Abstract

This article seeks to address knowledge gaps on sustainability indicators (SIs) in rural and natural resource-dependent communities, considering how they are used to contextualize sustainable development priorities and support local governance. We build on recent scholarship on the potentials of SIs for stimulating societal transformation, extending this inquiry into rural and resource-based communities which have been under-represented in SI research. The governance challenges facing rural Canada, as well as its geographic and socio-economic diversity, provide a unique context for examining these issues. We provide relatively uncommon synthetic findings by compiling an inventory of SI initiatives across 39 rural communities and regions of Canada. Using the Community Capital Framework, we examine grey literature and academic publications related to each initiative spanning from 1999–2019 to determine the breadth of sustainable development priorities considered. Informed by collaborative and multi-level governance frameworks, we explore how these initiatives are used to support multi-stakeholder collective action. This article finds that rural Canadian SI initiatives prioritize socio-cultural capital, with relatively fewer economic and ecological indicators, while identifying a typology of SI use and inter-related governance dynamics informing how these priorities and indicators are determined. Although some initiatives display highly collaborative and bottom-up processes, many rural Canadian SI initiatives are characterized by a data-driven approach that, when met with local capacity gaps, fails to contextualize standardized datasets to reflect rural realities. We encourage more in-depth investigation of these findings and comparison of Canadian experiences to other jurisdictions.

Highlights

  • Communities and regions worldwide have used indicators to monitor progress towards sustainable development (SD)

  • This article contributes to ongoing efforts to clarify the value of sustainability indicators (SIs) tools, expanding the focus into rural and resource-based areas and synthesizing local experiences in these contexts

  • The inventory presented here identifies that in rural Canada, SI initiatives have often been conducted in communities benefitting from favourable geographic and socio-economic conditions, reflecting pre-existing capacity gaps across rural contexts

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Summary

Introduction

Communities and regions worldwide have used indicators to monitor progress towards sustainable development (SD). Popularized by global calls to action such as Agenda 21 [1], and more recently the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) [2], sustainability indicators (SIs) have been articulated at local, national, and international scales [3]. Some have contended that SIs must be adopted by policy-makers in an instrumental fashion to have tangible impact [15,16]; others argue that they should play more indirect roles like facilitating multi-stakeholder dialogue [11,17,18] These debates relate to alternative perspectives on governance that highlight the complexity of sustainability challenges and call for collaboration between state and non-state actors at multiple scales [19,20,21]. It is unclear how local stakeholders can use SI tools to support such efforts in rural contexts

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