SustainAbility Think Tank: Trends & Waves Defining the Debate

Trends & Waves
From Silent Spring to Seattle, the events & themes that have defined the
debate
Trends & Waves
SustainAbility has grown to think of the evolution of the sustainability
movement in terms of a series of waves, with peaks and troughs of activity,
all contributing to the momentum we see today. Our research aims to explore
the business implications and what will happen next.
Broadly, we see three sets of waves to date, each building to a peak or
crest of activity where a new set of issues is hot and shapes the forward
agenda. Each peak is then followed by a lull or downwave, typically a period
when the issues are less in the media spotlight, but where processes of
consolidation embed the new priorities in law, management standards or
governance systems.
We describe the three waves to date as having had the following
characteristics:
1. The 1960s and 70s saw the first wave, characterised by the rise of an NGO
and an embryonic 'green' movement seeking to change government approaches to
the agenda. This at a time when the world order was characterised by the
Cold War status quo.
2. The second wave peaked late in the 1980s and through the early 1990s.
This period saw the end of the Cold War, coupled with a series of
environmental and social catastrophes that put markets, big business and
their brands firmly in the NGO and media spotlight.
3. We are currently in the post-millennial third wave, or more particularly
in the third downwave period, following an intense era of globalisation -
and of anti-globalisation. The focus is now increasingly on responsible
globalisation, on the changes in global and corporate governance that this
will require and on new forms of innovation and enterprise.
SustainAbility
http://www.sustainability.com/insight/trends-and-waves.asp
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Scott T. Edmondson, MAAURP, AICP
Sustainability 2030
CEQA/NEPA Environmental Review / Critical-Path Sustainability Research &
Planning
Phone: (415) 992-6473
E-mail:


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