamics on private investment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Effective Community Engagement for Sustainability: Wombat Community Forest Management Case Study.
- Author
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NELSON, ANITRA and PETTIT, CHRISTOPHER
- Subjects
FOREST management ,FORESTS & forestry ,COMMUNITY forests ,SUSTAINABLE development ,ECONOMIC development ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy - Abstract
The first significant government sponsored community-based forest management project in Australia was initiated in Central Victoria in 2002. This paper analyses the initial stage of the Wombat Community Forest Management Pilot Project. The paper develops a functional concept of `effective community' for structuring community engagement in these kinds of natural resource management projects. The effective community has characteristics in common with a community of interest, adopts a bioregional perspective, embodies the values of environmental stewardship and interacts in a fully informed way as a `discursive community' (Meppam 2000). The paper offers general advice for organising effective community engagement in such projects and 12 recommendations for governments developing similar initiatives elsewhere. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. The contribution of Geography to Environmental Assessment (EA) practice and research in South Africa.
- Author
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Sandham, L. A. and Retief, F. P.
- Subjects
GEOGRAPHY education ,ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis ,ENVIRONMENTAL management ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,SUSTAINABILITY - Abstract
After 100 years of academic Geography in South Africa, the emerging field of Environmental Assessment (EA) has occupied an important position vis-a-vis Geography. In this paper the contribution of Geography to practice and research in EA is investigated for South Africa. Firstly, Geography core competences are compared to the requirements for training Environmental Assessment practitioners, followed by reflection of the utility of Geography competences for Environmental Assessment research. It is evident that Geography competences are fundamental to EA practice, that EA skills are taught in some Geography curricula, and that the greater part of published EA research is produced by Geographers. We conclude that Geography as a discipline has embraced the environmental sustainability challenges by engaging actively in EA training and research. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Hybrid Bottom Line: another perspective on the sustainability of organizations.
- Author
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Jerónimo Silvestre, Winston, Antunes, Paula, and Filho, Walter Leal
- Subjects
SUSTAINABILITY ,STAKEHOLDERS ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,PROBLEM solving ,SOCIAL responsibility of business ,SUSTAINABLE development reporting - Abstract
In recent years, there has been a growing concern and an increasing number of proactive initiatives from various stakeholders on issues related to the environment, social matters, and economic aspects and this has been the main driving force toward sustainability. However, most players that are deeply involved with environmental and social agendas indicate that these actions have been more of a temporary palliative for the current unsustainability problems than real structural solutions, especially in what concerns the relationship between short-term actions and long-term structural planning. Even though the general literature on sustainability is comprehensive, there is a paucity of papers which look at it at the organizational level, and under a cross-sectoral perspective. This paper is an attempt to address this gap. It presents the concept of ‘Hybrid Bottom Line’ as a new perspective in understanding and sustainability at the organizational level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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- View/download PDF
28. Balancing Heritage and Environmental Policies for Sustainable Refurbishment of Historic Buildings: The Case of New Court, Trinity College, Cambridge.
- Author
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Smith, Oliver
- Subjects
CULTURAL property ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,SUSTAINABLE development ,HISTORIC buildings ,SUSTAINABLE building design & construction - Abstract
This paper analyses the environmentally sustainable retrofit of the Grade I-listed buildings at New Court for Trinity College, Cambridge. The paper critically reviews existing heritage and environmental policies as these relate to practice. The project on which the paper is based has brought together architects, engineers, building physicists, building conditions surveyors, and industry experts. The role of building physics and design, the monitoring and modelling of existing and future fabric conditions and building character are defined as essential components of a strategy to resolve the critical gaps between - and oppositions in - the policies addressing heritage and environmental sustainability. The case study unveils the complexity of the issues involved in such projects and the difficult, nuanced judgements to be made at every level of building physics, design, and policy interpretation. Indeed, there is a critical need for the appropriate allocation of resources (time, money, and intellectual rigour) by all parties involved in such projects to ensure that all decisions are made in a fully-informed and, hopefully, collaborative manner. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Promoting sustainability and pro-environmental behaviour through local government programmes: examples from London, UK.
- Author
-
Revell, Kristy
- Subjects
LOCAL government & environmental policy ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,ENVIRONMENTALISM ,ENVIRONMENTAL protection ,LIFESTYLES -- Environmental aspects - Abstract
In recent years within the UK, behaviour change as a policy tool has gained popularity. Concurrently, the role of local authorities in both tackling unsustainability and reducing carbon emissions has become more prominent. This paper describes a recent study in the UK that aims to understand how local authorities are working to tackle unsustainability and encourage pro-environmental behaviour change in the population. Through interviews with local authority sustainability officers from London, this paper reviews the extent of sustainability work currently being undertaken by local authorities to assist residents transition to a more sustainable lifestyle. The study discusses key findings from the interviews, drawing on the commonalities and factors that influence local authority sustainability programmes. The key finding from these interviews is that there is a need for more robust monitoring and evaluation of local authority sustainability programmes. Robust evaluation would improve understanding of the potential contribution that local authority sustainability work could make towards addressing unsustainability and meeting national emission reduction targets. In addition, it would assist the development of the evidence-base on behaviour change interventions and their effectiveness. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Energy conservation policy and environment for a clean and sustainable energy future.
- Author
-
Bilgen, Selçuk and Sarıkaya, İkbal
- Subjects
ENERGY conservation ,ENERGY consumption ,RENEWABLE energy sources ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,ENERGY policy - Abstract
One of the most serious difficulties facing humanity is the need for a sustainable future. Maintaining nonrenewable energy resources for future generations is a main purpose of sustainability. However, for sustainable future, produced and consumed energy should support human development all social, economic and environmental dimensions. Problems related with environment and energy shortages have put all circles to the task of actively promoting education in energy conservation. Therefore, many countries have started to identify their responsibility for decreasing the unfavorable effect of high energy use on the environment. The primary contribution of this paper will be to ensure energy conservation policy advices to decrease climate change without effecting economic growth for a clean and sustainable energy future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Reinvigorating the sustainable development research agenda: the role of the sustainable development goals (SDG).
- Author
-
Leal Filho, Walter, Azeiteiro, Ulisses, Alves, Fátima, Pace, Paul, Mifsud, Mark, Brandli, Luciana, Caeiro, Sandra S., and Disterheft, Antje
- Subjects
SUSTAINABLE development ,SUSTAINABILITY ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,ECOLOGICAL modernization - Abstract
The United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (UN SDGs) contain a set of 17 measures to foster sustainable development across many areas. It offers a good opportunity to reinvigorate sustainable development research for two main reasons. First, it comprises many areas of SD research, which have become mainstream thanks to the UN SDGs. Second, the fact that the UN and its member countries have committed to attaining SDGs by 2030 has added a sense of urgency to the need to perform quality research on SD on the one hand, and reiterates the need to use the results of this research on the other. Even though the basic concept of sustainability goes back many centuries, it has only recently appeared on the international political agenda. This is partly due to an awakening of the fact that the human ecological pressure on the planet is still much larger than what nature can renew or compensate for. Based on this state of affairs, this paper presents an outline of the process leading to the agreement on the UN SDGs, and looks at some of the ecological aspects as a result of continued pressure of human activities on natural resources. Furthermore, a set of research needs is proposed – also based holistically on updated research trends – discussing the degree of urgency of some measures and explaining why the UN SDGs need to be accorded greater priority in international sustainable development research efforts. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Sustainability indicators for evaluation of the Water-Energy-Food Nexus in urban agriculture.
- Author
-
Babaei, Leila, Niksokhan, Mohammad Hossein, Torabian, Ali, and Negahban-Azar, Masoud
- Subjects
URBAN agriculture ,ENVIRONMENTAL indicators ,SUSTAINABILITY ,ANALYTIC network process ,ANALYTIC hierarchy process ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,ARID regions ,POLLUTION prevention - Abstract
Application of the Water-Energy-Food Nexus system is essential for addressing Water-Energy-Food Security and Environmental Protection in urban agricultural areas. However, there is currently no standardized framework for measuring and comparing sustainability indicators in these areas using the WEF Nexus practices. This study proposes sustainability measurement indicators to evaluate the WEF Nexus sustainability. The Analytical Hierarchy Process (AHP) was employed to identify the most crucial indicators for policymakers. The WEF nexus sustainability indicators were selected based on three dimensions of sustainability: social, environmental, and economic. The study focused on Varamin, a semi-arid city in Tehran that serves as a center for urban agriculture. Research results indicate that water-related components are crucial in arid and semi-arid regions. Based on the environmental sustainability indicators, pollution prevention, with a priority of 52.8%, is a critical component of sustainability. Finally, several key indicators are recommended for decision-makers to address sustainability. Allocating national budgets to create environmental policies and increasing public education on environmental issues are two priorities for achieving sustainability goals. However, future studies should utilize the Analytic Network Process (ANP), which enables interdependencies among decision components, as the AHP approach has some limitations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. An assessment of the aggregated and disaggregated effects of natural resources rents on environmental sustainability in BRICS economies.
- Author
-
Zhou, Fengjiao, Bin Samsurijan, Mohamad Shaharudin, Ibrahim, Ridwan Lanre, and Al-Faryan, Mamdouh Abdulaziz Saleh
- Subjects
NATURAL resources ,SUSTAINABILITY ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,EMISSIONS (Air pollution) ,QUANTILE regression ,AIR pollution ,CLEAN energy - Abstract
This study seeks to investigate how natural resources rents impact environmental sustainability measured by CO
2 emissions and PM2.5 air pollution in Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa (BRICS) economies from 1995 to 2019. To enhance robust policy implications, natural resources are decomposed into disaggregated (coal, gas, oil, forest, and mineral rents) and aggregated (total natural resources rents) indicators. Besides, the intervening roles of affluence, urbanization, and green policies vectoring green technological innovation, green finance, green energy, and waste management within the theoretical underpinning of STIRPAT model are considered. The empirical verification is anchored on second-generation estimators entailing Common Correlated Effects Mean Group, Augmented Mean Group, and Panel Quantile Regression. Similarly, Fully Modified OLS is employed to gauge the country-specific effects amidst varying robustness analyses. The fallouts from the analyses reveal that natural resources rents inhibit the attainments of environmental sustainability in BRICS economies by positively driving CO2 emissions and PM2.5 air pollution. Conversely, green policies are observed to substantially drive environmental sustainability by mitigating both pollutants whereas affluence and urbanization escalate them. The distributional effects from Panel Quantile Regression and Fully Modified OLS corroborate the main findings divergently. Additionally, two channels of causality, including unidirectional and bidirectional nexuses, are apparent from the estimated models. Policy measures are suggested based on the empirical findings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. How Neoliberalism and Ecological Modernization Shaped Environmental Policy in Australia.
- Author
-
Coffey, Brian and Marston, Greg
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,NEOLIBERALISM ,ECOLOGICAL modernization ,CRITICAL discourse analysis - Abstract
‘Sustainability’ provides the dominant frame within which environmental policy debate occurs, notwithstanding its divergent meanings. However, how different discourses combine to shape understanding of the environment, the causes of environmental issues, and the responses required, is less clear cut. Drawing primarily on the approach to critical discourse analysis (CDA) developed by Fairclough, this paper explores the way in which neoliberal and ecologically modern discourses combine to shape environmental policy. Environmental scholars have made relatively little use of this approach to CDA to date, despite the significant interest in the discursive aspects of environmental issues, and its wide use in other areas of policy interest. Using the case of environmental policy-making in Victoria, Australia, this paper illustrates how neoliberalism and weak ecological modernization represented sustainability in ways that seriously limited the importance of environmental issues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Opportunity Costs of Ensuring Sustainability in Urban Water Services.
- Author
-
Sáez-Fernández, Francisco J., González-Gómez, Francisco, and Picazo-Tadeo, Andrés J.
- Subjects
MUNICIPAL water supply ,WATER management ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,SUSTAINABILITY ,GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
This paper assesses technical performance in the water industry in the Southern European region of Andalusia, while accounting for sustainability in the management of water. This allows the opportunity cost of producing sustainability to be evaluated. Given the low cost of raw water in Spain in relation to the estimated opportunity cost of saving this natural resource, wasting water becomes a profitable strategy for utility managers from a private perspective. However, this managerial strategy has a huge social cost in an area of Europe where the sustainable management of water is a pressing need. The conclusion is that environmental policy aimed at discouraging this wasteful behaviour is urgently needed. For this reason, a suitable mix of environmental taxes on water abstraction and institutional reforms is proposed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. The sustainability-profitability trade-off in tourism: can it be overcome?
- Author
-
Moeller, Teresa, Dolnicar, Sara, and Leisch, Friedrich
- Subjects
TOURISM impact ,TRAVELERS ,VACATIONS -- Social aspects ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,ENVIRONMENTAL protection ,NATURAL resources management ,SUSTAINABILITY ,MARKET segmentation ,DEMARKETING ,SOCIETIES - Abstract
This paper answers key questions about personal and industry decision-making in implementing sustainable tourism. Being environmentally friendly is typically associated with sacrifice, including sacrifice of comfort (e.g. walking rather than driving), sacrifice of time (e.g. recycling garbage) or sacrifice of money (e.g. buying more expensive locally grown vegetables). Consequently, the tourism industry perceives sustainable tourism as a sacrificial touristic niche, one that is associated with additional cost but appears to attract customers who do not spend enough money to compensate for the extra effort. This paper explores a perceived trade-off between minimising environmental damage and maximising revenue, by finding market segments that are environmentally friendly and have high expenditures. An online survey was made of 1003 Australian domestic tourists. Results indicate that tourist segments vary significantly in terms of their environmental impacts and vacation expenditure. Six segments were identified. Two market segments, containing 40% of the total market, that leave small environmental footprints while maintaining high expenditure were found, indicating that market segmentation when coupled with marketing/demarketing policies can be used as a strategy complementary to the development of destination-based initiatives to reduce the environmental impact of tourism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. The adoption of corporate social responsibility practices in the airline industry.
- Author
-
Cowper-Smith, Allan and de Grosbois, Danuta
- Subjects
SOCIAL responsibility of business ,COMMERCIAL aeronautics ,TRANSPORTATION industry ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,INDUSTRIAL productivity ,STRATEGIC alliances (Business) ,LABOR supply - Abstract
This paper identifies initiatives related to corporate social responsibility (CSR) in the airline industry and evaluates the overall state of their adoption as reported by members of the three largest airline alliances. Of 41 airlines, only 14 had annual CSR reports publically available in January 2009. Reports were analyzed using a qualitative content analysis approach. Results showed a stronger focus on environmental issues than on the social or economic dimensions of CSR. Of the seven major environmental themes examined, emission reduction programs predominate. Other environmental issues receive much less attention, with no single other initiative implemented by all airlines. Four social and environmental themes were found, including employee wellbeing and engagement, diversity and social equity, community wellbeing and economic prosperity. The data analysis supported the arguments made in the literature that the airlines report CSR initiatives using differing or inconsistent measurements, making evaluation and comparison of their performance and effectiveness difficult. Although a large number of airlines publishing CSR reports discussed their achievement of major goals (reduction of emissions, increasing community involvement or increasing workforce diversity), a much smaller number provided detailed information relating to specific initiatives implemented in order to contribute to these goals. Further, important issues for CSR research are posed in the paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Survival of the greenest: evolutionary economics and policies for energy innovation.
- Author
-
van den Bergh, Jeroen D. J. M., Faber, Albert, Idenburg, Annemarth M., and Oosterhuis, Frans H.
- Abstract
This paper aims to explore the possible contribution of evolutionary economics to environmental policy-making, in particular with respect to innovations in energy technology. Evolutionary economics offers insights into the mechanisms that underlie innovations, structural changes and transitions, therefore making it of great value in framing policies aimed at stimulating environmental innovations and transitions to sustainable development. The paper identifies ‘bounded rationality’, ‘diversity’, ‘innovation’, ‘selection’, ‘path dependency and lock-in’, and ‘co-evolution’ as the main concepts in evolutionary economics. These concepts are subsequently used to formulate guidelines for designing energy innovation policies. We evaluate current Dutch policies related to energy technologies against this background and examine the development of three particular energy technologies within the adopted evolutionary economics framework, namely fuel cells, nuclear fusion, and photovoltaic cells. We conclude that in order to incorporate the core concepts of evolutionary economics, governmental technology policies should focus more on the diversity of technologies, strategies and businesses, rather than on economic efficiency as the key goal. It is further found that evolutionary concepts conflicting with traditional growth objectives are rarely incorporated in Dutch energy innovation policies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Introduction to the SUFOR Program.
- Author
-
Nihlgård, Bengt and Sallnäs, Ola
- Subjects
SUSTAINABLE forestry ,FORESTRY research ,SUSTAINABLE development ,CONSERVATION of natural resources ,DECISION making ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,FOREST management ,ECONOMIC development & the environment - Abstract
As a background to the SUFOR program, in this paper a short introduction to Swedish forestry is given, together with an overview of the sustainability debate in Sweden. The research carried through in the SUFOR program is concurrent with some of the main aspects of sustainability as interpreted here. Knowledge obtained through the program is identified to have a role as decision support for decision makers in Swedish forestry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Policy Competences of Environmental Sustainability Professionals.
- Author
-
Runhaar, Hens, Driessen, Peter, and Vermeulen, Walter
- Subjects
SUSTAINABLE development ,POLICY sciences ,ECONOMIC development & the environment ,CONSERVATION of natural resources ,ENVIRONMENTAL engineering - Abstract
In this paper, the authors elaborate on the policy competences that environmental sustainability professionals need for solving environmental problems as part of sustainable development. The 'multi-actor' policy context in which they operate lends itself to the application of the metaphor of a sports game. The paper goes on to outline the difference between 'spectators', 'players' and their relative roles. In practice, environmental sustainability professionals often switch between both roles during their career, implying that their training should have prepared them for such changes. The authors then elaborate on specific role-related competences and their educational delivery. An important competence for players of the game includes the ability to organise interactive policy-making processes. Spectators should be able to analyse, explain and evaluate the content, process and impact of public policy-making. Such competences can be acquired by teaching students to apply certain key methods and the paper considers the appropriate level of education for each identified aspect. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Revealing inadvertent elitism in stakeholder models of environmental governance: assessing procedural justice in sustainability organizations.
- Author
-
George, Colleen and Reed, Maureen G.
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,SUSTAINABILITY ,PROCEDURAL justice ,NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations ,ORGANIZATIONAL governance - Abstract
Consensus-based multi-stakeholder forms of environmental governance involving government, private and civil society actors, have become popular for advancing sustainability, but have been criticized for failing to achieve procedural justice objectives including recognition, participation and strengthening capabilities. Yet, how such models have functioned within non-governmental organizations dedicated to advancing sustainability has been underexplored. This paper assesses the procedural elements of consensus-based multi-stakeholder models used within Canadian biosphere reserves and model forests, two organizations working to address environment and sustainability issues. We draw on strategic documents and semi-structured interviews from five organizations in Canada to analyze their governance structures and processes against a framework for procedural justice. We find the organizational structure reproduces elitism and professionalism associated with stakeholder models more generally and reproduces challenges associated with recognition, participation and building capabilities found in other stakeholder approaches. Meeting broader sustainability challenges requires organizations to address procedural justice issues in addition to their traditional environmental concerns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Tackling wicked problems and tricky transitions: change and continuity in Cape Town's environmental policy landscape.
- Author
-
Davison, Amy, Patel, Zarina, and Greyling, Saskia
- Subjects
SUSTAINABILITY ,ORGANIZATIONAL learning ,LOCAL government ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy - Abstract
This paper offers a reflection on 15 years of policy change in the City of Cape Town aimed at fostering sustainability from the perspective of a City practitioner. The persistent continuation of unsustainable outcomes, despite ongoing policy reforms, is understood as a combination of the emergence of wicked problems, within a changing local government mandate, in the absence of a transformation of institutional structures, tools and approaches. While the approach to policy reform in Cape Town has focussed on reducing substantive uncertainty through its knowledge-based approach, we show that in the context of an expanding local government mandate, sustainability becomes an aspect of many departments’ directive resulting in strategic uncertainty. The untransformed traditional line-function-based structure of local government in turn works against integration between departments (fundamental for addressing non-linear wicked problems), thus promoting institutional uncertainty. In addressing this combination of strategic and institutional uncertainty, our findings indicate that integration has to happen in the policy stage in order for sustainability principles to be implemented in relevant departments; that implementation requires resourcing across the institution, and ought to be included in departments’ targets; and that competing and conflicting rationalities underpin the policy–practice gap. It is suggested that a first step in breaking down the strategic and institutional uncertainties would be to foster shared values through creating deliberative spaces within the City in which debate, discussion and learning can occur. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Putting transdisciplinarity into practice: a mixed mode procedure for stakeholder participation in natural resource management.
- Author
-
Guimarães, Maria Helena, McKee, Annie, Lima, Maria Luísa, Vasconcelos, Lia, Boski, Tomasz, and Dentinho, Tomaz
- Subjects
NATURAL resources ,FACTORS of production ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,RESOURCE-based communities ,FORCES of production - Abstract
The definition of management actions in natural resource management requires the integration of all types of knowledge involved. An appropriate approach for such a challenge is the ideal of transdisciplinarity. A transdisciplinary process can be considered “consultative” when knowledge is simply gathered and collated, or “participatory” when knowledge integration is undertaken collectively. In this paper, we present a mixed mode procedure (i.e., using interviews, questionnaires, and group discussions) that empirically demonstrates the difference between consultative and participatory transdisciplinary processes. The mixed mode procedure is used for identifying the most relevant problems occurring in the coastal system of Praia da Vitória bay, Azores, Portugal. This mixed mode procedure is likely to be useful for other studies, because the results highlight the need to promote face-to-face interaction at the earliest opportunity, and because it allows an understanding to be gained of social learning processes, the influence of power, and participant behaviour during interaction with others. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Evidence-based policy as iterative learning: the case of EU biofuels targets.
- Author
-
Anderton, Karen and Palmer, James R.
- Subjects
GOVERNMENT policy ,BIOMASS energy ,DECISION making ,LEARNING ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy - Abstract
In recent years, certain attempts to promote sustainable transport have fallen victim to the impact of ‘unintended consequences’ on decision-making and policy outcomes. The pressure that European Union biofuel targets place on global food production and the role they play in facilitating deforestation are well-known examples. This paper highlights how policy-makers’ failure to consider evidence relating to the potential impacts of biofuel mandates in the early 2000s led to a host of complex problems developing over subsequent years. Drawing on the concept of problem ‘framing’, the article then examines the extent of policy learning that has taken place since the Biofuels Directive was implemented in 2003. While acknowledging that not all eventualities can be prepared for, the article highlights the importance of enhanced communication and collaboration across different levels and departments of government in policy-making processes as a means of promoting learning, especially when dealing with complex cross-cutting and international social, environmental and economic problems. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. ESD, federalism and intergovernmental relations in Australia.
- Author
-
Hollander, Robyn
- Subjects
SUSTAINABLE development ,DECISION making in environmental policy ,ENVIRONMENTAL protection planning ,ENVIRONMENTAL protection management ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy - Abstract
Federations present particular challenges for environmental policy makers. They can not only provide opportunities for devolved decision-making and policy experimentation but can also act to reduce standards and inhibit coordinated action. Ecologically sustainable development presents a particular challenge because it relies on the engagement of all levels of government at both the planning and implementation stages. This paper argues that limited state engagement at the conceptualisation phases and the absence of central leadership in the intergovernmental arena in the implementation phase may help explain the failure of this bold meta-policy in changing the game at a national level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. The role of the Red Lists of Ecosystems in leveraging sustainability changes in Finland – perceptions of the assessors.
- Author
-
Salomaa, Anna and Arponen, Anni
- Subjects
APPRAISERS ,ECOSYSTEMS ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,SUSTAINABILITY ,MANUFACTURING processes ,INFORMATION resources - Abstract
The human impact on nature has now reached a level at which the well-being of future human society is at risk. Therefore, transformative change in society is needed. Environmental assessments contribute to shaping environmental policy, potentially leveraging transformative change. Red Lists are a key information source on the state of biodiversity. Our aim was to study the Red List authors' perceptions of how Red Lists contribute to leveraging sustainability changes. We interviewed 15 of the authors of the forest and peatland sections of the Finnish Red List of Ecosystems 2018. We used the framework of sustainability leverage points to locate sustainability changes that Red Lists have leveraged in the social part of the Finnish social-ecological system. Our results show how the assessors perceived the influence of the Red Lists at most of the leverage points, including the deepest ones, and how these influences simultaneously co-exist in several leverage points. The most prominent sustainability changes were linked with legislation and information flows, whereas current paradigms, system goals and legislation appeared to prevent Red Lists from leveraging sustainability changes in Finland. We conclude that the production and dissemination processes of Red List knowledge can make an important contribution to sustainability changes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Resource-based cities (RBC): a road to sustainability.
- Author
-
Zhang, Meng, Tan, Feifei, and Lu, Zhaohua
- Subjects
SUSTAINABILITY ,URBANIZATION ,NATURAL resources management ,RENEWABLE energy sources ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,SIMULATION methods & models - Abstract
Resource-based cities (RBC) have made momentous contributions to urbanization in China. However, as natural resources are exhausted, RBC are facing an enormous challenge. In this paper we put forward a resource-based city sustainability index (RCSI) and a resource-based city coordination index (RCCI), including environmental, social, and economic dimensions, adopted three weight scenarios, and selected 13 cities for study. The results: (a) help locate the problems by analyzing both dimensions and indicators; (b) simulate the trends of how RBC emerged, grew, declined, and regenerated; (c) categorize RBC into four types by integrating RCSI and RCCI; (d) give policy makers a holistic and comprehensive perspective in the future urban regulation and management; and (e) highlight a road to sustainability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Science and Social License: Defining Environmental Sustainability of Atlantic Salmon Aquaculture in South-Eastern Tasmania, Australia.
- Author
-
Leith, Peat, Ogier, Emily, and Haward, Marcus
- Subjects
SUSTAINABILITY ,SALMON farming ,SOCIAL change ,COASTAL zone management ,ENVIRONMENTAL management ,ENVIRONMENTAL protection ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,AGRICULTURE & the environment - Abstract
Social license reflects environmental and social change, and sees community as an important stakeholder and partner. Science, scientists, and science policy have a key role in the processes that generate social license. In this paper, we focus on the interaction between science and social license in salmon aquaculture in south-eastern Tasmania. This research suggests that social license will be supported by distributed and credible knowledge co-production. Drawing on qualitative, interpretive social research we argue that targeted science, instilled by appropriate science policy, can underpin social license by supporting emerging, distributed, and pluralistic knowledge production. Where social license is important and environmental contexts are complex, such knowledge production might support environmental governance, and so improve outcomes in coastal zone management and beyond. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Where Is What Called Sustainability? A Survey of Policies Ostensibly and Explicitly Linked to Sustainability in the United States.
- Author
-
Whittemore, Andrew H. and Forgey, Fred A.
- Subjects
SUSTAINABILITY ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,LOCAL government ,SOCIAL conflict ,URBAN planning - Abstract
This paper discusses the outcome of a survey of US planners working in local governments with a population of over 25,000. The survey asked in which of 72 action areas ostensibly linked to sustainability had their government enacted policy, of these which did they explicitly link to sustainability and if they associated implementation with political conflict. We also considered the geographical variation of policies. We wished to find out if policy-makers more frequently associate sustainability with some policies over others. We hypothesized that between regions there would be significant variation in the number of policies pursued and in which were linked to sustainability, and that political conflict may explain this geographical variation. However, our findings were more limited: we found that planners are more likely to explicitly link policies pertaining to environmental goals with sustainability, and that there is geographical variation in what policies local governments pursue, although in only a few cases we found variations of statistical significance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Wastewater management in Ethiopian higher learning institutions: functionality, sustainability and policy context.
- Author
-
Haddis, Alemayehu, de Geyter, Adriaan, Smets, Ilse, and Van der Bruggen, Bart
- Subjects
COLLEGE campuses -- Environmental aspects ,SEWAGE disposal plants ,WASTEWATER treatment ,EFFLUENT quality - Abstract
This study investigates the existing wastewater management situation in Ethiopia, with particular emphasis on university campus wastewater. The investigation was carried out by reviewing literature, reports, policy documents and field visits integrated with laboratory assessment. It was established that from the seven universities only two have functional wastewater treatment plants, but none of them meet effluent standards. Thesemainly centrally prescribed systemslack sustainability because of problems related to technology choice, affordability and technical skills. This paper proposes feasible rehabilitation strategies for the existing wastewater systems. A combination of policy instruments and integrated wastewater management strategies are proposed. Although based on specific data from Ethiopia, the findings and recommendations of this study also apply to other, similar, low-income countries where the population is booming but overall wastewater management planning is lagging behind. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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