The Challenge of Sustainable Consumption for Governance and Policy Development—A Systematic Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Managing Societal Sustainability
- Establish the extent to which existing research has progressed towards generating methodologies, tools and templates that facilitates the development of sustainable policy;
- Identify relationships, contradictions, gaps, and inconsistencies in the literature on sustainable behaviour in Irish, European, and Western societies;
- Explore reasons for the diversity of perspectives presented in the literature on sustainability as a process and to propose new conceptualisations or theories that may account for these inconsistencies;
- Disaggregate and map the components and dynamics of sustainable governance and societal and individual sustainable behaviour;
- Inform an overarching conceptual model for the development of policy that nurtures and advances behavioural dynamics at the institutional, community and individual level towards a more environmentally sustainable state.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. A Systematic Literature Review
- (i)
- A conceptual framework was developed based on a review of methodological literature and defines the three key areas of enquiry, i.e., the utilitarian approach and consumer responsibility, the social/psychological approach, and the socio-technical (systems of provision/institutional) approach [3]. This framework represents the initial ‘architecture’ for reviewing the wider literature, its underlying assumptions and key dimensions. It also provided insight in terms of context and the development of concepts to enable a deeper interrogation of the topic and to provide the necessary consistency and scientific structure in addressing the research questions. Additionally, outputs of this review process provided guidance on the key search terms to be used in the SLR and on the generation and selection of the grey literature (GL);
- (ii)
- (iii)
- -
- What societal dynamics drive consumption behaviour and how is environmental sustainability integrated into the decision-making process at a governance, institutional, community and individual levels?;
- -
- What intrinsic and extrinsic dimensions of society control sustainable behaviour and decision making at the individual, institutional, community and governance levels?;
- -
- What is the most effective approach (road map) to the design of strategies, policies, initiatives, programmes and plans that can advance individual and societal behaviour and institutional and governance systems towards a more environmentally sustainable state?
2.2. Eligibility and Data Extraction
2.3. Thematic Analysis—Interpretation and Synthesis
2.3.1. Deductive Thematic Considerations
2.3.2. Latent Approach to Theme Identification
2.3.3. Constructionist Thematic Analysis
2.3.4. Outputs of Thematic Analysis
3. Results
4. Discussion
4.1. The Utilitarian Approach—The Individual as Responsible Consumer
4.2. The Social/Marketing Perspective
- Political support to enhance citizen-oriented choices is required;
- There is a need for social policies to redistribute resource consumption in a context of a no-growth scenario;
- Climate change necessitates evolution—technologically as a response to new or shifting ecological states, culturally to provide the context and leverage, and in regulatory terms to provide the vehicles to implement change;
- Communication approaches that advocate individual voluntary action often ignore social and structural impediments to behaviour change;
- There is a need to develop a conceptual framework to analyse power and (dis)empowerment in transformative social change;
- There is a need to advance a conceptual model linking consumption with the status of population–environment literature;
- Institutional change theory identifies the taxonomy of power and how institutions can determine individual choice and interaction structures;
- Cases of collective action have been identified as exemplars or standards of corporate action in relation to environmental issues and used to leverage change;
- Communities and their interactions are critically important as a context for behavioural change.
4.3. Socio-Technical Approach—Systems of Provision
- People do not adopt sustainable consumption lifestyles for societal reasons; rather, cultural norms, institutional inertia and powerful actors, as well as individual reasons all conspire to fashion the output observed and experienced;
- Communication is not enough for consumer awareness and behavioural change—its understanding is often misplaced or misunderstood or even re-directed where its seen as contrary to accepted patterns;
- A new conceptual framing is needed which defines a culture of sustainability embodying individual practices but more significantly changing social institutions, societal norms and governance systems—indeed, the need for developing a sustainable global society is advocated;
- There is a need to build concepts around an ethical society—linking an individual’s worldview with planned societal or citizenship activities to ensure society continuously improves its ethical behaviour;
- Sustainability is a ‘Grand Challenge’ and requires ‘Grand Governance’, where the meaning and role of the citizen is elevated beyond paternalistic platitudes. There is a need for a new meaning of citizenship and for the state to reflect a deeper sustainability model.
4.4. The Governance and Sustainability Policy Development (GSPD) Framework
5. Conclusions
- -
- What societal dynamics drive consumption behaviour and how is environmental sustainability integrated into the decision-making process at a governance, institutional, community and individual level?
- -
- What intrinsic and extrinsic dimensions of society control sustainable behaviour and decision making at the individual, institutional, community and governance level?;
- -
- What is the most effective approach (road map) to the design of strategies, policies, initiatives, programmes and plans that can advance individual and societal behaviour and institutional and governance systems towards a more environmentally sustainable state?
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Inclusion Criteria | Categorisation | Justification |
---|---|---|
Includes reference to sustainability, environment and society | Topic/Discipline/Theory Focus | Links sustainability and the natural environment with social systems, behavioural systems and their operating context. |
Addresses sustainable management or practices | Practice/implementation | To include studies that have demonstrated a practice or assessment or implementation focus. To ensure the inclusion of organisational and operational dimensions, as well as aspects of preservation, biodiversity, and ecosystem welfare. |
Environment and ecosystems | Definition | To include reference to the natural environment and ecosystems. |
Consumer behaviour | Definition | To ensure inclusion of all relevant publications that are concerned with sustainable consumption, consumers/behaviour, and the consumption of natural resources. To ensure the inclusion of stakeholders and market dimensions. |
Governance | Definition | To ensure inclusion of all relevant publications that are concerned with social control and governance systems. |
Policy | Definition | To ensure inclusion of publications that address the issue of policy associated with sustainability, environment and guiding behavioural outcomes, including the consumption of natural resources by society. To identify policy as a term related to the preceding search terms. |
Value/s | Definition | To identify papers that address societal values in the consumption of natural resources. To ensure the inclusion of financial and economic considerations and those that address ethical, moral and aesthetic principles and the role of belief systems, social norms and behaviour. |
Intrinsic | Definition | To include papers that address intrinsic characteristics which are defined by the thing having value “in itself,” or “for its own sake,” or “as such,” or “in its own right.” |
Extrinsic | Definition | To include papers that address values defined by a derived good; it is a good not for its own sake, but for the sake of something else that is good and to which it is related in some way (as such the latter is reflective of the former). |
All Fields | All sections of the document to be included | This ensures that all sections in the selected documents are screened by the database search engine for inclusion of the search terms. |
All disciplines and research domains | Discipline type | To ensure that the search is not restricted by any discipline or topic area. |
Studies since 1st January 2002 | Time Frame | Limited by time because this is the period with the greatest number of contributions and the most relevant type of contribution to the topic of interest. |
Book/eBook, Book Chapter, Journal/e-Journal, Journal Article | Document types | To ensure only contributions included in published books and peer-reviewed articles were selected. |
Full text online | Search Display Format | The ensure that the full content and contribution of the articles and studies concerned were accessible for review and evaluation. |
Scholarly material including peer reviewed papers and studies | Search engine parameter | To target seminal theoretical developments and contributions in the academic literature. |
Include results beyond the library collections of the Institution concerned (TU Dublin) | Search engine parameters | To ensure that all relevant articles, papers and studies were included in the SLR search process. |
English | Language | Articles either fully written in English or with an English language Abstract because English is the academic reference language. |
Exclusion Criteria | Categorisation | Justification |
Before 1st January 2002 | Time Frame | Studies before this date are less relevant to current theoretical developments. The most significant contributions on sustainability and consumption have been published since 2002, and hence the reference period selected is proportionally more important. |
Non-English language papers | Language | Based on the academic norm that all significant academic contributions have an Abstract available in English (even if published in another language). |
Newspaper articles, book reviews and dissertations | Document type | In the context of this study, newspaper editorial comment, general book reviews, advertisement features, trade articles and dissertations do little to advance the research topic. It is noted that outputs of meritorious dissertations will have generated peer-reviewed academic publications, and if relevant, these will be identified through the publication path. |
Screening Criteria | Categorisation | Comment/Analysis |
---|---|---|
Duplicate Papers | ||
Duplication of a paper | Duplication, Duplicate entry | The Search Terms and Inclusion/Exclusion criteria when used on the literature databases can generate some duplicate outputs—these need to be filtered. |
Discipline Focus | ||
Disciplines/topics that address the research questions | Topic/Scope | Overarching requirements that the key concepts/topics of this research study are addressed in the paper being assessed, to ensure that relevant work is included. |
Research Question Focus | ||
Studies that address one or more aspects of the research questions. | Paradigm/theory | This identifies papers that link concepts of control, policy, governance, sustainability, environment and consumption. |
Q1(a) Are societal dynamics presented that drive consumption behaviour? | Driving parameters | Influence of setting and context. |
Q1(b) Are mechanisms that explain how societal dynamics relate to consumption behaviour included? | System understanding | Translational process and mechanism. |
Q1(c) Is there consideration of environmental sustainability and its integration into decision making for governments, institutions, communities and individuals? | Triggers and thresholds | How sustainability problems are managed by different sectors. |
Q2(a) Are intrinsic dimensions/values of society considered in terms of control of sustainable behaviour and decision making? | Social values and ethics | How are value systems understood and how do they influence behaviour? |
Q2(b) Are extrinsic dimensions/values of society considered in terms of the control of sustainable behaviour and decision making? | Social values and ethics | How are value systems understood and how do they influence behaviour? |
Q3(a) Are strategies, policies, programmes or plans considered in terms of sustainable development and sustainable behaviour? | Tools of policy | What are the major tools of sustainable behaviour management in society? |
Q3(b) Is there an assessment of the nature and effectiveness of approaches to the design of policies, programmes and plans as tools to advance sustainable behaviour? | Development protocols | Strategies in policy, programme and plan design. |
Q3(c) Are the efficacies of policies, programmes and plans to shape individual/societal behaviour and institutional and governance systems assessed? | Monitoring | Follow-up, assessment and the feedback system in policy implementation. |
Exclusion topics | ||
Articles/Papers/documents dealing with sustainability from a predominantly economic perspective or where the environmental reference excludes the natural/ecological environment., e.g., corporate environment, operating environment, sustainable or sustainability in reference to market or corporate durability, etc. | Definition for environment and sustainability. Although not absolute, this typically includes reference to:
| To exclude studies that use an alternative conceptualisation of the terms ‘environment’ and/or ‘sustainability’, and hence do not address the natural/ecological environment. |
Eligibility Criteria | Categorisation | Comment/Analysis |
---|---|---|
Bibliographic Characteristics | ||
Journal Title | Label | Classification of type |
Paper Title | Label | Classification of focus/topic/theme |
Authors/Institution | Identity | Contributors, research team and affiliation/s |
Year | Time | Age of article |
Discipline Focus and Thematic Boundaries | ||
Disciplines/topics that address the Research Questions | Prioritisation | Select articles which make a significant contribution to the core topics stemming from the research questions. Articles must make a substantial contribution to the theme of the research questions:
|
Brief Summary of article | Topic/Scope | The summary should be informative in terms of the research questions, particularly regarding sustainability and socio-cultural dimensions of consumption policy and related key issues. |
Aims of the paper/document | Focus | Indicate aims of the paper/article (possibly provide a list of aims). Indicate whether the paper deals with general issues or more concrete problems and solutions or both. |
Participating Institutions | Actors involved | To identify the driving parties involved in sustainable management and the governance response in policy design and implementation. |
Recipients (targets) of the policy/schemes | Actors involved | To identify the individuals, communities, industrial sectors and organisations at which sustainable policy is directed. |
Specific and Key topics or themes and concepts of the article/document | Themes and concepts | Sustainability and consumption—to identify the contribution to concept development, theory, policy development, policy implementation design, and governance and control systems in the social, economic and political context. |
Policy Implementation priorities/schemes/mechanisms | Protocols and Tools | Sustainability and Consumption
|
Studies that demonstrate Frameworks and Templates for monitoring, feedback and control—measure to manage | Monitoring Structural and Operational issuesunder pressure from social and environmental change | Sustainability and Consumption
|
Utility of the ideas/policies/schemes/mechanisms/theories | Effectiveness and efficiency—transformational potential | Sustainability and Consumption
|
Articles/Papers that reference societal values | Decision Theory, Values and Social paradigms | To explore the linked hierarchy of values and decision making—contrasting and shifting realities of society. |
Articles/Papers that explore governance and institutions. | Power, regulation, standards and social context | To expand the concepts of actors and influence in institutional and political governance and social change. |
Papers that address the nexus of sustainability, consumption, environment and governance/control and the socio-political context. | Interaction, the Multidiscipline or Cross-discipline focus or Nexus | To examine the dynamics and influence of linkages, choice sets, nuances, etc., imbedded within the socio-political context of consumption and sustainability. |
Methodological Approach | ||
Theoretical reviews | Methodology—Measurement approach or key variable | To ensure studies that address key theoretical considerations and concept development are included. |
Qualitative studies | Methodology—Research design | To ensure studies that address qualitative dimensions are included. |
Quantitative studies | Methodology—Measurement/key variable | To exclude or limit studies which have little theoretical/systems analysis, i.e., studies that are largely quantitative in nature. |
Approaches to Data and Theory Analysis | ||
Evidence of data interrogation and theoretical contribution to sustainability, consumption and governance. | New data and theory | To identify papers with seminal interpretations or novel interpretations of data. To identify papers that provide data or theoretical contributions on the interplay between consumption, sustainability, society and governance. |
Evidence of insights and analysis of sustainability and consumption as dynamic systems in the context of a changing environmental, social and political landscape. | Models and Uncertainty Approaches that advance understanding of the change paradigm | To include papers that address the uncertainty principal. Articles that make seminal contributions to the change agenda—environmental change, social change and political change. |
Evidence of the role of regulation and the UN SDGs in shaping the decision-making environment. | Global and Regional Regulation and policy conventions | To include papers that address global and regional regulation in the context of the ‘Grand Challenges’ of social and environmental change. |
Evidence of agile and smart over-arching approaches to sustainability and consumption optimisation. | Management, policy and decision making | To identify articles that are cross-cutting in outlook, have general applicability, and provide evidence of adaptability linked to the principles of the UN SDGs and key political and social actors and drivers in society. |
1 | Familiarisation with data: | Transcribing data (if necessary), reading and re-reading the data, noting initial ideas. |
2 | Generating initial codes: | Coding interesting features of the data in a systematic fashion across the entire data set, collating data relevant to each code. |
3 | Searching for themes: | Collating codes into potential themes, gathering all data relevant to each potential theme. |
4 | Reviewing themes: | Checking if the themes work in relation to the coded extracts (Level 1) and the entire data set (Level 2), generating a thematic ‘map’ of the analysis. |
5 | Defining and naming themes: | Ongoing analysis to refine the specifics of each theme, and the overall story the analysis tells, generating clear definitions and names for each theme. |
6 | Producing the report: | The final opportunity for analysis. Selection of vivid, compelling extract examples, final analysis of selected extracts, relating the analysis back to the research question and literature, and producing a scholarly report of the analysis. |
Search All/Summon at TU Dublin—The Technological University Dublin Library Catalogue | ||
---|---|---|
Search Terms | Boolean Operator | Number of Articles Identified, 17th January 2018 |
Sustainable | OR | |
Sustainability | AND | 1,175,290 |
Environment | OR | |
Environmentally | AND | 853,504 |
Consumer Behaviour/ Consumer Behaviour | AND | 88,052 |
Governance | AND | 23,095 |
Policy | AND | 21,492 |
Value | OR | |
Values | AND | 20,036 |
Intrinsic | AND | 2370 |
Extrinsic | 349 |
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Byers, V.; Gilmer, A. The Challenge of Sustainable Consumption for Governance and Policy Development—A Systematic Review. Sustainability 2021, 13, 6723. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13126723
Byers V, Gilmer A. The Challenge of Sustainable Consumption for Governance and Policy Development—A Systematic Review. Sustainability. 2021; 13(12):6723. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13126723
Chicago/Turabian StyleByers, Vivienne, and Alan Gilmer. 2021. "The Challenge of Sustainable Consumption for Governance and Policy Development—A Systematic Review" Sustainability 13, no. 12: 6723. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13126723
APA StyleByers, V., & Gilmer, A. (2021). The Challenge of Sustainable Consumption for Governance and Policy Development—A Systematic Review. Sustainability, 13(12), 6723. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13126723