Abstract

This article considers the concepts of sustainability and sustainable development in relation to disaster risk reduction and climate change adaptation. We conceptualize sustainability from a social systemic perspective, that is, from a perspective that encompasses the multiple functionalities of a social system and their interrelationships in particular environmental contexts. The systems perspective is applied in our consideration and analysis of disaster risk reduction (DRR), climate change adaptation (CCA), and sustainable development (SD). Section “Sustainability and Sustainable Development” introduces briefly sustainability and sustainable development, followed by a brief presentation of the theory of complex social systems (Section “Social System Model”). The theory conceptualizes interdependent subsystems, their multiple functionalities, and the agential and systemic responses to internal and external stressors on a social system. Section “Case Studies of Response to Stressors” considers disaster risk reduction (DRR) and climate change adaptation (CCA), emerging in response to one or more systemic stressors. It illustrates these with disaster risk reduction in the cases of food and chemical security regulation in the EU. CCA is illustrated by initiatives and developments on the island of Gotland, Sweden and in the Gothenburg Metropolitan area, which go beyond a limited CCA perspective, taking into account long-term sustainability issues. Section “Sustainable Development as a Societal Development System” discusses the limitations of DRR and CCA, not only their technical limitations but economic, socio-cultural, and political limitations, as informed from a sustainability perspective. It is argued that DRRs are only partial subsystems and must be considered and assessed in the context of a more encompassing systemic perspective. Part of the discussion is focused on the distinction between sustainable and non-sustainable DRRs and CCAs. Section “Concluding Remarks” presents a few concluding remarks about the importance of a systemic perspective in analyzing DRR and CCA as well as other similar subsystems in terms of sustainable development.

Highlights

  • The literature on the concepts “sustainability” and “sustainable development” is vast [1]

  • The systems perspective is applied in our consideration and analysis of disaster risk reduction (DRR), climate change adaptation (CCA), and sustainable development (SD)

  • CCA is illustrated by initiatives and developments on the island of Gotland, Sweden and in the Gothenburg Metropolitan area, which go beyond a limited CCA perspective, taking into account long-term sustainability issues

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Summary

Sustainability and Sustainable Development

The literature on the concepts “sustainability” and “sustainable development” is vast [1]. Rather than precise, scientific concepts (Sustainability and sustainable development differ in that the former refers to a complex of values/goals to be realized, while the latter refers to the process of societal change aiming at, and moving toward, sustainability goals) As normative concepts, they are contested and part of struggles over the direction and speed of social, economic, and political initiatives and developments in the global context [7,8]. Sustainability, as a normative and political concept, is used, among other things, to refer to a fair distribution of natural resources among populations of the world today as well as among different generations over time It concerns values and ‘rights’ to existence of other species as well as notions about how much environmental capital one generation should bequeath to the [5]. This is because sustainable development focuses our attention on multi-functionality and multiple-dimensional interactions

Social System Model
Sustainable Development as a Societal Development System
Distinctions between Sustainable and Non-Sustainable DRR and CCA
Findings
Concluding Remarks
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