Publication | Closed Access
The Governance of Sustainable Development: Taking Stock and Looking Forwards
430
Citations
66
References
2008
Year
EngineeringPolicy-relevant AreaSustainability GovernanceSustainable DevelopmentGreen PolicyEnvironmental PolicySustainable Development ’Reflexive Environmental GovernanceNatural Resource PlanningSocial SustainabilityEnvironmental GovernancePublic PolicyGovernance FrameworkSustainable GoalEnvironmental PoliticsBusinessSustainabilityGlobal SustainabilityCumulative Body
The literature on sustainable development and governance has expanded rapidly over the past decade, with a surge in books and articles bearing these terms in their titles. This paper investigates the meanings attached to “sustainable development” and “governance” and evaluates whether the existing scholarship forms a coherent, cumulative body. The study first reviews the literature on each term, highlighting similarities and differences, then examines empirical and theoretical efforts to bridge the two concepts using papers from the journal over the last decade. The authors identify key themes and outline future research directions, underscoring the area’s vibrancy and policy relevance.
The number of books and papers bearing the terms ‘sustainable development’ and ‘governance’ in their titles has grown exponentially in the last decade or so. The main purpose of this paper is to explore what meanings have been attached to these two essentially contested terms and to assess the extent to which the material on them constitutes an important, coherent, and cumulative body of scholarship. The first half explores the existing literatures on the two terms, and draws out some of the main similarities and differences. Drawing on papers that have been published in this journal over the last decade or so, the second half focuses on the attempts that have been made to build empirical and/or theoretical bridges between the two terms. The concluding section identifies a number of key themes and explores future research needs in what is evidently a vibrant and highly policy-relevant area of environmental social science research.
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