The Case for Coordination and Collaboration in Sustainable Community Indicators and Reporting Rationale for a common community information system in Canada
(2003)The International Institute for Industrial Environmental Economics
- Abstract
- As growing populations concentrate in urban areas, it has become apparent that many global problems are a cumulative reflection of unsustainable practices at the local level. Correspondingly, there has been an increasing need to monitor and manage sustainable community growth, which includes a balance of environmental, economic, health, and social measures.
Throughout the last decade, the community indicators movement has intensified, fuelled by a growing need for information for municipal management purposes, to guide policy decisions, and as a way to demonstrate accountability. This growing demand for information, combined with an increasing number of different frameworks and approaches to indicator development has resulted in a mass of... (More) - As growing populations concentrate in urban areas, it has become apparent that many global problems are a cumulative reflection of unsustainable practices at the local level. Correspondingly, there has been an increasing need to monitor and manage sustainable community growth, which includes a balance of environmental, economic, health, and social measures.
Throughout the last decade, the community indicators movement has intensified, fuelled by a growing need for information for municipal management purposes, to guide policy decisions, and as a way to demonstrate accountability. This growing demand for information, combined with an increasing number of different frameworks and approaches to indicator development has resulted in a mass of information, which is becoming unmanageable.
This research examined the factors contributing to what has resulted in an increasingly uncoordinated mélange of information, which threatens to become counter-productive in making progress towards community and regional sustainability.
Focusing on Canadian experiences, the research identified patterns that have emerged for common information requirements, and suggests a framework for coordination that may provide direction to current initiatives. Potential partners to be involved in the creation of a common community information system are identified, and potential barriers to a collaborative effort are discussed. These recommendations are supported by a strong call for coordination from community indicator practitioners, and examples of collaborative initiatives from other world regions. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
http://lup.lub.lu.se/student-papers/record/1325236
- author
- McKerlie, Catherine
- supervisor
- organization
- year
- 2003
- type
- H1 - Master's Degree (One Year)
- subject
- keywords
- sustainable community, indicators, collaboration, local, municipal monitoring, reporting, urban assessment tools, Environmental studies, Miljöstudier
- language
- English
- id
- 1325236
- date added to LUP
- 2007-03-01 00:00:00
- date last changed
- 2007-03-01 00:00:00
@misc{1325236, abstract = {{As growing populations concentrate in urban areas, it has become apparent that many global problems are a cumulative reflection of unsustainable practices at the local level. Correspondingly, there has been an increasing need to monitor and manage sustainable community growth, which includes a balance of environmental, economic, health, and social measures. Throughout the last decade, the community indicators movement has intensified, fuelled by a growing need for information for municipal management purposes, to guide policy decisions, and as a way to demonstrate accountability. This growing demand for information, combined with an increasing number of different frameworks and approaches to indicator development has resulted in a mass of information, which is becoming unmanageable. This research examined the factors contributing to what has resulted in an increasingly uncoordinated mélange of information, which threatens to become counter-productive in making progress towards community and regional sustainability. Focusing on Canadian experiences, the research identified patterns that have emerged for common information requirements, and suggests a framework for coordination that may provide direction to current initiatives. Potential partners to be involved in the creation of a common community information system are identified, and potential barriers to a collaborative effort are discussed. These recommendations are supported by a strong call for coordination from community indicator practitioners, and examples of collaborative initiatives from other world regions.}}, author = {{McKerlie, Catherine}}, language = {{eng}}, note = {{Student Paper}}, title = {{The Case for Coordination and Collaboration in Sustainable Community Indicators and Reporting Rationale for a common community information system in Canada}}, year = {{2003}}, }