Track Chairs
- Tomás B. Ramos, CENSE, Center for Environmental and Sustainability Research, Dep. of Environmental Sciences and Engineering, School of Science and Technology, NOVA University Lisbon, Portugal. tabr@fct.unl.pt
- Anne Wallis, Faculty of Science, Engineering and Built Environment, School of Life and Environmental Sciences, Deakin University, Australia. anne.wallis@deakin.edu.au
- Bart van Hoof, Department of Sustainability Management, School of Management, Universidad de los Andes, Colombia. bvan@uniandes.edu.co
Goals and Objectives of the Track
In the monitoring, assessment and reporting of sustainability one of the main ends is to support decision-making, organizational learning and policy processes, thus improving the management of natural and human systems and achieving transformation towards sustainable outcomes. In addition, to supporting policy development, organizational learning, and management strategies, sustainability evaluation, reporting and governance initiatives should integrate and reflect the uncertainty values of non-linear complex processes, where the limits are often unknown. Despite the diversity of methods and tools to assess and report sustainability, indicators are one of the approaches most used, playing a central role, in particular to support management systems and communicate sustainability performance to stakeholders.
Indicators and related approaches have long been used to assess sustainability, therefore its useful to compare, evaluate and innovate diverse indicator approaches and their practice. Researchers in this area face challenges, such as: How to develop indicator models that take into account complexity and long term of sustainable development? What are effective models for indicators communication? How useful are indicators for the society and for effective stakeholder use? How effective have indicators been at progressing sustainability/sustainable development? How do we assess the impact of sustainability indicator assessments? How should indicators be tailored to produce real impact on decision-making and policy processes? What are the strengths/benefits, drawbacks, opportunities and threats/barriers of using indicators? How resilient is the indicator concept and what innovations can be expected? The sustainable development goal posts keep changing, are we as indicator researchers keeping abreast of change? and if so, how?
Indicators should be flexible enough to include emerging issues and deal with overlooked aspects of sustainability, particularly those involving global changes and threats, goal and target/limit uncertainty, address different scales, sustainability ethics, cultural, aesthetics and general non-material values, blurred distinction between peacetime and wartime, collaborative learning, voluntary monitoring and crowd sourcing. They should also be able to reflect the new and old limits of natural-human systems.
The main goal of this track is to discuss new approaches, concepts, methods and frameworks or case study applications that deal with assessing and reporting sustainability through indicator initiatives. Therefore, we invite contributions of both theoretical and empirical papers.
Contributions from the following areas are sought-after
- The performance of sustainability indicators; the role of meta-evaluation approaches;
- The effective societal impacts of sustainability indicators;
- Questioning indicator development and selection approaches: improve the utility, accuracy, validity, feasibility and redundancy;
- Indicators of and for organizational learning;
- The role of sustainability indicators in assessing impact/follow-up processes of polices, plans and projects;
- New indicator approaches involved in estimating the physical, ecological and social limits of sustainability issues;
- The reliability/uncertainty of sustainability measurements and estimates provided by indicators;
- The implications of easy, friendly/simplistic indicator approach to assess and communicate sustainability limits;
- Indicator approaches for assessment and reporting of new sustainability challenges and non-traditional aspects;
- Scale effects on sustainability assessments and carrying capacity evaluations at local, regional, national and transnational levels and their relationships;
- Methods to define the thematic scope of sustainability assessment and reporting;
- How stakeholders could be engaged to assess and report sustainability issues for incorporation into policy: volunteer collaborative contributions to data selection; gathering and assessment; and crowd sourcing.
- Integration of Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) in indicator related frameworks (e.g. ISO 14000, ISO 14031, GRI, System-B, Ecolabels).
Length and content of the proposed abstract to the track
Each proposed abstract (in connection to an area pointed out above) of between 300 and 500 words (including all aspects),
- shall be best organized (without headlines) along usual structures (e.g. intro/method/findings or results/ discussion/conclusions)
- does not need to, but can include references
- shall provide in a final section
a. to which SDG(s) and SDG-target(s) their proposed abstract especially relate to (e.g. “SDG+Target: 14.1.”).
b. a brief indication how the proposed contribution relates to the topic of the Conference (Half-way through Agenda 2030: Assessing the 5Ps of SDGs (people, planet, prosperity, peace and partnership).
Abstracts which do not outline points 3.a.) AND 3.b.) might be considered less relevant in the review.
Potential publication channels
With regard to potential publications, depending on the number and quality of contributions, diverse publication opportunities will be envisaged.