Title: Sustainability
1Sustainabilitys Context
- Sustainability overarching framework
- the ability to maintain a desired condition over
time - Sustainable development underpinning mechanism
- a tool for achieving sustainability, not the
desired goal - (Commonwealth Department of Environment, Sport
and Territories, 1994, 12)
2The issue of meaning
- Sustainability
- an abstract noun thus
- contested but
- kept constant by certain principles and
- made relevant to local contexts
- Thinking both and
- Never permanently held as stable
3Principles of Sustainability (1)
- Integration
- Community involvement
- Precaution
- Equity
- Continual improvement
- Ecological integrity
4Refining the idea of integration
a
b
c
5Principles of sustainability (2)
- Integration
- Community involvement
- Precaution
- Equity
- Continual improvement
- Ecological integrity
6Principles of sustainability (3)
- Integration
- Community involvement
- Precaution
- Equity
- Continual improvement
- Ecological integrity
7Principles of sustainability (4)
- Integration
- Community involvement
- Precaution
- Equity
- Continual improvement
- Ecological integrity
8Principles of sustainability (5)
- Integration
- Community involvement
- Precaution
- Equity
- Continual improvement
- Ecological integrity
9Principles of sustainability (6)
- Integration
- Community involvement
- Precaution
- Equity
- Continual improvement
- Ecological integrity
10Human ecosystem
Critical resources Natural Energy Land
water Flora fauna Materials Nutrients
Socio-economic Information Population
Labour Capital Cultural Organization
Beliefs Myth
11Agenda 21 What is it?
- Global framework to enable more sustainable
living - 172 signatories
- 40 chapters based around certain programme areas
- Basis for action
- Objectives
- Activities
- Means of implementation
12Agenda 21 Major Groups
- Section I. Social and Economic Dimensions
- Section II. Conservation and Management of
Resources for Development - Section III. Strengthening The Role Of Major
Groups - Section IV. Means of Implementation
13Agenda 21 - Participation
- 23.2 One of the fundamental prerequisites for the
achievement of sustainable development is broad
public participation in decision-making.
Furthermore, in the more specific context of
environment and development, the need for new
forms of participation has emerged Individuals,
groups and organizations should have access to
information relevant to environment and
development likely to have a significant
impact
14Local governments and Agenda 21
- 28.1 Because so many of the problems and
solutions being addressed by Agenda 21 have their
roots in local activities, the participation and
cooperation of local authorities will be a
determining factor in fulfilling its objectives.
Local authorities construct, operate and maintain
economic, social and environmental
infrastructure, oversee planning processes,
establish local environmental policies and
regulations, and assist in implementing national
and subnational environmental policies. As the
level of governance closest to the people, they
play a vital role in educating, mobilizing and
responding to the public to promote sustainable
development.
15Local Agenda 21 Defined
- Local Agenda 21 is a participatory multisectoral
process to achieve the goals of Agenda 21 at the
local level through the preparation and
implementation of a long-term strategic action
plan that addresses priority local sustainability
concerns - (ICLEI, no date).
16Benefits
- Meet statutory requirements
- Enhance participation and citizenship
- Improve intergovernmental relations
- Improve relations with community
- Plan for the long term
- Integrate and coordinate policies and practices
- Foster the exercise of leadership and initiative
17Whats not happening?
- Ongoing participation
- Meaningful, sustained and robust integration
- Within councils
- Beyond environmental issues
- Slippage back in to short-termism
- Inadequate resourcing
- Lack of continuity
- Turnover
- Dispensibility
- Training
18UN Habitat Sustainable cities
- Sharing environment-development information and
expertise - Understanding and accepting environment-developmen
t interaction - Building environmental planning and management
capacities - Promoting system wide decision-making
- Stakeholder based development prioritisation,
strategy and action planning - Managing environmental resources and risks for
achieving sustainable development - Leveraging resources for lasting change
- Building inter-agency partnerships, facilitating
global exchange of experiences and know-how