| Literature DB >> 23475657 |
Robert Axelsson1, Per Angelstam, Erik Degerman, Sara Teitelbaum, Kjell Andersson, Marine Elbakidze, Marcus K Drotz.
Abstract
Policies on economic use of natural resources require considerations to social and cultural values. In order to make those concrete in a planning context, this paper aims to interpret social and cultural criteria, identify indicators, match these with verifier variables and visualize them on maps. Indicators were selected from a review of scholarly work and natural resource policies, and then matched with verifier variables available for Sweden's 290 municipalities. Maps of the spatial distribution of four social and four cultural verifier variables were then produced. Consideration of social and cultural values in the studied natural resource use sectors was limited. The spatial distribution of the verifier variables exhibited a general divide between northwest and south Sweden, and regional rural and urban areas. We conclude that it is possible to identify indicators and match them with verifier variables to support inclusion of social and cultural values in planning.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23475657 PMCID: PMC3593035 DOI: 10.1007/s13280-012-0376-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ambio ISSN: 0044-7447 Impact factor: 5.129
Social and cultural criteria defined in early conventions (UNESCO 1972, 2003), new themes from international policies and scholarly work (compiled from Council of Europe 2000; Saastamoinen 2005; Colantonio 2007) and emerging from the Rio+20 process (Culture 21 2011)
| Cultural sustainability | Social sustainability | |
|---|---|---|
| Material | Early: Cultural heritage in terms of human built objects, landscapes and combined man and nature systems | – |
| Immaterial | New: Cultural heritage such as in terms of practices, representations, expressions, knowledge, skills, and instruments, objects, artefacts and cultural spaces associated with practices, including tradition, identity, values, cultural diversity, spirituality, and esthetics | Traditional: Welfare, housing and environmental health Education and skills Employment Equity Human rights and gender Poverty Social justice |
Emerging: Tools and skills needed to understand and transform the world towards sustainability, including but not limited to literacy, creativity, critical knowledge, sense of place, empathy, trust, risk, respect, and recognition | Emerging: Demographic change (aging, migration, mobility) Social integration and cohesion Identity, sense of place and access Health and safety Social capital Wellbeing, happiness and quality of life |
Selected indicators of social and cultural sustainability criteria from international policies, scholarly work and individual natural resource use sectors
| Indicator | Scholarly references | General policies | Appearance in sector policies and practice | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Social sustainability | Democratic civil society | Rothstein and Uslaner ( | UN ( | Wind energya, land consolidationa (improved local processes) |
| Living environment | Magis and Shinn ( | EU ( | Forestry (Swedish Forest Agency | |
| Human development | Magis and Shinn ( | UNDP ( | Mininga (development of sustainable mining) | |
| Equity | Rothstein and Uslaner ( | UNDP ( | ||
| Cultural sustainability | Cultural vitality, diversity and conviviality, Social capital | Putnam ( | RAA (Swedish National Heritage Board) ( | Wind energya, hydropowera (support to local NGOs) |
| Cultural landscape | Vos and Meekes ( | Föreningen Sveriges Länsantikvarier ( | Agriculture (Landsbygdsdepartementet | |
| Cultural heritage | Palang and Fry ( | Council of Europe ( | Forestry (Swedish Forest Agency | |
| Cultural access, participation, consumption | Mercer ( | RAA (Swedish National Heritage Board) ( |
aWeaker occurrences that are not established as policies
Indicators (see Table 2), verifier variables with units, and data sources for social and cultural sustainability criteria (see Lammerts van Bueren and Blom 1997 for terminology)
| Indicator | Verifier/variable (unit) | Data sources |
|---|---|---|
| Democratic civil society | Participation in local elections (%) | Swedish Election Authority ( |
| Living environment | Forest in urban areas (%) | Swedish mapping, cadastral and land registration authority ( |
| Human development | Index of Human Development (UNDP | FHI (Swedish National Institute of Public Health) ( |
| Equity | Index of Gender Development (UNDP | FHI (Swedish National Institute of Public Health) ( |
| Cultural vitality, diversity and conviviality, Social capital | Number of voluntary groups ( | Statistics Sweden ( |
| Cultural landscape | Number of active farmers ( | Swedish Board of Agriculture ( |
| Cultural heritage | Historical remains ( | RAA (Swedish National Heritage Board) ( |
| Cultural access, participation and consumption | Number of available cinemas showrooms, theaters, museums and libraries ( | National Library of Sweden ( |
Fig. 1Maps of parameter values for four verifier variables for social sustainability in Sweden’s 290 municipalities: A participation in local election (%), B forest in urban areas (%), C Index of Human Development (IHD), and D Index of Gender Development (IGD). For details see Table 3
Fig. 2Maps of parameter values for four verifier variables for cultural sustainability in Sweden’s 290 municipalities: A voluntary groups/1000 inhabitants, B active farms/km2, C historical remains/km2 land area, and D Sum of libraries, museums, theaters, and cinema showrooms/municipality. For details see Table 3
Spearman rank bivariate correlation between social and cultural verifier variables. Significant values (P < 0.05) using two-tailed tests are marked with an asterisk (n = 290)
| Forest proportion | IHD | IGD | Voluntary groups/1000 inhabitants | Active farms/km2 | Historical remains/km2 | Available art/municipality | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Voter proportion | −0.160* | 0.605* | 0.600* | −0.339* | 0.161* | 0.243* | −0.020 |
| Forest proportion | −0.446* | −0.442* | 0.391* | −0.274* | −0.385* | −0.071 | |
| IHD | 0.997* | −0.568* | 0.178* | 0.505* | 0.371* | ||
| IGD | −0.585* | 0.195* | 0.523* | 0.382* | |||
| Voluntary groups/1000 inhabitants | −0.417* | −0.594* | −0.031 | ||||
| Active farms/km2 | 0.550* | 0.080 | |||||
| Historical remains/km2 | 0.186* |
Spearman rank bivariate correlation of social and cultural indicators versus external factors. Significant values (P < 0.05, n = 290) are marked with an asterisk. The normal temperature from 1961 to 1990 was used as a proxy for climate (SMHI 2012). Data on universities is from the Swedish National Agency for Higher Education’s yearly report 2011 (HSV 2011). For sources to all other datasets used see Table 3
| Verifier variable | External factors | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Climate | Population | Population/km2 | Education | Universities | Av. income | |
| Voter proportion | 0.180* | 0.207* | 0.267* | 0.527* | 0.100 | 0.623* |
| Forest proportion | −0.323* | −0.322* | −0.439* | −0.445* | −0.008 | −0.355* |
| IHD | 0.268* | 0.710* | 0.631* | 0.956* | 0.362* | 0.857* |
| IGD | 0.296* | 0.723* | 0.654* | 0.955* | 0.365* | 0.850* |
| Voluntary groups/1000 inhabitants | −0.586* | −0.462* | −0.806* | −0.470* | 0.050 | −0.618* |
| Active farms/km2 | 0.723* | 0.255* | 0.475* | 0.184* | 0.025 | 0.069 |
| Historical remains/km2 | 0.665* | 0.463* | 0.689* | 0.468* | 0.053 | 0.427* |
| Available art/municipality | 0.116 | 0.701 | 0.211* | 0.425* | 0.513* | 0.179* |