System Innovation for Sustainability 1 -

System Innovation for Sustainability 1

Perspectives on Radical Changes to Sustainable Consumption and Production
Buch | Hardcover
470 Seiten
2008
Greenleaf Publishing (Verlag)
978-1-906093-03-7 (ISBN)
54,85 inkl. MwSt
A result of a collaboration between experts from business, design, consumer behaviour and system innovation policy. This title examines what sustainable consumption and production (SCP) is. It provides a review on the governance of change in SCP policy and looks at the strengths and weaknesses of approaches.
Sustainable consumption and production (SCP) was adopted as a priority area during the World Summit on Sustainable Development in Johannesburg in 2002 and has since become one of the main vehicles for targeting international sustainability policy. Sustainable consumption focuses on formulating equitable strategies that foster the highest quality of life, the efficient use of natural resources, and the effective satisfaction of human needs while simultaneously promoting equitable social development, economic competitiveness, and technological innovation. But this is a complex topic and, as the challenges of sustainability grow larger, there is a need to re-imagine how SCP policies can be formulated, governed and implemented.



The EU-funded project "Sustainable Consumption Research Exchanges" (SCORE!) consists of around 200 experts in the field of sustainable innovation and sustainable consumption. The SCORE! philosophy is that innovation in SCP policy can be achieved only if experts that understand business development, (sustainable) solution design, consumer behaviour and system innovation policy work together in shaping it. Sustainable technology design can be effective only if business can profitably make the products and consumers are attracted to them. To understand how this might effectively happen, the expertise of systems thinkers must be added to the mix.



System Innovation for Sustainability 1 is the first result of a unique positive confrontation between experts from all four communities. It examines what SCP is and what it could be, provides a state-of-the-art review on the governance of change in SCP policy and looks at the strengths and weaknesses of current approaches. The SCORE! experts are working with actors in industry, consumer groups and eco-labelling organisations in the key consumption areas of mobility, food and agriculture, and energy use and housing – responsible for 70% of the life-cycle environmental impacts of Western societies – with the aim of stimulating, fostering or forcing change to SCP theory in practice. The System Innovation for Sustainability series will continue with three further volumes of comprehensive case studies in each of these three critical consumption areas.



Each chapter of this book examines problems and suggests solutions from a business, design, consumer and system innovation perspective. It primarily examines the differing solutions necessary in the consumer economies of the West, but also comments on the differing needs in rapidly emerging economies such as China, as well as base-of-the-pyramid economies.



The System Innovation for Sustainability series is the fruit of the only major international research network on SCP and will set the standard in this field for some years to come. It will be required reading for all involved in the policy debate on sustainable production and consumption from government, business, academia and NGOs for designers, scientists, businesses and system innovators.

Dr Arnold Tukker joined TNO in 1990 after some time working for the Dutch Environment Ministry. Over time, his focus shifted from life-cycle assessment, material flow analysis and risk assessment to interactive policy-making and sustainable system innovation and transition management. In 1998 he published a book on societal disputes on toxic substances, for which he was awarded a PhD from Tilburg University. He has published about 40 peer-reviewed papers, 5 books, 10 book chapters and 150 other publications, and is frequently asked as invited speaker worldwide. In his career, he has been awarded over ac;15 million in mainly international research grants. He currently manages the research programme on Transitions and System Innovation within TNO Built Environment and Geosciences, Business Unit Innovation and Environment. This programme was evaluated as one of TNO's top-ranking programmes during the 2006 scientific assessment exercise. Arnold is the initiator and manager of the SCORE! network. Martin Charter is the Director and Visiting Professor of Sustainable Product Design at The Centre for Sustainable Design at the University College for the Creative Arts at Canterbury, Epsom, Farnham, Maidstone and Rochester, UK. Since 1988, he has worked at director level in 'business and environment' issues in consultancy, leisure, publishing, training, events and research. He is the author, editor and joint editor of various books and publications including Greener Marketing (Greenleaf Publishing, 1992 and 1999), The Green Management Gurus [e-book] (1996), Managing Eco-design (Centre for Sustainable Design, 1997) and Sustainable Solutions (Greenleaf Publishing, 2001). Martin has an MBA from Aston Business School in the UK, and has interests in sustainable product design, green(er) marketing, and creativity and innovation. For 15 years Carlo Vezzoli has been researching and teaching design scenarios, strategies, methods and tools for products, services and systems for sustainability. At the Faculty of Design of the Politecnico di Milano he is a professor of Product Design for Environmental Sustainability and of System Design for Sustainability, and director of the Research Unit Design and System Innovation for Sustainability (DIS, INDACO) department. Among other projects, he is coordinator of the international Learning Network on Sustainability (LENS), of curricula development on Design for Sustainability focused on product-service system innovation, funded by the Asia Link Programme, European Commission. Eivind Sto is the Director of Research at the National Institute for Consumer Research (SIFO), Norway. He gained a Mag.art. in political science from the University of Oslo in 1972. He was an assistant at the Norwegian Election Programme from 1972 to 1976; and from 1976 to 1998 he worked for the Norwegian Fund for Market and Distribution Research. Since 1989, he has been a researcher at SIFO, as Head of Research from 1990, and Director of Research from 1998. He has initiated, participated and coordinated several European projects. His research interests include consumer complaints, consumer policy, sustainable consumption, energy use and nanotechnology. Maj Munch Andersen is a senior scientist at DTU, Denmark, the Danish Technical University. Her work focuses on innovation studies, particularly within eco-innovation processes and nanotechnology, both at the firm, inter-firm, technology and innovation system level. She has a special interest in the analysis of environmental and innovation policy and the relationship between the two. She has previously worked at the Copenhagen Business School as well as spending four years on innovation policy within the Danish Ministry of Trade and Industry and the Danish Ministry of Science where she was responsible for developing a green innovation strategy.

Preface





Part I: The context of this book



1. Introduction

Arnold Tukker, Sophie Emmert, Martin Charter, Carlo Vezzoli, Eivind Stø, Maj Munch Andersen, Theo Geerken, Ursula Tischner and Saadi Lahlou



2. Sustainability: A multi-interpretable notion – the book's normative stance

Arnold Tukker, TNO, The Netherlands





Part II: Business perspective



3. Review: The role of business in realising sustainable consumption and production

Martin Charter, Casper Gray, Tom Clark and Tim Woolman, The Centre for Sustainable Design, UK



4. Business models for sustainable energy

Rolf Wüstenhagen and Jasper Boehnke, Institute for Economy and the Environment, Switzerland



5. Alternative business models for a sustainable automotive industry

Peter Wells, Centre for Business Relationships, Accountability, Sustainability and Society, UK



6. Sustainability-related innovation and the Porter Hypothesis: How to innovate for energy-efficient consumption and production

Marcus Wagner, BETA and TUM Business School, Germany



7. Marketing in the age of sustainable development

Frank-Martin Belz, Technische Universität München, Germany





Part III: Design perspective



8. Review: Design for sustainable consumption and production systems

Carlo Vezzoli, Design and Innovation for Sustainability, Italy, and Ezio Manzini, INDACO-Politecnico di Milano, Italy



9. Design for (social) sustainability and radical change

Ursula Tischner, econcept, Agency for Sustainable Design, Cologne, Germany



10. Social innovation and design of promising solutions towards sustainability: Emerging demand for sustainable solutions (EMUDE)

François Jégou, Strategic Design Scenarios, Belgium



11. Eco-Innovative Cities Australia: A pilot project for the ecodesign of services in eight local councils

Chris Ryan, University of Melbourne, Australia



12. Is a radical systemic shift toward sustainability possible in China?

Benny C.H. Leong, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, China





Part IV: Consumer perspective



13. Review: A multi-dimensional approach to the study of consumption in modern societies and the potential for radical sustainable changes

Eivind Stø, Harald Throne-Holst, Pål Strandbakken and Gunnar Vittersø, SIFO, Norway



14. Product-service systems: Taking a functional and a symbolic perspective on usership

Gerd Scholl, Institut für ökologische Wirtschaftsforschung (IÖW), Germany



15. Social capital, lifestyles and consumption patterns

Dario Padovan, University of Torino, Italy



16. Linking sustainable consumption to everyday life: A social-ecological approach to consumption research

Irmgard Schultz and Immanuel Stieß, Institute for Social-Ecological Research, Germany



17. Emerging sustainable consumption patterns in Central Eastern Europe, with a specific focus on Hungary

Edina Vadovics, Central European University, Hungary





Part V: System innovation policy perspective



18. Review: System transition processes for realising sustainable consumption and production

Maj Munch Andersen, Oe-DTU, Denmark



19. System innovations in innovation systems: Conceptual foundations and experiences with Adaptive Foresight in Austria

K. Matthias Weber and Klaus Kubeczko, ARC systems research, Austria, and Harald Rohracher, IFZ–Inter-University Research Centre, Austria



20. Transition management for sustainable consumption and production

René Kemp, UNU-MERIT, ICIS, Drift and TNO, The Netherlands



21. Systemic changes and sustainable consumption and production: Cases from product-service systems

Oksana Mont and Tareq Emtairah, International Institute for Industrial Environmental Economics, Sweden





Part VI: Conclusions and integration



22. Conclusions: Change management for sustainable consumption and production

Arnold Tukker, TNO, The Netherlands

Erscheint lt. Verlag 1.3.2008
Verlagsort Saltaire
Sprache englisch
Maße 156 x 234 mm
Gewicht 880 g
Themenwelt Naturwissenschaften Biologie Ökologie / Naturschutz
Technik
Wirtschaft Volkswirtschaftslehre
ISBN-10 1-906093-03-2 / 1906093032
ISBN-13 978-1-906093-03-7 / 9781906093037
Zustand Neuware
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