Sustainable Development: Lost Meaning and Opportunity?

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Bibliographic Details
Title: Sustainable Development: Lost Meaning and Opportunity?
Authors: Fergus, A. H. T.1 aftrgus@ucalgary.ca, Rowney, J. I. A.1 Julie.rowney@haskayne.ucalgary.ca
Source: Journal of Business Ethics. Aug2005 Part 1, Vol. 60 Issue 1, p17-27. 11p.
Subject Terms: *Componential analysis (Linguistics), *Economic development, Sustainable development, Discourse ethics, Social responsibility of business, Socioeconomic factors, Social accounting, Socioeconomics, Strategic planning, Ethics
Abstract: The term Sustainable Development has been used in many different contexts and consequently has come to represent many different ideas. The purpose of this paper was to explore the underlying meaning of the term Sustainable Development, and to assess the dominant ethic behind such meaning. Through this exploration, we uncovered a change in the semantic meaning of the term, and described what that meaning entails. The term Sustainable Development had the potential, we argue, to stimulate discursive engagement with respect to the future development of society within an ethical framework based around the values of inclusivity, diversity, and integration. The importance of philosophical context within which the term is used influences the definitional process of meaning, and has been simulated into the language of the dominant scientific-economic paradigm. We go on to explore how this meaning change has come about. In doing so we looked to the Enlightenment period and the resulting philosophies to explore the foundations of meaning, and then to the work of Jürgen Habermas to explain how the scientific-economic paradigm came to dominate the meaning of Sustainable Development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Database: Education Research Complete
Description
Abstract:The term Sustainable Development has been used in many different contexts and consequently has come to represent many different ideas. The purpose of this paper was to explore the underlying meaning of the term Sustainable Development, and to assess the dominant ethic behind such meaning. Through this exploration, we uncovered a change in the semantic meaning of the term, and described what that meaning entails. The term Sustainable Development had the potential, we argue, to stimulate discursive engagement with respect to the future development of society within an ethical framework based around the values of inclusivity, diversity, and integration. The importance of philosophical context within which the term is used influences the definitional process of meaning, and has been simulated into the language of the dominant scientific-economic paradigm. We go on to explore how this meaning change has come about. In doing so we looked to the Enlightenment period and the resulting philosophies to explore the foundations of meaning, and then to the work of Jürgen Habermas to explain how the scientific-economic paradigm came to dominate the meaning of Sustainable Development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
ISSN:01674544
DOI:10.1007/s10551-005-2927-9