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Defining sustainable development : environmental and investment perspectives and implications for administrative reform

By: GUSTAFSON, Daniel J.
Contributor(s): INGLE, Marcus D.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticlePublisher: New York : Marcel Dekker, 1999International Journal of Public Administration - IJPA 22, 6, p. 833-854Abstract: The current catchphrase of “sustainable development” reflects two primary issues: increased concern with the environment and natural resource management, and heightened frustration with the meager staying power of many development investments once external support has ceased. Achieving and measuring sustainable benefits has been exceedingly difficult, however, and considerable confusion exists regarding the definitions and contexts in which the term is used. This paper outlines the similarities and differences between the environmental perspective and the development investment perspective, and discusses the lessons for administrative reform. The concept of development investment sustainability emphasizes that successful administrative reform must enhance the ability of the government to continually respond to change in the external environment. An important lesson from the environmentalists is that reforms must be approached in an integrative manner - all elements of the system must work together rather than in isolation for sustainable results.
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The current catchphrase of “sustainable development” reflects two primary issues: increased concern with the environment and natural resource management, and heightened frustration with the meager staying power of many development investments once external support has ceased. Achieving and measuring sustainable benefits has been exceedingly difficult, however, and considerable confusion exists regarding the definitions and contexts in which the term is used. This paper outlines the similarities and differences between the environmental perspective and the development investment perspective, and discusses the lessons for administrative reform. The concept of development investment sustainability emphasizes that successful administrative reform must enhance the ability of the government to continually respond to change in the external environment. An important lesson from the environmentalists is that reforms must be approached in an integrative manner - all elements of the system must work together rather than in isolation for sustainable results.

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