Report (Part 3): Sustainable Development Convention 200231 Octubre 2002 © ICVolunteers and IBEX, Geneva, Switzerland Contenidos
Stockholm Partnerships for Sustainable Cities: Extending a Sustainability Knowledge BaseTime: 30 October 2002, 14:30-15:30 Location: A Chair: Cheryll Gerelle Presenters/ Participants: Eric Britton, EcoPlan Reporter: Kyle Cranmer, Danielle Dalsoren (ICVolunteers) Languages: English Key words: Stockholm, partnership, public-private, knowledge base, bouquet In the knowledge era, sustainable development has an amazing potential for progress through the transfer of ideas without regard to geography or social status. To realize this potential an informed culling of information and the extension of a knowledge base are imperative. That is exactly what the Stockholm Partnerships for Sustainable Cities has set out to do. In this presentation, Dr. Eric Britton of EcoPlan discusses his role on the jury that chose the "Stockholm Bouquet" and the challenges of extending the resultant knowledge base. In June 1972, Stockholm held the first UN conference on the environment resulting in the creation of UNEP. Then in June 2001, in preparation for Johannesburg and in celebration of the anniversary of the first conference in Stockholm, a public-private partnership was formed: Stockholm Partnerships for Sustainable Cities. The Stockholm Partnership wanted to create a "Nobel Prize" of sustainable development, and therefore appointed a group of judges for the task, of which Dr. Eric Britton was the chair. Dr. Britton resisted the Partnership's desire for a singular prize for "best practice." He urged the group to consider whether or not the idea of "best practice" is a valid concept. The judges agreed instead on presenting a "bouquet" of projects of different sizes different approaches that they felt had merit. The project and winners are documented at http://www.partnerships.stockholm.se. The rest of the session focused on what to do with information gathered from the "Stockholm Bouquet". Dr. Britton addressed the problem of "how to marry information and action". He pointed out that most of the knowledge sources ?academic institutions, for instance? are "lovers of abstraction". He suggested that more Ph.D. thesis projects should be accessible to the general public. Similarly, he considered how the knowledge base developed from the Stockholm Partnerships for Sustainable Cities should be presented. Surprising Issues Interesting Questions Conclusions Publicado: 2010-1-04 Actualizado: 2010-1-05 | ||