Sustaining communities by learning from integrated assessments of place

Paper


Osborn, Dick and McFarlane, Mike. 2006. "Sustaining communities by learning from integrated assessments of place." Petheram, R. and Johnson, R. (ed.) APEN 2006: Practice Change for Sustainable Communities: Exploring Footprints, Pathways and Possibilities. Beechworth, Australia 06 - 08 Mar 2006 Gosford, Australia.
Paper/Presentation Title

Sustaining communities by learning from integrated assessments of place

Presentation TypePaper
AuthorsOsborn, Dick (Author) and McFarlane, Mike (Author)
EditorsPetheram, R. and Johnson, R.
Journal or Proceedings TitleProceedings of the Australasia Pacific Extension Network International Conference (APEN 2006)
Number of Pages10
Year2006
Place of PublicationGosford, Australia
ISBN1920842314
Web Address (URL) of Paperhttp://www.regional.org.au/au/apen/2006/refereed/3/2911_osbornrc.htm
Conference/EventAPEN 2006: Practice Change for Sustainable Communities: Exploring Footprints, Pathways and Possibilities
Event Details
APEN 2006: Practice Change for Sustainable Communities: Exploring Footprints, Pathways and Possibilities
Event Date
06 to end of 08 Mar 2006
Event Location
Beechworth, Australia
Abstract

Communities of place exist at many scales: from global village through nations, catchments, and local governments to millions of properties at the level of households and workplaces. Interventions from beyond their boundaries ensure institutional arrangements for their governance are complex. Political and bureaucratic actors network across all decision-making levels. The actors and their roles change frequently. Even so, connecting two activities can begin the process of engaging stakeholders in sustaining a community of place. First, stakeholders need to assess community conditions relative to a sustainability target. Second, stakeholders have to learn from, and respond to, the information contained in the assessment. In 2005, the authors joined with the Campaspe Shire Council in piloting a practice connecting the two activities. Trends of growth, steady state, or decline, in indicators of the Shire’s human, built, and natural capital stocks were estimated by pooling local and external knowledge. Results were presented as a balance sheet. Senior management then drafted some thirty response-statements by interpreting the accounts. A stakeholder forum used decision-support software to structure relationships between the response-statements. Conducting a SWOT analysis during the forum provided further insights into place-based learning for sustaining communities, and for building capacities to do so.

Three key learnings: (1) Understanding their operational impacts within their community of place is the most useful context within which organisations can engage in sustainability learning; (2) the capital approach to measuring sustainable development simplifies learning; and (3) qualitative local knowledge is a significant element in sustainability assessment and accounting.

Keywordsintegrated assessment; capital accounting; learning community
ANZSRC Field of Research 2020460999. Information systems not elsewhere classified
390499. Specialist studies in education not elsewhere classified
Public Notes

© 2006 The Regional Institute Ltd www.regional.org.au.

Byline AffiliationsAustralian National University
Department of Mathematics and Computing
Institution of OriginUniversity of Southern Queensland
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