Sustainability Reporting: An Approach to Get the Right Mix of Theory and Practicality for Local Actors

Many local government or regional plans have “a sustainable future for our community” as a goal. However, few local or regional governments have a sustainability reporting tool in place that enables them to understand how far along the pathway to sustainability their community is. There are a range...

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Main Author: Michelle L. M. Graymore
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2014-05-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/6/6/3145
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spelling doaj-e0e3b285e00f4c509580c70bb2c296612020-11-24T22:34:23ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502014-05-01663145317010.3390/su6063145su6063145Sustainability Reporting: An Approach to Get the Right Mix of Theory and Practicality for Local ActorsMichelle L. M. Graymore0Wimmera Research Group, Federation University Australia, Horsham VIC 3400, AustraliaMany local government or regional plans have “a sustainable future for our community” as a goal. However, few local or regional governments have a sustainability reporting tool in place that enables them to understand how far along the pathway to sustainability their community is. There are a range of reasons for this, including current sustainability indicators and indices not matching the needs or capacity of local actors. This paper argues that a collaborative approach to developing sustainability reporting tools, that involves sustainability experts and local actors working together, will be more successful at developing a tool that has a theoretical basis with locally relevant indicators, which is practical for informed decision making. This process will also build the sustainability reporting capacity of local actors. This collaborative approach was tested in South West Victoria, Australia, resulting in a locally relevant, practical and theoretically sound sustainability reporting tool that met the needs of local actors. This outcome shows that a collaborative approach can overcome some of the barriers to sustainability reporting for local actors; however, further testing is required.http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/6/6/3145sustainability indicatorscollaborative approachlocal governmentregional government
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michelle L. M. Graymore
spellingShingle Michelle L. M. Graymore
Sustainability Reporting: An Approach to Get the Right Mix of Theory and Practicality for Local Actors
Sustainability
sustainability indicators
collaborative approach
local government
regional government
author_facet Michelle L. M. Graymore
author_sort Michelle L. M. Graymore
title Sustainability Reporting: An Approach to Get the Right Mix of Theory and Practicality for Local Actors
title_short Sustainability Reporting: An Approach to Get the Right Mix of Theory and Practicality for Local Actors
title_full Sustainability Reporting: An Approach to Get the Right Mix of Theory and Practicality for Local Actors
title_fullStr Sustainability Reporting: An Approach to Get the Right Mix of Theory and Practicality for Local Actors
title_full_unstemmed Sustainability Reporting: An Approach to Get the Right Mix of Theory and Practicality for Local Actors
title_sort sustainability reporting: an approach to get the right mix of theory and practicality for local actors
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2014-05-01
description Many local government or regional plans have “a sustainable future for our community” as a goal. However, few local or regional governments have a sustainability reporting tool in place that enables them to understand how far along the pathway to sustainability their community is. There are a range of reasons for this, including current sustainability indicators and indices not matching the needs or capacity of local actors. This paper argues that a collaborative approach to developing sustainability reporting tools, that involves sustainability experts and local actors working together, will be more successful at developing a tool that has a theoretical basis with locally relevant indicators, which is practical for informed decision making. This process will also build the sustainability reporting capacity of local actors. This collaborative approach was tested in South West Victoria, Australia, resulting in a locally relevant, practical and theoretically sound sustainability reporting tool that met the needs of local actors. This outcome shows that a collaborative approach can overcome some of the barriers to sustainability reporting for local actors; however, further testing is required.
topic sustainability indicators
collaborative approach
local government
regional government
url http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/6/6/3145
work_keys_str_mv AT michellelmgraymore sustainabilityreportinganapproachtogettherightmixoftheoryandpracticalityforlocalactors
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