Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1053954 Environmental Science & Policy 2011 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

The paper outlines the principles and methodology for sustainability assessment, using multi-actor multi-criteria evaluation practices to articulate competing, un-reconciled and often irreconcilable claims. The impossibility of measurement for quantification of opportunity costs in relation to values to be sustained and the status of stakeholders in sustainability as an impossible social choice problem, describe two complementary thresholds—system complexity and ethical complexity—beyond which assessing trade-offs, choices or consequences of choices through monetary measures alone becomes difficult to justify. We seek by this, to formalise the deliberative and scientific claims for deliberative multi-criteria multi-actor evaluation as an integrative approach to sustainability assessment. The KerBabel™ Deliberation Support Tool (kerDST) on-line system kerDST provides an example of such a framework for the selection and mobilisation of indicators, to highlight significant differences across a representative diversity of stakeholders and performance–quality challenges for a given social choice situation. The paper concludes with a brief appraisal of the implications and complexities of undertaking sustainability assessment using such a system.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
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