Public identification with sustainable development
This paper reports on a study using focus groups drawn from different sections of the Lancashire public which sought to cast light on public understanding of and identification with sustainable development. Considerable public support was found for the idea that current ways of life are generating p...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Global environmental change 1997-04, Vol.7 (1), p.5-24 |
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description | This paper reports on a study using focus groups drawn from different sections of the Lancashire public which sought to cast light on public understanding of and identification with sustainable development. Considerable public support was found for the idea that current ways of life are generating problems for the future and that economic activity would have to be held within environmental limits. However there was very little support for the idea that sustainability would be achieved through government and business initiatives. Government in particular was deeply mistrusted as part of the 'system' which was generating environmental and social problems. The paper argues that this mistrust in government and the lack of a sense of individual agency has serious implications for the political salience of sustainable development. Initiatives to generate public participation, particularly by providing information through sustainability indicators, are unlikely to succeed unless this is addressed. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1016/S0959-3780(96)00023-4 |
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title | Public identification with sustainable development |
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