Exploring Social Sustainability Handprint—Part 2: Sustainable Development and Sustainability
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Sustainable Development
3.2. Sustainability
- Important future issues encompass (1) extending the existing metrics to better integrate the contribution of all relevant natural and anthropogenic resources, (2) addressing connections within and across systems organization levels, (3) addressing intra- and intergenerational equity and (4) monitoring of capacities that are necessary for sustainable development (e.g., capacity to measure sustainable development, promote equity and design governance arrangements that support collective management of shared resources and promote equity) [41].
- Based on normative orientation towards sustainability justice (the synthesis of sustainability relationships such as intra- and intergenerational justice between humans and justice towards nature), comprehensive scope, continuance, threefold relationality (nature and present and future generations), uncertainty (especially about the environment and future including interactions between human and natural systems) and limits [60].
- A dynamic, open and an evolving idea that aims at encompassing multiple interdependence, independence and interpretation possibilities among various sectors, actions, contexts and stakeholders across time and space and a concept that engages with environmental, social and economic domains (key issue is intergenerational equity which refers to fairness across generations) [48].
- It is based on the social, environmental and economic pillars of sustainability (in the broadest sense) and it encourages coordination between humans and social, environmental and economic pillars of sustainability through sustainability strategies [21].
- A fundamental shift in the development paradigm including focus on enhanced human well-being and environmental resilience [22].
- Governance is needed to implement sustainability in practice and to promote a global sustainability transformation [20].
- It is about a (1) communal system with social equity and understanding of relationship to address the pressures caused by disharmony in the society and (2) the achievement of a stable relationship between human activities and the environment to ensure that future generations can have a good quality of life [21].
- It aims at (1) ensuring that the earth can meet the material and energy needs to support complex systems (e.g., humanity) over the long-term including social dimensions, (2) supporting human society and (3) making the survival of civilized human existence on earth feasible [42].
3.3. Social and Societal Sustainability
3.3.1. Social Sustainability
3.3.2. Societal Sustainability
- Societal sustainability is about (1) sustainability implications of social aspects (e.g., institutions, culture and politics) and their influence on the interaction of social and natural systems and (2) a systems perspective and approach that integrates social and natural systems encompassing consideration of social and environmental quality justice in particular social or economic fields [19].
- (1) Business organizations are societal institutions that should play a role in ensuring the long-term viability of a democratically governed society that is based on equality, justice and trust and supported by sustainable social, natural and economic systems and (2) organizational management needs to be held accountable by society (e.g., evaluation of outcomes based on criteria that reflect the norms and values of the society) including the use of resources [109].
- Understanding of the environmental dimension of sustainable development in the context of societal sustainability requires focus on, e.g., biodiversity (ecosystem, species and genetic diversity) and ecosystem services (things acquired by people from nature to support well-being) [48].
3.4. Sustainability Assessment
- The integration of ecological, social and economic considerations [61].
- Operationalization of sustainability in the context of sustainability assessment including comprehensive considerations and interrelations and interdependency over the short- and long-term and application by governments, civil society organizations and companies at both strategic and project levels [52].
- Multiple approaches to align decision making with sustainability principles (including problem analysis, mapping of options and assessment of alternatives) and operationalization of sustainability for decision making based on structuring of unstructured sustainability issues [122].
- Inclusion of various specific aspects such as (1) intra- and intergenerational equity, (2) socio-ecological system integrity, (3) livelihood sufficiency and opportunity, (4) resource maintenance and efficiency, (5) socio-ecological civility and democratic governance, (6) precaution and adaptation and (7) immediate and long-term integration [72].
3.5. Sustainability Assessment Development Focus Areas
- In-depth knowledge about all parameters that have an effect on sustainability and assessment of the progress of a nation towards sustainability based on all parameters and their individual and combined impacts on all pillars of sustainability [21].
- (1) The integration, promotion and accomplishment of learning, (2) inclusion of the views of all affected and interested parties in the framing of the assessment and (3) the application of mechanisms for managing trade-offs based on open, accountable and participative approaches [123].
- Design to initiate innovative and creative thought processes to solve sustainable development problems and a communicative process to improve communication about sustainability issues [88].
- Information about (1) ecosystem services, (2) trends in human use of ecosystem services, (3) changes in institutions and governance arrangements and (4) trends in components of human well-being (particular focus on aspects outside traditional measurement) to manage human-environment systems [67].
3.6. Sustainability Indicators
- Internationally negotiated consensus on priority human needs goals, targets and indicators as a basis and focus on the assessment of the achievement of goals and targets and of progress towards or away from a sustainability transition [64].
- (1) Support of decision making for and to promote sustainable development, (2) operationalization of sustainable development for a specific system in a particular socio-environmental context, (3) generation and communication of complex sustainability information (well-structured approach to inform decision making), (4) identification of knowledge and data gaps and (4) advancement of continuous social learning (decision makers and stakeholders) [16].
- (1) Assessment and communication of the progress toward sustainable development, (2) support of all levels of decision making and policy processes (e.g., strategies, policies, plans, operations, activities, programs and projects) and (3) improvement of the management of both human and natural systems [128].
- Identification (including making them visible) and management of essential dimensions of society and the environment [71].
- (1) Mapping progress toward meeting human needs (including specific indicators of human welfare) and preserving life support systems, (2) evaluation of the effectiveness of applied actions to achieve the goals, (3) informing the society about the nature and progress of the sustainability transition and (4) contribution to information feedback system of society to adjust directions, assess progress and gain unsustainability warmings [58].
- (1) Promotion and support of decision making for sustainable development, (2) provision of guidance towards a sustainable society, (3) addressing sustainability decision-making challenges including interpretation (principles and socio-environmental context), information-structuring (complex and multi-dimensional sustainability into, e.g., indicators) and influence (of sustainability information on decision making and implementation of sustainable development), (4) interpretation of sustainability, (5) impact measurement and (6) promotion of social learning, debate and participation [16].
- (1) Evaluation of what really matters to track progress toward a sustainable society, (2) dealing with volatile contradictory societal values, new information traps and post-truth reality and (3) individuals as leading actors including their role in the collection, analysis, evaluation and communication of sustainability information and data covering households, daily activities and urban and rural ecosystems [128].
- (1) Sustainability transition through the operationalization of goals into specific indicators that can be continuously monitored, evaluated and reported, (2) responsibility by societies to take measure of the desired development direction and (3) sustainability transition reporting based on multiple indicators to both map progress toward the associated goals (meeting human needs and preserving life support systems) and to evaluate the effectiveness of applied actions to achieve the goals [58].
- Corporate social and environmental performance and management of society and environment related dimensions and progress towards sustainability (change in dynamic systems) including climate change and resource limit challenges.
- Institutional framework for sustainability to assess and monitor progress and value and sustainability indicators based on multiple qualitative, quantitative or combined approaches (e.g., to assess the characteristics or processes of the human-environmental system to ensure its functionality and continuity far into the future).
- Assessment of what really matters to track progress toward a sustainable society and societal values and individuals as leading actors in the collection, analysis, evaluation and communication of sustainability information and data (e.g., households, daily activities and urban/rural ecosystems).
3.7. Sustainability Indicator Development Focus Areas
- Capturing of social, environmental and economic priorities of projects and conflicts between human well-being, environmental conservation and economic development [139].
- Human-environment vulnerability including indicators that monitor the combination of social and natural factors that lead to irreversible damage [58].
- Indicators of (1) progress towards sustainability and (2) change in dynamic systems to address challenges (e.g., climate change and resource limits) [71].
- Specific issues such as (1) equity, (2) awareness of sustainability, (3) participation and (4) social cohesion dimensions of the social-environmental framework (for the analysis of organizations) [103].
- The development of a concise set of fully integrated indicators covering essential sustainable development variables that define the main minimum set of social, environmental and economic monitoring measurements to link across actors, sectors and countries to promote monitoring, accountability and data for the implementation of sustainable development goals [51].
4. Conclusions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Sustainable Development Definitions and Elements | Ways to Create Social Sustainability Handprints |
---|---|
Promotion of human development and well-being while protecting the life support systems of the earth [47] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts to promote (1) human development and well-being and (2) sustainable social/society–environment relationships and interfaces |
(1) normativity (societal and normative choices and social constructions by people based on values), (2) equity (fairness and justice including, e.g., inter- and intragenerational aspects), (3) integration (whole system perspective and integration of all goals) and (4) dynamism (process of sustainability-oriented change) [20] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts to promote (1) normative (societal and normative choices and social constructions based on values) aspects, (2) inter- and intragenerational equity, fairness and justice, (3) whole system perspective including integration of all social and societal goals and (4) dynamic social sustainability-oriented change processes |
(1) quality of life, (2) improvement of the lives of human beings, (3) an open and dynamic concept that includes multiple intersection possibilities among political, environmental and socio-economic processes and (4) can be defined, measured and achieved in many ways [48] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts to promote (1) quality of life and (2) improvement of the lives of humans considering open, dynamic and multiple intersections among political, environmental and socio-economic processes |
(1) multifaceted and normative concept, (2) human welfare and its relationships with nature in a framework in which nature–society imbalances can influence social and economic balance, (3) societal decision and action standards (to achieve well-being and survival), (4) integration of social, ecological and economic dimensions and (5) holistic and integrated approaches (to ensure coordinated operations among the social, environmental and economic domains) [49] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts to promote (1) multifaceted and normative aspects, (2) human welfare and its relationships with nature, (3) solutions to nature–society imbalances, (4) social and societal balance, (3) societal decision and action standards, (4) sustainable social/society–environment relationships and interfaces, (5) holistic and integrated coordination of activities related to social, societal and environmental aspects |
Definition based on (1) what it specifically aims to achieve, (2) how it is measured (including the role of indicators), (3) values supporting or representing it and (4) practice (e.g., goals, indicators and values) in addition to the social, environmental and economic pillars [39] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts to promote social and societal sustainability goals, values, practices and indicators |
(1) variability based on values, priorities and needs and (2) the suitability of measures may depend on contexts [50] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts to promote multiple values and to address multiple priorities and needs covering various contexts and considering selection of measures based on the context |
The implementation of goals requires focus on interlinkages across societal actors (civil society, local authorities, government agencies and private sector) and sectors and between countries with different income levels [51] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts to promote interlinkages across societal actors (e.g., civil society, local authorities and private sector) and sectors and between countries with different income levels |
Preservation and fostering of dynamic, adaptable, satisfying, resilient and durable socio-ecological systems from the family level to the global level [52] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts to promote dynamic, adaptable, satisfying, resilient and durable social/society–environment relationships and interfaces (from the family level to the global level) |
Sustainable Development Definitions and Elements | Social Sustainability Handprint Assessment Approaches |
---|---|
The development of a human, social and economic system that is capable of maintaining itself indefinitely in harmony with the biophysical systems of the planet [53] | Integration of (1) human, social and societal systems and (2) social/society–environment relationships that are capable of maintaining themselves indefinitely in harmony with the biophysical systems of the planet into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) integrated approaches and (2) a broad social front (to make sustainable development concrete and achievable) including responsibility for a sustainable future by various sections of society [54] | Integration of (1) broad social fronts to make social and societal aspects of sustainable development concrete and achievable and (3) responsibility for a sustainable future by various sections of society into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) present and future generations and the capacity of the earth and its natural resources (in accordance with the WCED 1987 definition), (2) natural resources should be not depleted by a small group of people and (3) the present generation should not compromise the capacity of future generations for their own development through irreparable damage to the environment, human health or to the economy [55] | Integration of (1) present and future generations, (2) carrying capacity of nature, (3) sustainable use of natural resources and (4) protection of human health and the environment into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
A concept that is based on international developments in the fields of environmental conservation, human rights and development [56] | Integration of international developments in the fields of human rights, environmental conservation and social and societal aspects of sustainable development into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) human rights and public participation, (2) environmental protection (3) sustainable use of natural resources, (4) integration and interrelatedness, (5) good governance, (6) time dimension (temporality, longevity and promptness) and (7) sound macro-economic development [57] | Integration of (1) human rights, (2) public participation, (3) sustainable use of natural resources, (4) interrelatedness, (5) good governance and (6) time dimension (temporality, longevity and promptness) into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
What is to be sustained: (1) community (groups, cultures and places), (2) nature (ecosystems, biodiversity and earth) and (3) life support (environment, ecosystem services and resources) [58] | Integration of social and societal sustainability aspects to be sustained: (1) community (groups, cultures and places) and (2) social/society–environment relationships and interfaces (e.g., life support, ecosystem services, biodiversity and resources) into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
What is to be developed: (1) society (institutions, social capital, states and regions), (2) people (equity, equal opportunity, education, child survival and life expectancy) and (3) economy (productive sectors, wealth and consumption) encompassing the links between these components and the vision about the future [58] | Integration of social and societal sustainability aspects to be developed: (1) society (e.g., institutions and social capital), (2) people (equity, equal opportunity, education, child survival and life expectancy), (3) links between people and society and (4) future visions about social and societal aspects of sustainable development into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) equality and mutual dependence among generations, peoples and nations of the earth, (2) future-orientation, interdisciplinarity, learning, participation and adaptation for the development of necessary socio-cultural, natural and socio-economical environments for the well-being of both humans and nature and (3) wide-ranging social, environmental and economic issues (inter-reliant dimensions that must be approached within an integrated framework) [49] | Integration of (1) equality and mutual dependence among generations, peoples and nations, (2) future-orientation, interdisciplinarity, learning, participation and adaptation for the development of social, societal and cultural environments and social/society–environment relationships and interfaces that are essential for the well-being of both humans and nature and (3) wide-ranging social and environmental issues (inter-reliant dimensions) into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
Sustainability Definitions and Elements | Ways to Create Social Sustainability Handprints |
---|---|
A social choice about what to develop and what to sustain and for how long (linked to the internationally negotiated consensus on development and environment issues including the associated priority human needs and life support system goals, targets and indicators) [64] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts based on (1) social and societal choices about what to develop and what to sustain and for how long and (2) internationally agreed priority social and societal sustainability goals, human needs and life support system goals, targets and indicators |
(1) The biophysical conditions of equity, environment and economy [65] and (2) new future-oriented systems approaches (in science, policy making and practice) to transform the world including focus on societal/social practice transformation taking into account the dynamic and complex nature of systems [66] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts based on (1) equity, (2) sustainable social/society–environment relationships and interfaces, (3) new future-oriented systems approaches and (4) social and societal practice transformations considering the dynamic and complex nature of systems |
(1) Understanding and transformation of social-ecological systems based on socially, ecologically and economically viable and long-term approaches, (2) sustainability of human well-being and ecosystem services based on long-term collection of experiments and continuous evaluation, innovation and learning, (3) establishment of capacity to create and implement policies for social-ecological systems, evaluate outcomes and predict consequences and (4) threat to society, human health and livelihoods by adverse changes to ecosystem services and the earth system [67] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts to promote (1) transformation towards sustainable long-term social/society–environment relationships and interfaces (e.g., ecosystem services), (2) sustainable human well-being) based on long-term and continuous assessment, innovation and learning and (3) responses and solutions to risks and threats related to society, human health and livelihoods (e.g., adverse changes in social/society–environment relationships and interfaces) |
Influence of the definition of goals on the need for changes in human values, attitudes and behaviors to achieve a sustainability transition [68] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts based on (1) social and societal sustainability goals and (2) human values, attitudes and behaviors needed to achieve a sustainability transition |
(1) Organizational goal and (2) integral part of organizational processes including continuous learning, knowledge creation, innovation and efforts at the organizational and human levels [69] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts to promote (1) organizational social and societal sustainability goals, (2) organizational processes including continuous learning, knowledge creation and innovation and (3) efforts at the organizational and human levels |
Integrated approach based on (1) addressing overarching concern in terms of well-being, equity, community engagement and security, (2) governance and education focusing on local experiences and cooperative processes and (3) engaged governance that addresses multiple issues (at the same time) and challenges the multiple pillar approach (separation of social, environmental and economic dimensions of sustainability) [70] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts to promote (1) well-being, equity and community engagement, (2) security, (3) education, (4) local experiences and cooperative processes and (5) engaged governance that addresses multiple issues at the same time |
Efforts to promote good governance through inclusion of sustainability into framework, process and practice including focus on (1) integrated vision of sustainability, (2) local contexts and ideas, (3) participation of citizens in decision making and (4) access to necessary resources in governance processes [70] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts based on and to promote (1) good governance, (2) integration of social and societal sustainability into processes and practices, (3) integrated vision of social and societal sustainability, (4) the importance of local contexts and ideas, (5) participation of citizens in decision making and (6) access to necessary resources in governance processes |
(1) An ethical challenge, (2) a process of dynamic balance, (3) a means to achieve goals for society in terms of human happiness or prosperity, fulfilment of human capacity or advance of civilization (defined in specific societies, cultures or spiritual traditions) and (4) social and economic dimensions relate to human society including its purpose [71] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts to promote (1) responses and solutions to ethical challenges, (2) inclusion of dynamic balances associated with social sustainability, (3) societal goals (e.g., human happiness, fulfilment of human capacity, advance of civilization and prosperity as defined in specific societies, cultures or spiritual traditions) and (4) sustainable relationship of the social dimension with human society including its purpose |
(1) A challenge to conventional thinking and practice, (2) long- and short-term well-being, (3) comprehensive coverage of all main decision making issues, (4) recognition of interdependencies and links (especially between human and the biophysical foundations of life), (5) embedded in a world of complexity and surprise (precautionary approaches are necessary), (6) recognition of both inviolable limits and endless opportunities for creative innovation, (7) open-ended process (not a state), (8) intertwined means and ends (culture and governance and ecology, society and economy) and (9) universal and context dependent [72] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts to promote (1) progress beyond conventional thinking and practices, (2) long and short-term well-being, (3) comprehensive coverage of all main decision making issues, (4) social/society–environment relationships and interfaces, (5) precautionary approaches, (6) unlimited opportunities for creative innovations, (7) understanding of critical and inviolable limits, (8) open-ended processes, (9) intertwined means and ends (e.g., culture and governance and society and ecology) and (10) universal and context dependent approaches |
Local and global sustainability challenges caused by interdependencies between societal, environmental, cultural and economic drivers that (1) lead to mutual and dynamic reinforcement with causes and effects at many geographic and temporal scales and (2) imply multiple conflicts of goals and interests [73] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts to address (1) local and global sustainability challenges, (2) interdependencies between societal, environmental and cultural drivers, (3) mutual and dynamic reinforcement including causes and effects at many geographic and temporal scales and (4) multiple conflicts of goals and interests |
Sustainability Definitions and Elements | Social Sustainability Handprint Assessment Approaches |
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(1) The UN SDGs as an essential framework for sustainability science [62,74], (2) adequate institutional framework including adequate interfaces between policy and science [75] and (3) the UN SDGs as an opportunity to mainstream sustainability science [76] | Integration of (1) the UN SDGs, (2) sustainability science, (3) adequate institutional frameworks, (4) adequate science-policy interfaces, (4) mainstreaming of sustainability science through the UN SDGs into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) The interpretation of the ethical implications and ethics of the UN SDGs including human-nature relationship based on an integrated approach to biocentrism and anthropocentrism, continuous inspection of values and attitudes and more focus on nature as a value and source for experience (in contrast to traditional focus on nature as a resource for action and knowledge) [77] and (2) ethics as part of the key foundations including social, environmental and economic dimensions [78] | Integration of (1) ethical implications and ethics of the UN SDGs, (2) social/society–environment relationships and interfaces, (3) continuous inspection of values and attitudes, (4) nature as a value and source for experience and (5) ethics including its social and environmental dimensions into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
Global transition based on balancing of human needs (human progress and quality of life) with the ability of ecosystems to provide goods and services (ecosystem integrity) [79] | Integration of global transition based on balancing of human needs, progress and quality of life with the ability of ecosystems to provide goods and services (ecosystem integrity) into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) Learning in a key role in transitions including the generation of new knowledge, insights and collaborative action [80], (2) sustainability problem, policy and political learning in policy communities [81] and (3) the essential role of governance (e.g., societal decision making and institutions) and politics in understanding and analyzing transformations [82] | Integration of (1) learning, (2) the generation of new knowledge, insights and collaborative action, (3) transitions and transformations, (4) sustainability problem, policy and political learning in policy communities and (5) governance (e.g., societal decision making and institutions) and politics into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) Learning in transitions including, e.g., organizational (management studies) and collaborative learning and social learning in natural resources management (complex system thinking) [83] and (2) learning by doing in transitions [84] | Integration of (1) learning in transitions (e.g., organizational), (2) management, (3) collaborative learning, (4) social learning (e.g., management of natural resources), (5) system thinking and (6) learning by doing in transitions into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) Many dimensions including multiple environmental, social and economic aspects and (2) governance can be supported by focus on knowledge integration and multi-actor governance [85] | Integration of (1) multiple social dimensions and aspects, (2) governance based on knowledge integration and (3) multi-actor governance into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
Goal achievement based on both understanding and management of unprecedented and interconnected challenges [86] | Integration of the achievement of goals based on understanding and management of unprecedented and interconnected challenges into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) Critical understanding by society (that is lacking) about institutional arrangements (knowledge systems) can effectively address science and technology for sustainability and (2) Mobilization of science and technology based on knowledge systems that manage boundaries between knowledge/expertise and action/decision making including focus on high-quality information, effective linking of knowledge and action, learning from field experience and enhancement of institutional and human capacity [87] | Integration of (1) critical understanding by society about and institutional arrangements, (2) science and technology for social sustainability, (3) knowledge systems to manage boundaries between knowledge/expertise and action/decision making, (4) high-quality information, (5) effective linking of knowledge and action, (6) learning from field experience and (7) enhancement of institutional and human capacity into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) Integration of sustainability assessment into municipal policy-making and planning processes and (2) local-level and community-based approaches to sustainability assessment including development of sustainable development indicators and monitoring systems [88] | Integration of (1) municipal policy-making and planning processes, (2) local-level and community-based approaches and (3) development of indicators and monitoring systems for social and societal aspects of sustainable development into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) Sustainability is about how communities envision and pursue natural and social well-being [89] and (2) urgent addressing of sustainability challenges by society and science (e.g., climate change, deforestation, land degradation and land use change) [90] | Integration of (1) the ways in which communities envision and pursue social and natural well-being and (2) sustainability challenges (e.g., climate change and deforestation) into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) A set of socio-ecological criteria that guide human action, (2) a vision of humankind (realization takes place through joining of social and ecological objectives of a particular system), (3) an approach (including the incorporation of social and ecological variables into the study of, e.g., systems or their social or environmental performance) and (4) an object (e.g., study object of sustainability science) [91] | Integration of (1) criteria related to social/society–environment relationships and interfaces to guide human actions, (2) visions of humankind (e.g., joint social/societal and environmental/ecological objectives), (3) social/societal and environmental/aspects, variables and performance and (4) sustainability science into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
Social Sustainability Definitions and Elements | Ways to Create Social Sustainability Handprints |
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Social sustainability refers to (1) a life-enhancing and positive condition within communities and (2) a process within communities that can achieve that condition [98] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts to promote (1) life-enhancing and positive conditions and (2) processes within communities (that can promote and achieve social sustainability) |
(1) Social justice and equity, (2) social capital, (3) engaged governance (e.g., participation and community engagement), (4) social infrastructure and (5) typical social sustainability research focus areas such as social and community well-being, community and/or human-scale development and community capacity building [99] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts to promote (1) social justice, equity, infrastructure and capital and (2) engaged governance (e.g., participation and community engagement) and (3) social and community well-being, community and human-scale development and community capacity building including the inclusion of social sustainability research approaches |
Traditional themes: (1) basic needs (e.g., environmental health and housing), (2) equity, (3) social justice, (4) human rights and gender issues, (5) education and skills, (6) employment and (7) poverty [93,100] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts to promote (1) equity, (2) social justice, (3) human rights and gender issues, (4) basic needs (e.g., environmental health), (5) education and skills, (6) employment and (7) poverty |
Emerging themes: (1) well-being, happiness and quality of life, (2) health and safety, (3) empowerment, participation and access, (4), social capital (e.g., knowledge and social norms of conduct), (5) social mixing and cohesion, (6) demographic change (e.g., mobility, migration and ageing) and (7) identity, sense of place and culture [93,100] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts to promote (1) well-being, happiness and quality of life, (2) empowerment, participation and access, (3) health and safety (4), social capital (e.g., knowledge and social norms of conduct), (5) social mixing and cohesion, (6) demographic change (e.g., mobility, migration and ageing) and (7) identity, sense of place and culture |
Relation to multiple spatial and functional levels including international, national or regional, city, community or neighborhood and household or business [101] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts at multiple spatial and functional levels (e.g., international, national, regional, city, community, neighborhood, household and business) |
(1) Equitable access and (2) community sustainability as the main dimensions of (urban) social sustainability [102] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts to promote (1) community sustainability and (2) equitable access as the main dimensions of urban social sustainability |
(1) Equity, (2) public awareness, (3) participation and (4) social cohesion as the overarching social concepts of the social pillar of sustainable development that can be extended to include environmental, international and intergenerational dimensions (sustainable development concept and policy approach including the development of interpillar links) [103] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts to promote (1) equity, (2) public awareness, (3) participation and (4) social cohesion as parts of the social and societal aspects of sustainable development including their extension to include international and intergenerational dimensions and social/society–environment relationships and interfaces |
The social aspect of sustainability meaning both (1) the processes that generate social well-being and health (now and in the future) and (2) social institutions that facilitate environmental and economic sustainability (now and in the future) [104] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts to promote (1) processes to generate social well-being and health (now and in the future) and (2) social institutions to facilitate sustainable social/society–environment relationships and interfaces (now and in the future) |
(1) The improvement of conditions for living people and future generations, (2) the quality of governance of the development process, (3) substantive (social sustainability goals and social goals of sustainable development to be achieved) and procedural (means to achieve the goals) aspects and (4) the integration of social and environmental aspects (e.g., in management and policy) based on a long-term learning process and focus on procedural aspects of social sustainability (e.g., participation) [105] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts to promote (1) the improvement of living conditions of people and future generations, (2) the quality of governance of the development process, (3) social sustainability goals, (4) social goals of sustainable development and (5) sustainable social/society–environment relationships and interfaces (e.g., management and policies) based on long-term learning processes and procedural aspects of social sustainability (e.g., participation) |
A social-environmental framework including (1) equity, (2) participation, (3) awareness for sustainability and (4) social cohesion dimensions [103] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts to promote (1) sustainable social/society–environment relationships and interfaces, (2) equity, (2) participation, (3) awareness for sustainability and (4) social cohesion dimensions |
(1) Social justice is the central part of the UN SDGs and it refers to the creation of a society that is based on equality, human rights and solidarity, (2) the importance of social inclusion and gender equality, (3) policy making for the promotion of equity (e.g., a universal approach to social policy and integration of broader social protection systems including the application of indicators, inclusive institutions, addressing discrimination and continuous provision of data to ensure that no one is left behind) [48] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts to promote (1) social justice, (2) the creation of a society that is based on equality, human rights and solidarity based on the UN SDGs, (3) social inclusion and gender equality, (4) policy making for the promotion of equity, (5) a universal approach to social policy, (6) integration of broader social protection systems, (7) application of social sustainability indicators, (8) inclusive institutions and (9) addressing discrimination based on continuous provision of information/data on social sustainability |
Social Sustainability Definitions and Elements | Social Sustainability Handprint Assessment Approaches |
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Interrelated and measurable social sustainability indicators that also represent action to establish and implement social sustainability: (1) equity of access to key services, (2) equity between generations, (3) a system of transmitting awareness of social sustainability across generations, (4) widespread political participation of citizens, (5) valuation and protection of different cultures and promotion and support of cultural integration (if desirable by groups/individuals) within the system of cultural relations, (6) mechanisms for a community to collectively identify its strengths and needs and to fulfil its own needs through community action and (7) mechanisms for political advocacy to meet needs that cannot be met by community action [98] | Integration of (1) equity of access to key services, (2) equity between generations, (3) a system of transmitting awareness of social sustainability across generations, (4) widespread political participation of citizens, (5) valuation and protection of different cultures and promotion and support of cultural integration (if desirable by groups/individuals), (6) mechanisms for communities to collectively identify their strengths and needs and to fulfil their own needs through community action and (7) mechanisms for political advocacy to meet needs that cannot be met by community action into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
Operational-level approach based on actions in main thematic areas covering the social realm of societies and individuals (e.g., capacity building, skills development and environmental inequalities) [93,100] | Integration of (1) operational-level approaches, (2) actions in main thematic areas of social sustainability by societies and individuals, (3) skills development, (4) capacity building and (5) environmental inequalities into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) Distinctive and stand-alone objective or social pillar of sustainability (including, e.g., social sustainability indicators or index), (2) a fully integrated, place-based and process-oriented approach to sustainability, (3) a precondition and foundation for environmental and economic sustainability, (4) a causal mechanism for changes in environmental and economic sustainability and (5) a constraint on environmental and economic pillars of sustainability [106] | Integration of (1) social sustainability objectives and (2) social aspects of sustainable development and sustainability, (3) social sustainability indicators and indexes, (4) fully integrated, place-based and process-oriented approaches to sustainability and (5) social/society–environment relationships and interfaces including changes and constraints into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
Interlinked with the other sustainability dimensions (impacted by any change) [107] | Integration of interlinkages with and impacts of changes in environmental sustainability into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
Social impacts of business organizations and activities are related to interactions with and impacts on organizational stakeholders such as employees including unions, suppliers/supply chain, communities and consumers [108] | Integration of (1) social sustainability impacts of business organizations and activities, (2) interactions with and impacts on organizational stakeholders such as employees, unions, suppliers, supply chain, communities and consumers into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) Socially sustainable actions and activities enhance the long-term well-being of social institutions and (2) the moral legitimacy of social sustainability is based on action/activities in the public interest (e.g., organization acting in the interest of society) [109] | Integration of (1) socially sustainable actions and activities, (2) long-term well-being of social institutions and (3) moral legitimacy of social sustainability based on action and activities in the public interest (e.g., organizations that act in the interest of societies) into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
Social capital (e.g., networks and norms) can be used to (1) assess social aspects of sustainability and (2) measure social sustainability with particular focus on measuring the social-environmental interface of communities and measuring and reporting community sustainability efforts [110] | Integration of (1) social capital (e.g., networks and norms), (2) social aspects of sustainability, (3) social-environmental interfaces of communities and (4) sustainability efforts by communities into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) A quality of societies, (1) nature–society relationships mediated by work and relationships within society and (3) achieved if work and related institutional arrangement within a society satisfy a broad set of human needs and are shaped in a way that ensures long-term preservation of nature (including its reproductive capabilities) and fulfilment of normative claims of social justice, participation and human dignity [94] | Integration of (1) qualities of societies, (2) social/society–environment relationships and interfaces, (3) relationships within societies, (4) work and related institutional arrangements within societies, (5) a broad set of human needs, (6) long-term fulfilment of normative claims of social justice, (7) participation, (8) human dignity and (9) preservation of nature and its reproductive capabilities into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) Health and safety of every social domain, (2) good quality of life, (3) impacts on local communities and (4) extra benefits to disadvantaged groups of society [21], (5) human well-being, (2) equity, (3) democratic government and governance and (4) democratic civil society [95] | Integration of (1) good quality of life, (2) health and safety of all social domains, (3) impacts on local communities and (4) extra benefits to disadvantaged groups of society into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
Integration of (1) human well-being, (2) equity, (3) democratic government and governance and (4) civil society into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information | |
(1) How individuals, communities and societies live with each other and how they set out to achieve the objectives of the chosen development models considering the physical boundaries of both specific places and the whole planet and (2) mix of social policy areas and principles including, e.g., well-being, quality of life, happiness, equity and health, participation, needs, social capital and the environment [93,100]. | Integration of (1) how individuals, communities and societies live with each other and how they specify the ways to achieve the chosen social sustainability objectives, (2) social/society–environment relationships and interfaces taking into account the physical boundaries of specific places and the whole planet and (3) a mix of social sustainability areas and principles including well-being, quality of life, happiness, equity and health, participation, needs and social capital into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
Societal Sustainability Definitions and Elements | Ways to Create Social Sustainability Handprints |
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Consensus-building processes and approaches and associated capacity-building taking into account that various stakeholder communities can be used to support a sustainable society [111] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts to promote (1) consensus- and capacity-building processes and approaches and (2) the role of stakeholder communities in promoting more sustainable societies |
Sustainable society requires sustainability education including focus on sustainability problems and approaches to address them based on system thinking from a holistic perspective [112] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts to promote (1) sustainability education, (2) responses and solutions to sustainability problems and (3) holistic perspectives and system thinking |
(1) Enhanced capacity to promote equity for sustainable development and social sustainability (including empowerment of actors in weaker positions), (2) equity/inequity as related to fairness and justice (distribution of resources within and between generations) and (3) equality in access to resources can be influenced through policy (e.g., sustainability goals) [41] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts to promote (1) capacities related to equity for societal aspects of sustainable development and societal sustainability (e.g., empowerment of actors in weaker positions), (2) equity, inequity, fairness and justice (e.g., distribution of resources within and between generations) and (3) equality in access to resources (e.g., policies to promote societal sustainability goals) |
(1) Public deliberation and participatory decision making on environmental problems by citizens and (2) protection of regional environments based on bottom-up type of governance [113] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts to promote (1) public deliberation, (2) participatory decision making and (2) bottom-up governance to address problems related to and to promote sustainable social/society–environment relationships and interfaces |
Knowledge structuring (interdisciplinary research and transdisciplinary expertise) to create an interdisciplinary intellectual base, action-structuring (decomposition of actions, integration into new actions and promotion of collective actions) and knowledge accompanied by action to change a situation [114,115] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts to promote (1) knowledge structuring based on inter- and transdisciplinary approaches and expertise, (2) the creation of an interdisciplinary intellectual base, (3) action-structuring based on decomposition of actions, integration into new actions and promotion of collective actions and (4) knowledge and actions to change situations to promote and manage societal sustainability |
Identification of sustainability problems by public-policy makers based on (1) problem-structuring from a multidisciplinary viewpoint and (2) understanding of the multiple problem identification perceptions of participants with regard to the social/natural system [111] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts to promote responses and solutions to sustainability problems faced by public-policy makers based on (1) multidisciplinary approaches to problem-structuring and (2) multiple problem identification perceptions of societal sustainability and sustainable social/society–environment relationships and interfaces by various participants |
(1) Interactions of society and nature in the Anthropocene System form a complex adaptive system that is globally interconnected and includes formative roles played by innovation, heterogeneity and nonlinear relationships, (2) the unpredictable nature of the dynamics of this system and (3) partial guidance is possible through appropriate interventions [41,116] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts to promote sustainable interactions of society and nature as a complex, adaptive and globally interconnected system considering (1) innovation, heterogeneity and nonlinear relationships, (2) unpredictable nature of the dynamics of the system and (3) possibility for partial guidance through appropriate interventions |
Contribution of biodiversity to societal well-being, human health and ecosystem services [117] and social systems that reflect the interaction between humans and the biological systems as an indicator of sustainability accomplishment including the maintenance and restoration of biodiversity in ecosystems (essential for sustainable ecology) [49] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts to promote (1) societal well-being, (2) human health, (3) ecosystem services, (4) social systems that consider sustainable interactions between humans and the biological systems as indicators of sustainability accomplishments and (5) the maintenance and restoration of biodiversity in ecosystems |
(1) Integration of societal, environmental and industrial systems and (2) establishment of decision support systems that evaluate societal, environmental and economic impacts and address inputs from society and associated ethical considerations [118] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts to promote (1) integration of societal, environmental and industrial systems and (2) decision support systems that assess societal and environmental impacts and take into account inputs from societies including all ethical considerations |
(1) Societal sustainability problems include complex and dynamic interplay of interests, incentives and causalities among multiple stakeholders in multiple cultural, historical and geographical contexts and (2) addressing these problems needs to be based on understanding of and dealing with a whole system in an integrative way taking into account multi-, inter- and transdisciplinary work [112] | Changes, actions, innovations and impacts to promote solutions to societal sustainability problems considering multiple stakeholders in various cultural, historical and geographical contexts and based on integrative, transdisciplinary and whole system level approaches |
Sustainability Assessment Elements and Approaches | Social Sustainability Handprint Assessment Approaches |
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(1) Addressing sustainability priorities and progress towards sustainability, (2) direction of decision making towards sustainability, (3) application to any type of decision making including different levels, contexts and approaches and (4) operationalization of the sustainability concept in the context of decision making and assessments [123] | Integration of (1) sustainability priorities, (2) progress towards sustainability, (3) direction of decision making towards sustainability, (4) application to decision making at all levels and in all contexts) and (5) operationalization of the sustainability concept in the context of decision making into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
Integration of assessment and management tools into decision making and planning processing [124] | Integration of (1) management and assessment tools and (2) decision making and planning processes into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) The definition of local sustainability particulars (specific location, context and circumstances), (2) the pursuit of sustainability (requirements of progress toward sustainability and general sustainability criteria for decision making and evaluation) and (3) promotion of positive steps towards enhanced community and ecological sustainability and more viable, secure and pleasant future [72] | Integration of (1) local sustainability particulars in specific locations, contexts and circumstances, (2) requirements of progress towards sustainability, (3) sustainability criteria for decision making and (4) positive steps towards community sustainability, sustainable social/society–environment relationships and interfaces and sustainable future into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) Systemic (e.g., scope, scales and environmental, social and economic interrelations/impacts), (2) normative (e.g., incorporation of sustainability principles and dimensions and context-specific perceptions), (3) strategic (e.g., purpose, decision and action support, broader context and consideration of alternatives) and (4) transdisciplinary (e.g., knowledge, actors and stakeholder engagement) approaches [27] | Integration of (1) systemic (e.g., scope, scales and social and environmental impacts), (2) normative (e.g., sustainability principles and dimensions and context-specific perceptions), (3) strategic (e.g., purpose, decision and action support, broader context and consideration of alternatives) and (4) transdisciplinary (e.g., knowledge, actors and stakeholder engagement) elements and approaches into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
Sustainability or social sustainability perspective to assessment typically applies a multi-dimensional index that integrates processes and factors of some focus area [100] | Integration of multi-dimensional indices that integrate processes and factors of focus areas into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
Analysis of organizations based on (1) their relative commitment to the social pillar of sustainable development with respect to the other pillars of sustainable development and to their commitment to develop interpillar relationships and (2) indicators (based on, e.g., equity, awareness of sustainability, participation and social cohesion dimensions of the social-environmental framework) [103] | Assessment of organizations based on the integration of (1) commitment to social aspects of sustainable development including social/society–environment relationships and interfaces and (2) sustainability indicators (e.g., equity, awareness of sustainability, participation, social cohesion and social-environmental framework) into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) Effective tool to promote and support decision making for sustainable development and to provide guidance towards a sustainable society, (2) operationalization of sustainable development for a specific system in a particular socio-environmental context, (3) addressing sustainability decision-making challenges including interpretation (principles and socio-environmental context), information-structuring (complex and multi-dimensional sustainability into indicators) and influence (of sustainability information on decision making and implementation of sustainable development), (4) generation of sustainability information (well-structured approach to inform decision making), (5) identification of knowledge and data gaps and (6) advancement of continuous social learning (decision makers and stakeholders), debate and participation [16] | Integration of (1) decision making for sustainable development, (2) guidance towards a sustainable society, (3) operationalization of sustainable development for specific systems in particular socio-environmental contexts, (4) sustainability decision-making challenges, (5) interpretation of principles and socio-environmental context, (6) infor-mation-structuring (e.g., multi-dimensional sustainability into indicators), (7) influence of sustainability information on decision making and implementation of sustainable development, (8) identification of knowledge and data gaps and generation of sustainability information, (9) well-structured approaches to inform decision making and (10) advancement of continuous social learning (e.g., decision makers and stakeholders) debate and participation into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
Evaluation of sustainability transition experiments covering (1) societal effects such as institutional change (organizations and decision making, governance and policies), (2) process (e.g., conceptualization of sustainability, inclusiveness, transparency, fairness, approaches, governance and reflexive and adaptive capacity) and (3) sustainability transition impacts (e.g., long-term sustainability impacts that reflect societal transition) [125] | Assessment of sustainability transitions based on the integration of (1) social effects, (2) institutional changes (organizations, decision making, governance and policies), (3) processes (e.g., governance, inclusiveness, transparency, fairness and reflexive and adaptive capacity) and (4) impacts (e.g., long-term sustainability impacts related to societal transitions) into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) Integrated approach (e.g., to explore solutions to enduring problems), (2) sustainability-oriented, strategic, constructive and potentially transformative, (3) a cyclical and participatory process encompassing envisioning, scoping, experimenting and learning to establish and apply an interpretation of sustainability for a specific context, (4) exploration of problem-solving and opportunity-creation potential of alternative framing contexts (e.g., institutions, policy regimes and technologies) and (5) establishment and application of sustainability interpretations for a specific context through an integrated approach to explore solutions to sustainability problems [126] | Integration of (1) exploration of solutions to enduring problems, (2) sustainability-oriented, strategic, constructive and transformative approaches, (3) cyclical and participatory processes including envisioning, scoping, experimenting and learning to establish and apply an interpretation of sustainability for specific contexts, (4) exploration of problem-solving and opportunity-creation potential of alternative framing contexts (e.g., institutions, technologies and policy regimes) and (5) establishment and application of sustainability interpretations for specific contexts based on integrated approaches to explore solutions to sustainability problems into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
Assessment of urban sustainability based on (1) an integrative approach using common sustainability principles and goal-based framework and (2) sustainability and sustainable development indicator or index frameworks including social, environmental and economic dimensions (as well as integrative dimensions such as social-environmental or institutional such as good governance) [127] | Assessment of urban sustainability based on the integration of (1) common sustainability principles and goal-based framework, (2) sustainability and sustainable development indicator and/or index frameworks, (3) social and environmental dimensions, (4) integrative dimensions such as social/society–environment relationships and interfaces and (5) institutional dimensions such as good governance including institutional dimensions into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
Support of decision making and policy within a broad social, environmental and economic context based on complex appraisal methods that go beyond technical and scientific evaluation [128] | Integration of (1) support of informed decision making and policy, (2) broad social and environmental context and (3) advanced appraisal methods that go beyond technical and scientific evaluation into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
Sustainability Assessment Development Focus Areas | Social Sustainability Handprint Assessment Approaches |
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(1) Integrated assessment including incorporation of sustainability goals and proactive promotion of positive impacts (broad solution-oriented approach and scope that goes beyond comparative and analysis-oriented approach and avoidance of negative impacts), (2) holism and transdisciplinarity, (3) co-production of knowledge (e.g., science-policy interface), (4) multiple geographical and temporal scales (from local to global), (5) stakeholder involvement and commitment, (6) determination of who is entitled to carry out the assessment and (7) identification of targets based on bottom-up approach and broadly supported and widely shared development process [128] | Integration of (1) sustainability goals, (2) identification of targets based on bottom-up approaches and broadly supported and widely shared development processes, (3) proactive promotion of positive impacts (broad solution-oriented approach and scope), (4) holistic and transdisciplinary approaches, (5) co-production of knowledge, (6) multiple geographical and temporal scales (from local to global), (7) stakeholder involvement and commitment and (8) determination of who is entitled to carry out the assessment into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) Use of collaborative scientific innovation and development as basis for change and (2) addressing new local and global paradigms [129] | Integration of (1) collaborative scientific innovation and development as a basis for changes and (2) new local and global paradigms into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
Active engagement of supply chain and integrated approach to sustainable supply chain management and product development are important in the context of social sustainability assessment [130] | Integration of (1) active supply chain engagement, (2) integrated approaches to sustainable supply chain management and (3) product development into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) Consideration of environmental, social and economic issues, (2) the context of the assessment (e.g., planning context), (3) prediction of future conditions, (4) comparison of the likely results of various actions and (5) presentation and communication of findings to decision makers and stakeholders [131] | Integration of (1) social/society–environment relationships and interfaces, (2) the context of the assessment, (3) prediction of future conditions, (4) comparison of the likely results of various actions and (5) presentation and communication of results to decision makers and stakeholders into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) The choice of tools and metrics based on highlighted context and characteristics, (2) consideration of the underlying assumptions and features of the applied tools to ensure transparency of the result, (3) the use of a variety of tools based on a choice guided by the assessment context (a good idea because no individual tool can encompass all sustainability perspectives), (4) addressing the lack of capability to assess progress towards sustainability in a holistic way (e.g., focus on multiple social, environmental and economic issues jointly with inter- and intragenerational equity aspects), (5) integration of social, environmental and economic (increasingly also institutional) issues and consideration of associated interdependencies, (6) inclusion of inter- and intragenerational equity considerations, (7) consideration of the future consequences of present actions, (8) acting with a precautionary bias and acknowledgement of the uncertainties related to the results of present actions and (9) engagement of the public [132] | Integration of (1) the selection of tools and metrics based on context and its characteristics, (2) the consideration of the underlying assumptions and features of the applied tools to ensure transparency of the result, (3) the use of a variety of tools based on the assessment context to encompass all sustainability perspectives, (4) capability to assess progress towards sustainability in a holistic way (e.g., social/society–environment relationships and interfaces), (5) social, institutional and environmental issues including associated interdependencies, (6) inter- and intragenerational equity, (7) future consequences of present actions, (8) acting with a precautionary bias and acknowledgement of the uncertainties related to the results of present actions and (9) engagement of the public into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
The development of social and cultural sustainability assessments including focus on the development of indicators, verifier variables and target levels [133] | Assessment of social and cultural sustainability including development of indicators, verifier variables and target levels |
(1) The ability to continue and develop a desirable way of living taking into account future generations, values and beliefs of people about the way societies sustain quality of life and life in other places of the planet and (2) an integrated framework that aims at developing and continuing quality of human life (also in other places and in the future) within ecological and social limits [18] | Integration of (1) abilities to continue and develop desirable ways of living considering future generations, values and beliefs of people, (2) the way societies sustain quality of life and life in other places of the planet and (3) development and continuing of the quality of human lives (including future and other places) within social and ecological limits into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
Observation systems that (1) encompass both social and environmental phenomena, (2) include multiple types of information (qualitative, narrative, quantitative data and historical records), (3) support decision making and scientific understanding and (4) address significant changes and assess resilience and vulnerability [67] | Integration of (1) observation systems, (2) social and environmental phenomena, (3) multiple types of information (qualitative, narrative, quantitative data and historical records), (4) decision making, (5) scientific understanding, (6) significant changes and (7) resilience and vulnerability into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) Integration into government decision making including recognition of the need to assess the interdependencies between human activities and the environment early in the decision-making process, the need for informed decision-making and participation and openness of the decision makers to a process of change and (2) qualitative approaches that may increase the quality of discussions on the introduction of the sustainable development principles into functioning of societies [88] | Integration of (1) informed decision making (e.g., government), (2) early assessment of the interdependencies between human activities and the environment in decision making processes, (3) participation and openness of the decision makers to change processes and (4) qualitative approaches to introduce social and societal aspects of sustainable development principles into functioning of societies into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
Sustainability Indicator Approaches | Social Sustainability Handprint Assessment Approaches |
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(1) Indication of progress toward or away from sustainable development goals to advise decision makers, managers and the public, (2) multiple sustainability indices that address community, environment and economy parts of sustainable development and their interactions and (3) measurement and characterization of sustainability including choices about how to define and quantify what is being developed and about what is being sustained and for how long [136] | Integration of (1) progress toward or away from sustainable development goals to advise decision makers, managers and the public, (2) multiple sustainability indices that ad-dress community and environment parts of sustainable development and their interactions, (3) characterization of sustainability, (4) choices about how to define and quantify what is being developed and (5) choices about what is being sustained and for how long into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) Simplifying tools (similarly to indices) that are designed to address complexity and provide information to both specialists and non-specialists and (2) multiple indicators (and indices) to influence the people in power and the public to do wiser things [137] | Integration of (1) simplifying tools that are designed to address complexity and provide information to both specialists and non-specialists and (2) multiple indicators and indices to influence the people in power and the public to do wiser things into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) Development and use by national, regional and local governments, local communities, business organizations and non-governmental organizations, (2) measurement of progress towards sustainable development goals and (3) contribution to a more sustainable society for future generations [138] | Integration of (1) development and use by national, regional and local governments, local communities, business organizations and non-governmental organizations, (2) progress towards sustainable development goals and (3) contribution to a more sustainable society for future generations into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) Use in decision making taking into account placing in a specific cultural context and the relevant people and processes, (2) qualitative and quantitative indicators, (3) addressing critical sustainability issues in a specific context in a comprehensive way, (4) what is measured depending on the goal of specific intervention, (5) monitoring to support development and use and (6) addressing future scenarios [139] | Integration of (1) use in decision making, (2) placing in specific cultural contexts, (3) the relevant people and pro-cesses, (4) qualitative and quantitative indicators, (3) critical sustainability issues in specific contexts, (4) what is measured depending on the goals of specific interventions, (5) monitoring to support continuous improvements and (6) future scenarios into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
Roles in sustainability science: (1) support of management and policy decision making, (2) improvement of knowledge about socio-ecological systems and (3) addressing relationships between intergenerational well-being and specific capital assets [140] | Integration of (1) sustainability science, (2) management and policy decision making, (2) knowledge about socio-ecological systems and (3) intergenerational well-being into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) Monitoring of progress towards or away from sustainability, (2) addressing changes of interconnected social and ecological features of a system taking into account (social-ecological) systems thinking, (3) design to measure based on systems approach including interdependent parts of the system and (4) potential to change the perceptions of goals and values about how that system should be managed [141] | Integration of (1) progress towards or away from sustainability, (2) changes of interconnected social and ecological features of systems, (3) social-ecological systems thinking, (4) a systems approach including interdependent parts of systems and (5) potential to change the perceptions of goals and values about how that system should be managed into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) Capturing the measure of sustainability (progress towards sustained social, environmental and economic outcomes), (2) measurement of social, environmental and economic processes to support decision making to enhance social and environmental outcomes, (3) complex and varied as the definition of sustainability and (4) a systems approach as a basis in which all aspects are interlinked [142] | Integration of (1) progress towards sustained social and environmental outcomes), (2) social and environmental processes, (3) decision making to enhance social and environmental outcomes, (4) broad and diverse social sustainability indicators and (5) a systems approach in which all aspects are interlinked into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) Promotion of compliance with the principles for sustainability, (2) assessment of the relevance, quality and quantity of activities to ensure alignment with the principles of sustainable development and (3) monitoring the ecosphere–society system and its impacts [143,144] | Integration of (1) compliance with the principles of sustainability, (2) the relevance, quality and quantity of activities to ensure alignment with the principles of sustainable development and (3) the ecosphere–society system and its impacts into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) Framework that is comprehensive, understandable to the society, information-driven, transparent, covers the whole process (monitor, assess, learn, decide and act) and supports decision making by people and (2) multiple sources (e.g., social, environmental and economic processes) as a basis and provision of indications of change [145] | Integration of (1) comprehensive, information-driven and transparent social sustainability indicator framework that is understandable to the society, covers the whole process (monitor, assess, learn, decide and act) and supports decision making by people, (2) multiple sources (e.g., social and environmental processes) and (3) provision of indications of change into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
Social sustainability indicators (1) address the integration of multidimensional and intergenerational issues that are essential to the sustainability concept, (2) are selected in a way that is informed by sustainability principles and objectives based on participation process involving stakeholders and local agents, (3) are process indicators that assess the processes that define, agree themes for and implement solutions for sustainability principles and objectives and (4) assess progress towards specific objectives in an interactive way and allow monitoring of actual implementation [100] | Integration of the following aspects of social sustainability indicators: (1) the integration of multidimensional and intergenerational issues, (2) selection based on sustainability principles and objectives through a participatory process involving stakeholders and local agents, (3) process indicators to assess the processes that define, agree themes for and implement solutions for sustainability principles and objectives and (4) progress towards specific objectives in an interactive way including assessment of actual implementation into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
Assessment of the social dimension of sustainability based on indicator groups including (1) quality of life and satisfaction of basic needs (health, security, education, training, income, income distribution, poverty, housing conditions, unemployment and subjective satisfaction with work, environment, health, housing and income), (2) equal opportunities (e.g., education, gender and migrants) and (3) social coherence (e.g., social networks, involvement in activities and solidarity) [94] | Integration of the following social sustainability indicator groups: (1) quality of life and satisfaction of basic needs (health, security, education, training, income, income distribution, poverty, housing conditions, unemployment and subjective satisfaction with work, environment, health, housing and income), (2) equal opportunities (e.g., education, gender and migrants) and (3) social coherence (e.g., social networks, involvement in activities and solidarity) into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
The indicators for social values encompass (1) living environment (e.g., human well-being and safety, (2) equity (e.g., equal rights and opportunities), (3) human development (e.g., education and health) and (4) democratic civil society (e.g., participation and governance) [95,133]. | Integration of the following indicators for social values: (1) living environment (e.g., human well-being and safety, (2) equity (e.g., equal rights and opportunities), (3) human development (e.g., education and health) and (4) democratic civil society (e.g., participation and governance) into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
The measurable aspects of community sustainability include: (1) participation in networks and collective groups in the community, (2) social interaction and networks in the community, (3) safety and security, (4) community stability and (5) sense and pride of place [102]. | Integration of the following aspects of community sustainability: (1) participation in networks and collective groups in the community, (2) social interaction and networks in the community, (3) safety and security, (4) community stability and (5) sense and pride of place into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
Sustainability Indicator Development Focus Areas | Social Sustainability Handprint Assessment Approaches |
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Development of new indicators to effectively assess and report sustainable development through robust, collaborative and open approaches, (2) focus on societal role and impacts, end-users, practitioners, communities and individuals, (3) adaptation of thinking and doing by researchers and (4) assessments that use collaborative scientific innovation and development as basis for change and address new local and global paradigms [129] | Integration of (1) new indicators to effectively assess and report sustainable development through robust, collaborative and open approaches, (2) societal role and impacts, (3) end-users, (4) practitioners, (5) communities, (6) individuals, (7) thinking and doing by researchers, (8) collaborative scientific innovation and development as basis for change and (9) new local and global paradigms into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
Framework that is (1) comprehensive, (2) understandable to the society, (3) information-driven, (4) transparent, (5) covers the whole process (monitor, assess, learn, decide and act) and (6) supports decision making by people [145] | Integration of social sustainability indicator framework that is (1) comprehensive, (2) understandable to the society, (3) information-driven, (4) transparent, (5) covers the whole process (monitor, assess, learn, decide and act) and (6) supports decision making by people into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) Earth observation data need to be used to support the development and diversity of SDGs indicators [146], (2) selection, revision and refinement based on the appropriate communities of interest [134] and (3) wider application of knowledge about indicators to specific management situations [58] | Integration of (1) earth observation data to support the development and diversity of SDGs indicators, (2) selection, revision and refinement of indicators based on the appropriate communities of interest and (3) wider application of knowledge about indicators to specific management situations into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) Social norms (reflect sustainability principles and goals), (2) sustainability indicators (to provide clear information for decision making and steering of policies) and (3) a good narrative (making the complex sustainable development concept comprehensible to all) are among the missing enabling conditions for sustainable development [59,147] | Integration of (1) social norms (sustainability principles and goals), (2) sustainability indicators (to provide clear information for decision making and steering of policies) and (3) a good narrative (making sustainable development comprehensible to all) into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) Society needs relevant indicators to make the right decisions about and to build public support for sustainable development [147] and (2) it is essential to conceptualize and operationalize the targets of the SDGs with particular emphasis on the relevance of indicators [148] | Integration of (1) relevant indicators to make the right decisions about and to build public support for sustainable development and (2) the conceptualization and operationalization of the targets of the SDGs (with particular emphasis on the relevance of indicators) into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) Sustainability index development based on ethics (e.g., justice and equity) to ensure alignment with sustainability ethics and (2) research on how sustainability indexes address participatory and distributive intra- and intergenerational justice taking into account the challenges related to insufficient data [149] | Integration of (1) sustainability index development based on ethics (e.g., justice and equity), (2) alignment with sustainability ethics, (2) participatory and distributive intra- and intergenerational and (3) sufficient and high-quality information and data into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) Monitoring to support development, use and inclusion of future scenarios [139], (2) inclusion of the notions of people about sustainability in the development and application [150] and (3) support of sustainable development based on an indicator system as an essential platform taking into account all views, issues, actions and diversities [48] | Integration of (1) monitoring to support development, use and inclusion of future scenarios, (2) the notions of people about sustainability, (3) the promotion of sustainable development, (4) an indicator system (platform) and (5) all views, issues, actions and diversities into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
New sustainability index development methods and indexes to ensure that (1) indexes encourage and monitor participatory justice (the ability of people to participate in decision making and to meaningfully contribute to decisions affecting their lives) and distributive justice (equitable distribution of environmental benefits and burdens) between present and future generations and among currently living people and (2) indicators and indexes are in accordance with both normative and technical aspects of sustainability [149] | Integration of (1) new sustainability index development and indices, (2) the ability of people to participate in decision making, (3) meaningful contributions of people to decisions affecting their lives, (4) equitable distribution of environmental benefits and burdens, (5) participatory justice and distributive justice between present and future generations and among currently living people and (6) indicators and indices that are in accordance with both normative and technical aspects of sustainability into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) Complementation of a global set of individual indicators by a set of key indicators considering that many complementary indicators and data sets are likely to emerge for national and regional SDGs assessment [151] and (2) value-based sustainability indicators and assessment tools to address ethical values [152] | Integration of (1) a global set of individual indicators, (2) a set of key indicators, (3) many indicators and data sets based on national and regional SDGs assessments, (4) value-based sustainability indicators and assessment approaches and (5) ethical values into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) Case studies on development and use, (2) top-down vs. bottom-up approaches, (3) aggregation of indicators, (4) data provision, (5) a systems perspective and (6) alternatives to Gross Domestic Product [153] | Integration of (1) case studies on development and use, (2) top-down vs. bottom-up approaches, (3) aggregation of indicators, (4) data provision, (5) a systems perspective and (6) social and societal sustainability, well-being and quality of life-oriented alternatives to Gross Domestic Product into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
(1) The development and use of sustainability indices (case studies and linking use information to development and presentation), (2) more systemic perspective and integrated approach to goals and targets (alternatives to linear thinking), (3) top-down versus bottom-up (particular context, open discussion, participation and continuous exploration), (4) aggregation of indicators (e.g., more focus on users), (5) data provision (good quality and timely data) and (6) alternatives to Gross Domestic Product and economic-based indicators [137] | Integration of (1) the development and use of sustainability indices based on case studies and linking of use information to development, (2) systemic perspectives and integrated approaches to goals and targets as alternatives to linear thinking (e.g., in the context of circular economy), (3) top-down vs. bottom-up approaches, (4) particular contexts, (5) open discussion and participation, (6) continuous exploration, (7) aggregation of indicators with focus on users, (8) the provisions of good quality and timely information and data and (9) alternatives to Gross Domestic Product that are oriented towards social and societal sustainability, well-being and quality of life (including sustainable social/society–environment relationships and interfaces) into assessment, development of indicators and collection of information |
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Husgafvel, R. Exploring Social Sustainability Handprint—Part 2: Sustainable Development and Sustainability. Sustainability 2021, 13, 11051. https://doi.org/10.3390/su131911051
Husgafvel R. Exploring Social Sustainability Handprint—Part 2: Sustainable Development and Sustainability. Sustainability. 2021; 13(19):11051. https://doi.org/10.3390/su131911051
Chicago/Turabian StyleHusgafvel, Roope. 2021. "Exploring Social Sustainability Handprint—Part 2: Sustainable Development and Sustainability" Sustainability 13, no. 19: 11051. https://doi.org/10.3390/su131911051
APA StyleHusgafvel, R. (2021). Exploring Social Sustainability Handprint—Part 2: Sustainable Development and Sustainability. Sustainability, 13(19), 11051. https://doi.org/10.3390/su131911051