| Literature DB >> 30174730 |
Michael J Dockry1, Katherine Hall2, William Van Lopik2, Christopher M Caldwell3.
Abstract
The College of Menominee Nation Sustainable Development Institute's theoretical model (SDI model) conceptualizes sustainable development as the process of maintaining the balance and reconciling the inherent tensions among six dimensions of sustainability: land and sovereignty; natural environment (including human beings); institutions; technology; economy; and human perception, activity, and behavior. Each dimension is understood to be dynamic, both internally and in relationship to each of the other five dimensions. Change within one dimension will impact other dimensions in a continual process of change. Change can be externally driven or inherent to the dynamic nature of any of the six dimensions. Sustainable development is a continual and iterative process. A central concept of the model is based on the experience of the Menominee Indian Tribe of Wisconsin and their profound sense of place and relationship with the land that has allowed their community to recognize and balance the tensions among model dimensions through time. This paper provides a detailed description of the SDI model and its development and concludes with short examples illustrating how the model has been used for course design and delivery in higher education, interdisciplinary community planning, and participatory research.Entities:
Keywords: Indigenous wisdom; Menominee; Sustainability education; Sustainability models; Tribal Colleges and Universities
Year: 2015 PMID: 30174730 PMCID: PMC6106376 DOI: 10.1007/s11625-015-0304-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sustain Sci ISSN: 1862-4057 Impact factor: 6.367
1995 Menominee Advisory Council on Sustainable Development
| Early SDI model dimensions | Menominee leaders/experts | External partners/experts |
|---|---|---|
| Environmental | Forest Manager—Menominee Tribal Enterprises | Dean of the College of Natural Resources—University of Wisconsin Stevens Point |
| Community | Menominee Indian Tribe of Wisconsin, Tribal Historic Preservation Office | Professor of Sociology—University of Wisconsin Madison |
| Institutional | Former Tribal Chairman of Menominee Indian Tribe of Wisconsin | Professor of Political and Environmental Studies—University of Wisconsin Green Bay |
| Economic | Director of Menominee Economic Development | Director of the Land Tenure Center—University of Wisconsin Madison |
| Technology | President—Menominee Tribal Enterprises | Principle Engineer, Mater Engineering LTD |
The Advisory Council comprised Menominee leaders/experts and external partners/experts. The advisory council was loosely based upon an early version of the SDI model. The overall process was convened by the President of the College of Menominee Nation and the Director of the Sustainable Development Institute
Fig. 1Six dimensions of sustainable development in the College of Menominee Nation Sustainable Development Institute’s Model. Menominee Autochthony (their profound sense of place and tie to the land) would occupy the center of the model and represent the Menominee cultural value that has allowed them to balance the tensions among the six model dimensions. Other communities using the model can identify their own cultural values that would allow them to balance the tensions among model elements (CMN c. 1999)
Fig. 2Illustration of tensions among dimensions in the College of Menominee Nation Sustainable Development Institute’s Model. Tensions are represented anywhere the model dimension’s borders touch. An unlimited number of tensions can be illustrated by placing dimensions adjacent to each other (CMN c. 1999)
The Sustainable Development Institute Model can be used by communities, planners, educators, and researchers to create a complex narrative to understand the past and present and create visions and solutions for the future
| SDI model dimension | Possible questions to develop narrative |
|---|---|
| Land and sovereignty | Does the community have control over their resources? In the past? In the future? |
| Natural environment | How has the natural environment changed over time? |
| Institutions | How are community institutions organized? In the past? In the future? |
| Technology | How is technology used to influence natural environment, perceptions, institutions? In the past? In the future? |
| Economy | How does the local economy work? In the past? In the future? |
| Human perception, activity, and behavior | How do individuals perceive forest management? The community? |
| Menominee autochthony (profound sense of place/tie to the land) | How does the community perceive their sense of place? |
The table lists some questions that can be used for creating the narrative