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Significance of environment in the assessment of sustainable development : the case for South West Victoria

conference contribution
posted on 2008-01-01, 00:00 authored by Michelle Graymore, Anne WallisAnne Wallis, Anneke Richards
The assessment of sustainable development is often based on the three pillars of sustainability model or triple bottom line using a set of indicators that evaluate the social, economic and environmental systems. It is thought that by measuring the performance of each system information can be gained about the sustainability of the whole system. However, this represents a disconnect between sustainability theory and the practice of sustainability evaluation as there is no attempt to evaluate if this assumption is true. During the development of a sustainability assessment framework for south west Victoria, Australia, it has become evident that this approach to sustainability assessment does not provide an accurate evaluation of system sustainability. Throughout this project, from stakeholder prioritisation of indicators to final multiple criteria analysis of sustainability, the environmental indicators were found to be the most important for the region’s sustainability. As a consequence, the assessment produced shows that in south west Victoria, sustainability is largely determined by the condition of the environment. This finding highlights the current disconnection between theory and the reality of sustainability. Thus, we discuss a framework for sustainability assessment that attempts to re-connect theory to practice.

History

Event

Easy-Eco Vienna Conference (2008 : Vienna, Austria)

Publisher

EASY-ECO

Location

Vienna, Austria

Place of publication

[Vienna, Austria]

Start date

2008-03-11

End date

2008-03-14

Language

eng

Publication classification

L2.1 Full written paper - non-refereed (minor conferences)

Title of proceedings

Easy-Eco 2008 : Governance by evaluation : institutional capacities and learning for sustainable development