Abstract
Sustainability as a guiding idea for societal and economic development causes a growing need for reliable sustainability assessments (SAs). In response, a plethora of increasingly sophisticated, standardizAed, and specialized approaches have emerged. However, little attention has been paid to how applications of SAs in different contexts navigate the challenges of selecting and customizing SA approaches for their research purposes. This paper provides an exploration of the context-specific conditions of SA through a case study of three research projects. Each case study explores the different approaches, methodologies, as well as difficulties and similarities that researchers face in “doing” SA based on the research question “What are common challenges that researchers are facing in using SA approaches?” Our case study comparison follows a most different approach for covering a wide range of SA applications and is structured along with three key challenges of doing SA: (i) Deliberation, learning and assessment; (ii) normative assessment principles; (iii) feasibility, especially regarding data quality/availability. Above all, the comparative case study underlines the role and importance of reflexivity and context: We argue that a more explicit and transparent discussion of these challenges could contribute to greater awareness, and thus, to improving the ability of researchers to transparently modify and customize generic SA methodologies to their research contexts. Our findings can help researchers to more critically appraise the differences between SA approaches, as well as their normative assumptions, and guide them to assemble their SA methodology in a reflexive and case-sensitive way.
Highlights
Sustainability is widely recognized today as a guiding idea for societal and economic development
The principles formulated there are relevant to sustainability research, and in particular, to sustainability assessments (SAs) at the level of sustainability policies, but they are of rather limited use at the level of individual projects we have presented, which ask how SA can be put into practice in different contexts on the level of sustainable products, consumption and lifestyles
Our findings indicate that existing systems and guiding principles suggested for doing SA, such as the Bellagio STAMP principles, are helpful and could benefit from more explicitly requiring transparency on normative value judgements in order to pay justice to broad participation and to enable effective communication
Summary
Sustainability is widely recognized today as a guiding idea for societal and economic development. With the growing importance of sustainability, there is a growing need for reliable and comparable approaches that allow measuring the sustainability of a given object, e.g., a product, service, process, or an enterprise. In response to this demand, a plethora of approaches [1,2] has emerged to provide sustainability assessments (SAs). Little attention has been paid to how research projects navigate the challenges of selecting and customizing SA approaches for their unique research purposes
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