Sustainability and
Local Government
Within
academic world and professional groups, there is agreement on the necessity for
local governments to formulate and implement policies that are concerned with
“sustainability”(Leuengerger and Bartle 2010, cited in Hawkins and Wang 2013,
63).Sustainable development has been
regarded as a ‘guiding principle for
local growth policies’ that changed from
an attention on environmental questions to a more ‘integrated
approach that consists of environmental, economic, and societal dimensions’
(Fiorino, 2010, cited in Hawkins and Wang 2013, 63,).
Sustainability from
local government standpoint links human needs with environmental safety and is largely
acknowledged as including socio-economic and environmental constituents
(Krause,Feiock& Hawkins 2013).These
three components have been applied
widely to structure research on local sustainability in multiple subjects, comprising
public administration and policy ( Feiock and Coutts 2013 ;Bulkeley 2013;
Krause,Feiock& Hawkins 2013).
Local governments are
distinctively located to initiate a variety of activities that openly address
sustainability and climate change. They also have mechanisms to address land
use, energy efficiency, ecological-conservation, and carbon emissions through their
role in ‘regulation and service delivery’. However, in their struggles to do so, they
have to face ‘challenges of scale, policy instrument design, and governance’ (Feiock
and Coutts, 2013 ,4).
To spread the
application of sustainability practices, the United Nations Conference on
Environment and Development (UNCED) approved Agenda 21 in 1992 as a ‘blueprint’
for environmentally sustainable growth. It inspires participation of UN member
states to think through the environmental effects of their land, resources, and
transportation improvement strategies (Krause,Feiock& Hawkins 2013).
Local
government is crucial to successful sustainability practices. Of the 2,509
actions recognized in Agenda 21 to attain superior sustainability, almost two
-thirds stress on the active involvement
of local government (Keen, Mahanty, and Sauvage, 2006; Krause,Feiock&
Hawkins 2013). The role of local government requires taking
responsibility ‘for introducing, interpreting, adapting and eventually
implementing the most relevant aspects of Agenda 21 for their local
communities” (UNCED 1992, 74; cited Saha 2009, 21).
To be continued-
Posted by-
S.M. Mehedi Hasan
BCS (Administration)
ID- 16194
27th Batch
Upazila Nirbahi Officer
Kishoreganj, Nilphamari
Bangladesh
No comments:
Post a Comment