The Institute of Development Studies and Partner Organisations
Browse

Dynamic Systems and the Challenge of Sustainability

Download (854.44 kB)
report
posted on 2024-09-05, 23:08 authored by Ian Scoones, Melissa Leach, Adrian Smith, Sigrid Stagl, Andy Stirling, John Thompson
Dynamism, uncertainty and complexity dominate today’s world. Yet many policy interventions ignore this, and so often fail. What is missing is a rigorous and systematic approach to addressing dynamics, one that encompasses an understanding of complex system dynamics and provides a useable guide to action. This paper is a first attempt by the STEPS Centre to address this challenge. To open, the paper reviews a range of different approaches to understanding dynamics, including complexity science, dynamic ecology, industrial socio-technical systems and policy and organisational responses, exploring opportunities, complementarities and gaps. Next, the paper examines how such approaches to understanding dynamic systems can illuminate and extend approaches to sustainable development, concluding that a new science for sustainability requires an integration of now well-elaborated non-equilibrium perspectives from the natural sciences with constructivist social science perspectives. Drawing on these diverse literatures and debates, the final section presents a heuristic framework for addressing dynamic contexts in debates about sustainable development. In conclusion, the paper highlights three things: the need to address diverse framings of both system structure and function, the need to assess trade-offs between system properties that underlie attempts to achieve sustainability and the need to be continuously reflexive about the diverse options implied.

Funding

ESRC

History

Publisher

STEPS Centre

Citation

Scoones, I., Leach, M., Smith, A., Stagl, S., Stirling, A. and Thompson, J. (2007) Dynamic Systems and the Challenge of Sustainability, STEPS Working Paper 1, Brighton: STEPS Centre

Series

STEPS Working Paper No.1

IDS Item Types

Series paper (IDS)

Copyright holder

STEPS Centre

Language

en

Identifier ISBN

9781858646502

Usage metrics

    ESRC STEPS Centre

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC