Publication | Open Access
Re‐conceptualizing the Science of Sustainability: A Dynamical Systems Approach to Understanding the Nexus of Conflict, Development and the Environment
61
Citations
30
References
2016
Year
EngineeringSustainability GovernanceSustainable DevelopmentSustainable FutureEcological SustainabilitySustainable ProcessesResource SustainabilityEnvironmental PlanningSocial SciencesEnvironmental PolicyPolitical EcologyComplex Systems ApproachCurrent Academic ConceptualizationsSustainability AnalysisEnvironmental ManagementDynamical Systems ApproachSustainable GoalEnvironmental JusticeSustainable SystemsConflict StudiesNatural EnvironmentsSustainabilityGlobal SustainabilityFamily Sustainability
Sustainability has become central to governance and science, yet prevailing frameworks overlook peace and conflict, despite sustainable development inherently involving conflict resolution. This article proposes an expanded sustainability framework that integrates conflict, environment, and development, linking mainstream sustainability concepts to peace studies and conflict resolution. It applies a complex systems approach—combining coupled systems and dynamical systems theory—to model how conflicting interests among actors in social‑ecological systems can be managed to achieve sustainable development. © 2016 The Authors Sustainable Development published by ERP Environment and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Abstract The concept of sustainability has come to permeate many spheres of governance, decision‐making and scientific inquiry. Although current academic conceptualizations of sustainability often acknowledge the conflicts inherent in the pursuit of sustainable development, the present discourse does not explicitly include the concepts of peace and conflict. This omission has been in error, as the pursuits of sustainable environmental governance and sustainable human development are themselves efforts to manage and resolve conflict. Thus, this article advocates for an expanded framework of sustainability that operates at the nexus of conflict, environment and development by exploring current mainstream conceptualizations of sustainability and illustrating the direct connections between sustainability and the fields of peace studies and conflict resolution. It goes on to discuss the utility of applying a complex systems approach to the expanded conceptualization of sustainability, including aspects of both coupled systems and dynamical systems theory, in order to provide an analytical framework for studying mechanisms that enable sustainable development by dealing explicitly with conflicting needs and interests among actors in social–ecological systems. Copyright © 2016 The Authors Sustainable Development published by ERP Environment and John Wiley & Sons Ltd
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