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Sustainable Development: Is This Paradigm The Remedy of All Challenges?


Does Its Goals Capture The Essence of Real Development and Sustainability?
With Reference to Discourses, Cre...

Article  in  SocioEconomic Challenges · January 2019


DOI: 10.21272/sec.3(4).97-128.2019

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SocioEconomic Challenges, Volume 3, Issue 4, 2019
ISSN (print) – 2520-6621, ISSN (online) – 2520-6214

Sustainable Development: Is This Paradigm The Remedy of All


Challenges? Does Its Goals Capture The Essence of Real
Development and Sustainability? With Reference to Discourses,
Creativeness, Boundaries and Institutional Architecture
https://doi.org/10.21272/sec.3(4).97-128.2019
Medani P. Bhandari, ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2213-2349
PhD, Professor, Department of Natural Resource & Environment / Sustainability Studies, Akamai University,
USA; Professor, Department of Finance and Entrepreneurship, Sumy State University, Ukraine
“The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) are the blueprint to achieve a better and more
sustainable future for all. They address the global challenges we face, including those related to
poverty, inequality, climate, environmental degradation, prosperity, and peace and justice. The Goals
interconnect and in order to leave no one behind, it is important that we achieve each Goal and target
by 2030” (United Nation 2015). “The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), otherwise known as
the Global Goals, are a universal call to action to end poverty, protect the planet and ensure that all
people enjoy peace and prosperity” (UNDP, 2019).
Abstract
This paper summarizes the arguments and counterarguments within the scientific discussion on the issue of
sustainable development with reference to discourses, creativeness, boundaries and institutional architecture.
The main purpose of the research is to understand current global challenges – environmental, geographic,
socioeconomic – poverty, hunger, health and inequality. Sustainability is a complex issue which interchangeably
in use with sustainable development. The term sustainability discourse stands to maintain the equilibrium between
nature and society and fulfill the societal demands (which could be environmental, economic and social. The
boundaries of sustainable development can also be seen and evaluated in terms of institutionalization process
and organizational process. More importantly, United Nation has been vigorously working to overcome with
these challenges through various initiatives. In this regard, United Nation has been pioneering to minimize
global challenges throughout its history. United Nation declared four decades (1960-1990) as development
decade with the objective of total development primarily in the developing world. In 1990, UN presented
Human Development Report 1990, and in 2000 UN declared millennium development goals (2000-2015).
However, Goals were only partially achieved. With this experience, UN declared “Transforming our world:
the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, which declared 17 Sustainable Development Goals and 169
targets. The investigation of the topic in the paper is carried out in the following logical sequence: 1) what is
the epistemological stand of sustainable development; 2) how discourses are developed, what is the limitation;
3) boundaries, how creativeness is incorporated in the sustainability domain and are SDGs are achievable; 4)
are governments are ready to cope with the domestic and international challenges. The results of the research
can be useful for many scholars, international organizations, governments, civil societies.
Keywords: United Nations, Human Development, Millennium Development Goals, Discourses, Boundaries,
Creativeness, Institution, Sustainable Development, India, Nepal, Bangladesh, Pakistan, South Asia,
Environmental Problems, Over Population, Poverty, Hunger, UNESCO, WHO, Epistemology.
JEL Classification: O11, O40, O53, I31.
Cite as: Medani P. Bhandari (2019). Sustainable Development: Is This Paradigm The Remedy of All
Challenges? Does Its Goals Capture The Essence of Real Development and Sustainability? With Reference
to Discourses, Creativeness, Boundaries and Institutional Architecture. SocioEconomic Challenges, 3(4), 97-
128. https://doi.org/10.21272/sec.3(4).97-128.2019.
© The Author, 2019. This article is published with open access at Sumy State University.

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Introduction
SDGs are achievable. To achieve SDGs goals and meet the targets, there is a need of real commitments - in
so far - commitments are limited on the paper - or in the political slogans. United Nations and its member
nations are taking SDGs as remedy of all problems. For example, the UN declaration 2015 states that “The
Sustainable Development Goals are the blueprint to achieve a better and more sustainable future for all. They
address the global challenges we face, including those related to poverty, inequality, climate, environmental
degradation, prosperity, and peace and justice. The Goals interconnect and in order to leave no one behind,
it is important that we achieve each Goal and target by 2030” (United Nation 2015). This statement is enough
to show the hope; however, the entire declaration openly and equally treats haves and haves not country as
UN stands for. However, none of the documents disclose why inequality gaps (in every span-social-economic-
environment) are widening throughout the history - rapidly increasing in recent decades? Who are responsible,
and why it is increasing despite of numerous efforts from related stakeholders? Are individual countries
capable enough to implement the SDGs? What is the cost of poverty, inequality, climate, environmental
degradation? And where are the resources? Are global international development agencies willing to support
developing nations without (agency’s income-return) any stirring. Will development agencies support to
developing nations without interventions in their national strategies? In so far, we have not seen any agencies
support without conditions. These conditional supports primarily create super strata as supporter and recipient
are automatically remain in lower strata. There is no free wheel as well as free will to developing countries
who must rely on others merci to tackle the accelerating environmental problem for which they were and are
not responsible for. I would say SDGs have created a temporary emotion of hope, however, mostly countries
of global south may or may not be able to bring desired outcome. The current trend so far in the developed
world (G20) shows questionable results. As Bertelsmann Stiftung and Sustainable Development Solutions
Network 2018, indicates that the lack of economic resources, appropriate institutional arrangements; suitable
monitoring evaluation tools and shortage of appropriate professional manpower are the major challenges
toward the achieving SDGs. Bertelsmann Stiftung and Sustainable Development Solutions Network 2018,
report summarizes that:
➢ Most G20 countries have started SDGs implementation, but important gaps remain.
➢ No country is on track towards achieving all SDGs.
➢ Conflicts are leading to reversals in SDG progress.
➢ Progress towards sustainable consumption and production patterns is too slow.
➢ High-income countries generate negative SDG spillover effects.
➢ Inequalities in economic and social outcomes require better data (page IX).
If so, what is the condition of developing countries? Unknown. Will remain unknown because they are still,
in planning phase or for the report purpose – they might have some framework, however implementation? Is
matter of big question mark (?). “To achieve the SDGs, countries must undertake major transformations of
education, health, energy systems, land-use, urban development, and many other dimensions. Each
transformation requires long term changes involving large numbers of stakeholders from government,
business, and civil society. Since such complex transformations cannot be implemented by markets alone,
governments must take the lead in mobilizing stakeholders, planning for the transformations, designing
supporting policy processes, and mobilizing the public funding” (Bertelsmann Stiftung and Sustainable
Development Solutions Network 2018:1). Similarly, Egron-Polak (2019) rightly shows the future directions
to achieve the SDGs “SDGs address all nations – North, South, East and West; The 17 SDGs are all inter-
connected and show that solutions are interdependent; need holistic (multi-disciplinary) approaches; No SDG
can be achieved without involvement – through research, education, and outreach – of higher education
institutions; None can be achieved without international collaboration and commitment; Current trajectories
of development (including in HE) are unsustainable – economically, socially, and politically; International
education and research can serve to raise awareness, be at forefront of search for alternatives, demonstrate
centrality of both knowledge and collaboration, gain new impetus by building on other broad agendas’. SDGs
are global agendas and unified international efforts are needed to achieve them practically. Institutionalization
is process (Scott 2001), must cross several prerequisites; similarly, internationalization also need combined
efforts at multinational level. Therefore, it is hard judge and too early to predict. Based on past experiences,
(United Nations development decades - 1960-90; agenda 21; millennium development goals) there is rational
ground state that SDGs, may be partially achieved by 2030. Even to achieve partial indeed, there is a need of

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strong commitments of governments, reginal and global collaborations and strong institutional architecture
for monitoring and evaluation.
These questions:
1. How theoretically and practically is sustainability discourse developed?
2. What are the boundaries and what is the linkage with creativeness?
3. Does sustainability notion help to foster creativeness and innovation?
4. What is the institutional architecture to attain the SDGs?
1. How Theoretically and Practically Sustainability Discourse Developed?
A "theory" is not a collection of assertions about the behavior of the actual economy but rather an
explicit set of instructions for building a parallel or analogue system--a mechanical, imitation economy.
A "good" model, from this point of view, will not be exactly more "real" than a poor one, but will provide
better imitations. Of course, what one means by a "better imitation" will depend on the questions to
which one wishes answers (Lucas 1980: 697).
Discourse is what we understand and share the meaning of idea, concept, opinion (written or unwritten). “The
routine day-to-day usage of the term discourse simply refers to a stretch of text or spoken utterances that
cohere into a meaningful exposition” (Chris Barker, 2004: 54).
Sustainability as such is a complex term, sustain – survive, maintain, bearing or holding capacity and ability
to be able of. However, in definitional statement, mostly scholarly world cites from Our Common Future
report (1987) which states “development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability
of future generations to meet their own need” (Our Common Future, 1987). In definitional term, Sustainability
and sustainable development are used interchangeably, which builds on three major areas, Environmental
Sustainability, Economic Sustainability and Social Sustainability.

Figure 1. The semantics of sustainable development


Source: adopted from Lele, 1991: 608.

“The current state of scientific knowledge (particularly insights obtained in the last few decades) about
natural and social phenomena and their interactions leads inexorably to the conclusion that anyone
driven by either long-term self-interest, or concern for poverty, or concern for intergenerational equity
should be willing to support the operational objectives of SD” (Lele, 1991: 612).
Lele (1991) nicely presents the complexity of sustainable development (SD) from concepts to the
implementing phase, which reveals the fact that SD depends on many aspects and can be implement with

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the application of multidimensional approaches. The following table gives general scenario of SD
coverage (self-explanatory).
Sustainability is a complex issue which interchangeably in use with sustainable development. Various
authors have used the term various ways and defined various categories to illustrate th e issue they are
addressing (health, development, policy, environment, climate change, weather variation, ……) (Corral -
Verdugo et el., 2009; Betsy, 2010; SDSN, 2014; Boucher, 2015; United Nations, 2015; WHO, 2015;
Mitchell and Walinga 2017; Tahvilzadeh, StigMontin and Cullberg, 2017; Bhandari, 2018). The term
sustainability discourse stands to maintain the equilibrium between nature and society and fulfill the
societal demands (which could be environmental, economic and social). Sustainability scholarship is to
search the know how of how development can be maintained without hampering the natural ecosystem
and how the global major problems i.e. Environmental problems, socioeconomic problems - poverty,
hunger, health can be solved or at least minimize. Sustainability discourse is the overall scenario of how
the concept began and how all concern stakeholders use, develop, adjust with it. Discourse can be seen
as “social interaction, discourse as power and domination, discourse as communication, discourse as
contextually situated, discourse as social semiosis, discourse as natural language use, discourse as
complex, layered construct, sequences and hierarchies in discourse, abstract structures versus dynamic
strategies in discourse, and types or genres of discourse” (Van Dijk, 2011). As Barker (2004: 54) notes
“discourse is said to ‘unite’ language and practice and refers to regulated ways of speaking about a subject
through which objects and practices acquire meaning”. Sustainability discourse captures the notion of
how the theories and practices have been developed and how the concern stakeholders utilized in
established scenario. Sustainability discourses can be seen as creation of sustainability regime creation,
by which various rules, regulations, norms, values and policy has been created. Sustainability discourses
are accepted notion in the contemporary political, social, economic and environmental policy domain. As
such sustainability discourse can be seen from IUCN, UNEP, WWF document “World Conservation
Strategy: Living Resource Conservation for Sustainable Development” in 1980.
Table 1. Sustainability discourse
The World Conservation Strategy is intended to stimulate a
more focused approach to the management of living resources
and to provide policy guidance on how this can be carried out
by three main groups:
- government policy makers and their advisers;
- conservationists and others directly concerned with living
resources;
- development practitioners, including development agencies,
industry and commerce, and trade unions.
1. The aim of the World Conservation Strategy is to achieve the
three main objectives of living resource conservation:
The Symbol
a. to maintain essential ecological processes and life-support
The circle symbolizes the biosphere – the thin
systems
covering of the planet that contains and sustains life.
b. to preserve genetic diversity
The three interlocking, overlapping arrows
c. to ensure the sustainable utilization of species and
symbolize the three objectives of conservation:
ecosystems………………… and……….
- maintanance of essential ecological processes
6. The World Conservation Strategy ends by summarizing the
and life-support systems;
main requirements for sustainable development, indicating
- preservation of genetic diversity;
conservation priorities for the Third Development Decade
- sustainable ulilization od species and
(section 20).
ecosystems.
Source: IUCN-UNEP-WWF (1980-vi-vii) https://portals.iucn.org/library/sites/library/files/documents/WCS-004.pdf.
The world conservation strategy the symbol and the text clearly emphasize the importance to
sustainability, which also paved the foundation of sustainability discourses. However, one can trace the
originality of discourses when people began to think about the limitation of natural resources and
interrelated harmonies relationships between human and nature. In this respect, we can see the modern
environment conservation history and the efforts to conserve them particularly in terms of environmental
problems-climate change. Sustainability discourse developed as a problem-solving tool. The meaning of
sustainability has been modified as its application became popular. The following table adopted from
Klarin (2018: 77), provides chronological overview of the meaning of sustainable development.

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Table 2. The chronological overview of the meaning of sustainable development in the period 1980-2018
Authors/publication and Meaning and understanding of sustainable development
year
IUCN 1980 World Conservation Strategy
WCED, 1987 Sustainable development is a development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of
future generations to meet their own needs.
Pearce et al., 1989 Sustainable development implies a conceptual socio-economic system which ensures the sustainability of goals in
the form of real income achievement and improvement of educational standards, health care and the overall quality
of life.
Harwood, 1990 Sustainable development is unlimited developing system, where development is focused on achieving greater
benefits for humans and more efficient resource use in balance with the environment required for all humans and
all other species.
IUCN, UNDP & WWF, Sustainable development is a process of improving the quality of human life within the framework of carrying
1991 capacity of the sustainable ecosystems.
Lele, 1991 Sustainable development is a process of targeted changes that can be repeated forever.
Meadows, 1998 Sustainable development is a social construction derived from the long-term evolution of a highly complex system
– human population and economic development integrated into ecosystems and biochemical processes of the
Earth.
PAP/RAC, 1999 Sustainable development is development given by the carrying capacity of an ecosystem.
Vander-Merwe & Van-der- Sustainable development is a program that changes the economic development process to ensure the basic quality
Merwe, 1999 of life, protecting valuable ecosystems and other communities at the same time.
Beck & Wilms, 2004 Sustainable development is a powerful global contradiction to the contemporary western culture and lifestyle.
Vare & Scott, 2007 Sustainable development is a process of changes, where resources are raised, the direction of investments is
determined, the development of technology is focused, and the work of different institutions is harmonized, thus
the potential for achieving human needs and desires is increased as well
Sterling, 2010 Sustainable development is a reconciliation of the economy and the environment on a new path of development
that will enable the long-term sustainable development of humankind.
Marin et al., 2012 Sustainable development gives a possibility of time unlimited interaction between society, ecosystems and other
living systems without impoverishing the key resources
Duran et al., 2015 Sustainable development is a development that protects the environment, because a sustainable environment
enables sustainable development
Bhandari 2018 Sustainable development is a fundamental basis of development practice and way of thinking ahead.
Source: Klarin (2018:77).

This change of sustainability meaning is based on its complexity- in coverage- Economic- Social and
environment and its subsidiaries. According to Daly “Standard economics defines sustainability as non-
declining utility over generations. Ecological economics considers this unworkable because utility is not
measurable, and more importantly cannot be bequeathed. Also, it is throughput, not utility, that impinges on
the environment. Ecological economics therefore defines sustainability as the bequest to future generations
of an intact resource base, a non-declining stock of natural capital (strong sustainability). Some economists
define sustainability as a non-declining total capital stock (the sum of natural and man-made capital) on the
neoclassical assumption of easy substitution between the two. The usual ecological economists’ view of
complementarity, with natural capital being the limiting factor, argues for the nonreclining natural capital
definition” (Daly, 2007: 254-255).
Primarily sustainability discourse was developed to overcome the worrisome triggered through environmental
change and to search the technological tools to monitor the environmental challenges and impacts.
Table 3. The development trend-the worrisome of environmental damage and mainstreaming of
sustainability
Year Activity Description
UN published the report Man and His Environment or U Activities focused to avoid global environmental degradation. More
1969
Thant Report. than 2,000 scientists were involved in creation of this report.
First UN and UNEP world Conference on the Human Under the slogan Only One Earth, a declaration and action plan for
1972
Environment, Stockholm, Sweden. environmental conservation was published.
UNESCO conference on education about the Setting up a global environment educational framework, a statement
1975
environment, Belgrade, Yugoslavia. known as the Belgrade Charter.
International Congress of the Human Environment
1975 Emphasized the same problems as in Stockholm in 1972.
(HESC), Kyoto, Japan.
The First World Climate Conference, Geneva, Focused on the creation of the climate change research and program
1979
Switzerland. monitoring.
The first UN Conference on Least Developed Countries, A report with guidelines and measures for helping the
1981
Paris, France. underdeveloped countries.
The task of the Commission is the cooperation between developed
Establishment of United Nations World Commission on
1984 and developing countries and the adoption of global development
Environment and Development (WCED).
plans on environmental conservation.
WCED report Our Common Future or Brundtland report A report with the fundamental principles of the concept of
1987
was published. sustainable development.

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Table 3 (cont.). The development trend-the worrisome of environmental damage and mainstreaming of
sustainability
Year Activity Description
Contains results of the researches on harmful effects on the ozone
1987 Montreal Protocol was published.
layer.
Further development of the climate change research and monitoring
The Second World Climate Conference, Geneva,
1990 program and the creation of global Climate Change Monitoring
Switzerland.
System.
United Nations Conference on Environment and In the Rio Declaration and Agenda 21 Action Plan principles of
1992 Development (Earth Summit or Rio Conference), Rio de sustainable development were established and the framework for the
Janeiro, Brazil. future tasks as well.
The Kyoto Protocol was signed between countries to reduce CO2
1997 Kyoto Climate Change Conference, Kyoto, Japan.
and other greenhouse gas emissions, with commencement in 2005.
Declaration containing eight Millennium Development Goals
2000 UN published Millennium declaration.
(MDGs) set by 2015.
Report with the results achieved during the time from the Rio
The World Summit on Sustainable Development,
2002 Conference, which reaffirmed the previous obligations and set the
Johannesburg, South Africa.
guidelines for implementation of the concept in the future.
The Third World Climate Conference, Geneva, Further development of the global Climate Change Monitoring
2009
Switzerland. System with the aim of timely anticipation of possible disasters.
G20 member states made an agreement on a moderate and
2009 World Congress Summit G20, Pittsburgh, USA.
sustainable economy.
Twenty years from the Rio conference, report the future we want
2012 UN conference Rio +20, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil renewed the commitment to the goals of sustainable development
and encouraged issues of the global green economy.
The UN 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development was published,
UN Sustainable Development Summit 2015, New York,
2015 setting up 17 Millennium Development Goals which should be
SAD.
achieved by 2030.
UN conference on climate change COP21Paris Climate Agreement on the reduction of greenhouse gases in order to reduce
2015
change Conference, Paris, France. and limit global warming.

Source: UN 2015; UNFCCC, 2016 (recited from Klarin 2018:72).

The environmental change detection was only possible through the technological enhancement and use of
enhanced tools to detect the change. If we go even back, we can find, how, the Greek began to explore the position
of the Earth and atmospheric variation through Geology and Geography (Geology: Greek meaning Earth and its
speed and Geography (Tuan1991) "ge" for earth and "grapho" for “to write”); from where the exploration of climate
variation and change came into the research agenda. The concern about the environmental change can be seen from
the Greek Era; however, it was only within a certain group of people. The geological and geographical study of the
Earth’s system paved the ground for research on scenarios of climate variation; these are the oldest disciplines of
the academic world. Longwell (1954) examines the root of the geological exploration - the first step in the detection
of environmental change (Bhandari 2017). However, the concerned people were only elites / scholars and scientists.
Historically, we can find many concerned scientists about the impact of environmental damage on human, however,
it was also subject of discussion at the political arena. “The history of life on earth has been a history of interaction
between living things and their surroundings ... Considering the whole span of earthly time, the opposite effect, in
which life continually modifies its surroundings, has been relatively slight. Only within the moment of time
represented by the present century has one species — man — acquired significant power to alter the nature of his
world." (Rachel Carson, Silent Spring, 1962).
In the modern era, 1972 was the milestone year for the institutionalization of environmental concern and
sustainability discourse formalization, through the first World Conference on Global environment, which
recommended establishing the United National Environment Program. Similarly, the Club of the Rome also
published its most authentic report “The Limits to Growth” (1972), which draws global attention to the global
environment. There is no direct challenge on the research outcome of the Rome Club. The “Limits to Growth”
report states that if the present growth trends in world population, industrialization, pollution, food production and
resource depletion continue unchanged, the limits to growth on this planet will be reached sometime within the
next one hundred years (Bhandari, 2012). The most probable result will be a rather sudden and uncontrollable
decline in both population and industrial capacity. This was a second shock after Rachel Carson’s book Silent
Spring (1962), which largely drew the attention of the general public regarding the seriousness of global climate
change (Brechin and Bhandari 2011). Having growing concerns and evidence of global impact of environment,
UNEP continued its consultation with the scientific and government agencies to reach a mutual understanding.
“Human history has traditionally been cast in terms of the rise and fall of great civilizations, wars, and specific
human achievements. This history leaves out the important ecological and climate contexts that shaped and
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mediated these events. Human history and earth system history have traditionally been developed
independently…and there have been few attempts to integrate these histories … across these fields of study”
(Robin and Steffen, 2007: 9). The environmental history helps to pave the future direction through its failure or
success stories.
It is established notion that the sustainability discourses emerged very recently, however, it has long route to be
accepted in the main stream of political, social, economic and environmental agendas. The growth of international
concern of governments, scientific agencies, non-profit sector and general public dealing with the environment
began to accelerate from the beginning of the 20th century and still continues. The sustainability discourse is
uniformly accepted, used, and being utilized.
The sustainability discourse became so paramount that, it has its own niche in development arena of current time.
It can be state that, discourse became an established, accepted principle, in another words, it can be seen as
sustainability regime. "Regime is sets of implicit or explicit principles, norms, rules and decision-making
procedures around which actors’ expectations converge in a given area of international relations" (Krasner, 1983).
Maintaining the Sustainability is national, transnational, multinational and global concern. Socioeconomic and
environment problems have been increasing on a global scale (HIVAID, inequality, transnational migration,
terrorism, environmental problems-climate change etc.), and these problems themselves create certain types of
regime and format their own networks and relationships.
In current scenario, sustainability discourses are seen in the form of agreement on the facts, norms, rules, and
procedures. The United Nations has been playing a critical role in sustainability regime formation with factual
scientific results and is influential in international policy formation to obtain the sustainable development goals.
In this regard, it is necessary to understand that “discourse is not a neutral medium for the formation and transfer
of values, meanings and knowledge that exist beyond its boundaries, rather, it is constitutive of them. That is,
discourse is not best understood as an innocent reflection of non-linguistic meaning, nor simply in terms of the
intentions of language users. Rather, discourse constructs meaning. Though material objects and social practices
have a material existence outside of language, they are given meaning or ‘brought into view’ by language and are
thus discursively formed. Discourse constructs, defines and produces the objects of knowledge in an intelligible
way while excluding other forms of reasoning as unintelligible. It structures which meanings can or cannot be
deployed under determinate circumstances by speaking subjects” (Barker 2004:54). In relation to sustainability
discourse, sustainability is no more a word with complex meaning, however, it is the framework of maintaining
the “development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet
their own need” (Our Common Future 1987). And how, the sustainable development goals (SDGs) are the
pathways and various policies are the directives and countries plans are the future directives. The goals are set with
the past experience of millennium development goals implementation’s (MDGs) output. As such MDGs was only
partial success; SDGs has incorporated the shortfalls of past and created the future directives through 17 goals and
100s of policy directives.
Sustainability is a complex issue which is built on the necessity created by the over utilization of natural resources,
due to accelerated development intervention on nature. As Costanza et.el. (2007) note “the most remarkable
phenomenon on Earth in the 20th century was the “Great Acceleration” the sharp increase in human population,
economic activity, resource use, transport, communication and knowledge–science–technology that was triggered
in many parts of the world…following World War II and which has continued into this century... Other parts of the
world, especially the monsoon Asia region, are now also in the midst of the Great Acceleration. The tension
between the modern nation state and the emergence of multinational corporations and international political
institutions is a strong feature of the changing human-environmental relationship. The “engine” of the Great
Acceleration is an interlinked system consisting of population increase, rising consumption, abundant cheap
energy, and liberalizing political economies” (Costanza et. al., 2007:4 as cited in Robin and Steffen, 2007:7). The
anthropogenic disturbance in nature has been its acceleration and impact on planet’s environment were drawing
attentions of concerned stakeholders. This urgency was documented (one can state them as sustainability discourses
at large), in various forms i.e. research papers, books, monographs, thesis, dissertation etc.(IUCN, 1980; Paehlke,
1989; Eckersley, 1992; Litfin, 1994; Hajer, 1995; Dryzek, 1997; van Dijk, 1998; Sawyer, 2002; Palmer, 2003;
Barker, 2004; Diamond, 2005; Costanza et.al., 2007; Lorek and Fuchs, 2011; Veen, et. al., 2013; James, 2015;
Tahvilzadeh et. al., 2017, etc.). The Silent Spring (1962); The Limits to Growth”(1972); World Conservation

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Strategy (1980); Our Common Future, (1987) and many UN and other agencies world summit on earth (1972-
2012) on sustainability discourse.
In addition, other major treaty events which boasted the sustainability discourses are Ramsar Convention,
Stockholm Declaration of the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment, The Rio Declaration on
Environment and Development, Convention on Biological Diversity ,Convention on Long-Range Trans-boundary
Pollution, Convention on the Prevention of Marine Pollution by Dumping of Wastes and Other Matter, Convention
on International Trade in Endangered Species(CITES), Basel Convention on the Control of Trans-boundary
Movements of Hazardous Wastes and Their Disposal, Convention Concerning the Protection of the World Cultural
& Natural Heritage, United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification, United Nations Convention on Law of
the Sea (UNCLOS), United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and the Kyoto Protocol on Global
Warming and many others). These treaty events captured the notion of international multicultural and socio-
economic politics. Many researchers have examined the successes and failures of international treaties and
agreements. These researches accept the role and responsibilities of nation, international organizations, civil
societies, NGOs and advocacy group. The hegemonic power relationship is still in force within the current neo-
liberal world (Bhandari, 2018).
However, the major step in fostering sustainability begins from the first UN Conference on the Human
Environment, Stockholm (1972), followed by the second Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro 1992, where 172, 108
people participated including head of the states, business personnel and other experts. In the first time about 2,400
representatives of non-governmental organizations (NGOs) participated in Rio summit. Summit produced agenda
21 declaration on environment and development, the statement of forest principles, the United Nations framework
convention on climate change and the United Nations convention on biological diversity. Since Rio summit global
concern on environment management and policy reform became common agenda to the entire world. Most of the
states in the world started focus and monitor on patterns of production (i.e. toxic components, gasoline, and
poisonous waste), investigation on alternatives for the fossil fuels (which is major cause for global climate change),
alternatives for the public transportation (to reduce air pollution and smog) and water resource management. Blue
print provides a comprehensive structure for the modernization of national / transnational environment protection
and environment reform which includes the framework for sustainability and offers the links between economic
growth using science and technology to solve the environmental problems with the application of multi-driven
approaches. The world conferences based on sustainability and environmental reforms have been broadly focusing
on the natural resource management, searching options to reduce the environment impact due to economic activities
with the application of new technology. As a result, sustainability discourse became a prime field of consideration
in the development agendas of global concern.
In sum, agenda of sustainability is institutionalizing, blue prints are becoming common and nations are more
receptive to address the socioeconomic, and environment problem and the diffusion of such concern is accelerating.
2. What are the boundaries of Sustainability?
In general term, the word meaning of boundaries can be understood as a limitation, edge, or limit. According to
Cambridge English Dictionary-an edge or limit of something, the limit of a subject or principle, or can be
understood as administrative boundary, natural boundary, or certain range within or beyond the limit. As seen in
the synonyms the term boundary is that which has a limitation. However, connecting with the sustainable
development which is defined as “Sustainable development is development that meets the needs of the present
without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs” (Brundtland, 1987).
As noted in the above question (discourse of sustainability), the global focus on sustainability began in earnest with
the 1980 publication of the World Conservation Strategy by the International Union for Nature and Natural
Resources (IUCN). The World Conservation Strategy is the first warning of resources limitation in another world-
there a limitation or boundary and societal including, social, economic and environmental development should not
cross the boarders. This bold statement highlighted the scope and limitations (boundaries) of our planet’s natural
resources and ecological systems. Though it presented a great scope of future development with the wise use of
available resources, it also presented a scenario how humankind’s current and future uses of resources would
diminish the carrying capacities of our ecosystems. Though neoliberalists might disagree with the arguments of
limiting carrying capacity in view of the new innovative measures, the Brundtland Commission on Sustainable
Development (CSD) in 1987 had realized the possibilities of deteriorating ecosystem services, if the present trend
of resource consumption continues without alternatives. It even coined the term of sustainable development (SD)
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for the wise of resources so as to ensure their availabilities for future generations. The Brundtland report gained
much importance in the UN Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED) in Rio de Janeiro in 1992.
Agenda 21 of this UNCED emphasized much on the sustainable aspect of ecosystem services. Since then SD got
more importance both in concept and practice. Today, the UN and its agencies are embedding the term SD in each
of their activities as envisioned by the CSD (Bhandari, 2017; 2018).
As listed in the table 3, in 1969 UN published the report Man and His Environment or U Thant Report, which first
outlined the environmental damage and its impact and proposed the activities focused to avoid global
environmental degradation. This indicated that over use of natural resources is crossing the boundary or limitation.
And all efforts through United Nations, international development agencies, international intergovernmental, non-
governmental organization, and warning calls from scholars (through publications, seminars presentations,
dissertations, etc.) have been trying to aware society, showing evidences that anthropogenic activities negatively
impacting on environment. In 1987, WCED report Our Common Future or Brundtland report was published, which
paved the fundamental principles of the concept of sustainable development, provided the clear indication that, if
we continue what we are doing on the name of economic development (this is beyond the limit of nature), future
generation may not have natural privilege as we have now. As depicted in the table 3 above, 1972, a declaration
and action plan for environmental conservation, 1975 conference on education about the environment, 1975
summit on Human Environment, 1992, Conference on Environment and Development, 2000-Millennium
declaration, 2002 on Sustainable Development, 2012-conference Rio +20, 2015-Sustainable Development
Summit, which set up 17 Millennium Development Goals and 2015- COP21Paris Climate change Conference
(holding the increase in global average temperature below 2 °C or 1.5 °C above pre-industrial levels), all focused
on environmental damage hampering earth sustaining mechanisms and earliest action has to be taken and
implemented. The agenda 21, Millennium Development Goals, and the most recent one sustainable development
17 goals and 169 targets to achieve them are the framework problems illustrations and plans for not to cross the
boundaries and maintain the health of planet as well as resolve the challenges of “poverty and hunger everywhere;
to combat inequalities within and among countries; to build peaceful, just and inclusive societies; to protect human
rights and promote gender equality and the empowerment of women and girls; and to ensure the lasting protection
of the planet and its natural resources….resolve also to create conditions for sustainable, inclusive and sustained
economic growth, shared prosperity and decent work for all, taking into account different levels of national
development and capacities (UN 2015-https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/post2015/transformingourworld).
This warning and the call of action to resolve the problems, the sustainable development is proposed method, plan
of action and procedures of implantation. The underline assumptions here is the current development which mostly
based on exploitation of nature and natural resources need to shift towards the harmony with nature. Therefore, the
boundaries of sustainable development largely seen through environmental constraints (“carrying capacity”,
“sustainable consumption and production”, “guardrails”, “tipping points”, “footprints”, “safe operating space”
or “planetary boundaries”) (Rockström et. al., 2009; 2013:3).
Table 4. Planetary boundaries and quantification
Planetary boundary Boundaries quantified
CO2 concentration in the atmosphere should be limited to 350 ppm and/or a maximum change of +1
1. Climate change
W m-2 in radiative forcing
2. Biological diversity loss An annual rate of a maximum of 10 extinctions per million species
Nitrogen (N) cycle - limit industrial and agricultural fixation of N2 to 35 Mt N yr-1) Phosphorus (P)
3. Biogeochemical cycles
cycle (annual P inflow to oceans not to exceed 10 times the natural background weathering of P
4. Global freshwater use Limited to 4000 km3 yr-1 of consumptive use of runoff resources
5. Land system change Not more than 15% of the ice-free land surface used as cropland
Mean surface seawater saturation state with respect to aragonite at not less than 80% of pre-industrial
6. Ocean acidification
levels
7. Stratospheric ozone Maximum 5% reduction in O3 concentration from pre-industrial level of 290 Dobson Units
8. Chemical pollution No boundary defined
9. Atmospheric aerosol loading No boundary defined
Source: Rockström, et.al. 2013:26-27- “The planetary boundary framework below is based on a decade’s research suggesting a safe operating space
for humanity. This was brought forward as a priority in the report from the UN Secretary-Generals High Level Panel “Resilient People Resilient Planet”
(UNs Secretary General’s High-Level Panel on Global Sustainability 2012). It stated that we should “defend the science that shows we are destabilizing
our climate and stretching planetary boundaries to a perilous degree” (25). Rockstrom et.al. (2013:21) summarize (1) The science of planetary
boundaries makes clear that we are on an unsustainable trajectory; (2) Achieving the Sustainable Development Trajectory will require an unprecedented
global effort by all countries – rich and poor – that will only be possible under a shared global framework for sustainable development. The planetary
boundary image by Rockström et. al. (2009) gives clearer picture with same circumstances.

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Figure 2. Planetary boundary


Source: Rockström et. al. (2009) and also in Steffen et al. (2015: 736) as cited also in Stockholm Resilience Centre website.
www.stockholmresilience.org (Estimates of how the different control variables for seven planetary boundaries have changed from 1950 to present.
The green shaded polygon represents the safe operating space.); The red areas in image 1. show the position of each boundary. The safe operating
space for the boundaries is within the green area. Out of these nine boundaries at least three have already been passed: climate change, biodiversity
loss, and the nitrogen cycle.

The boundaries of sustainable development can also be seen in terms of its three-pillar infusion-social,
economic and environmental. The environmental boundary is depicted in the table 3, many scientist / scholars
have shown the interrelationship of sustainability planetary boundary (Barnosky, 2012; Steffen et. al., 2011;
Carpenter and Bennett, 2011; Cornell, 2012; Erb et. al., 2012; Foley et. al., 2011; Folke et. al., 2011; Folke
and Rockström, 2011; Ingram, 2011; Rockström and Karlberg, 2010; Running 2012, etc.). There is gap of
research on sustainability boundary setting with the social, economic, cultural and political lenses.
Social boundaries of sustainability can be seen at individual, family, and cultural differences and their
relationships, how they perceive sustainability in their pursuits. Understanding of sustainability awareness can
be seen at the individuals to the societal level, - the aware about own Ecological footprint; carrying capacity
of local niche; valuing the nature on social interactions - regular behavior pattern - waste disposal system or
water use pattern etc. shows the regular pattern of understanding of sustainability through behavior. The
conflict among societies in resource use and utilization, the social strata and cultural variations are also among
the other boundaries of social phenomena. Economic boundaries of sustainability can be seen in the eyes of
the victims of poverty and hunger, in the inequalities within and among countries. Politically boundaries of
sustainability are a whole different scenario of discussion. The major cause of the conflict, division, wars,
segregation, separation, …………. are major boundaries. Table 2, development scenarios of sustainable
development can be considered as the minimizing the boundaries impacts and take action collectively to
resolve the environmental, social and economic challenges world is facing. UN 2015, in Transforming our
world: the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development states that “determined to mobilize the means required
to implement this Agenda through a revitalized Global Partnership for Sustainable Development, based on a
spirit of strengthened global solidarity, focused in particular on the needs of the poorest and most vulnerable
and with the participation of all countries, all stakeholders and all people” (Transforming our world: the 2030
Agenda for Sustainable Development-UN 2015). As noted in Scoones, (2016), ‘there has been a growing
consensus on the end points of sustainability, combining environmental, social, and economic goals — now
parsed in terms of circular, low-carbon, or green economies -— there has been less discussion of how to get
there and of the social, cultural, institutional, and political challenges that arise’ beyond the national and
political boarders. The Sustainable Development 17 Goals and 169 Targets (UN 2015) presents the current
scenario of the problems (which shows where the current trend of developed crossed the boundary) and
provides the pathway to move forward.
The boundaries of sustainable development can be seen, analyzed and interpreted within the coverage of
Sustainable development goals (1: No Poverty; 2: Zero Hunger; 3: Good Health and Well-being; 4: Quality
Education; 5: Gender Equality; 6: Clean Water and Sanitation; 7: Affordable and Clean Energy; 8: Decent
Work and Economic Growth; 9: Industry, Innovation and Infrastructure; 10: Reduced Inequality; 11:
Sustainable Cities and Communities 12: Responsible Consumption and Production; 13: Climate Action;14:

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Life Below Water 15: Life on Land;16: Peace and Justice Strong Institutions; 17: Partnerships to achieve the
Goal) (UN 2015) and beyond. These goals are interconnected, multidimensional and have underline
constraints (each holds different boundary discourse of sustainable development) (Rockström et. al., 2013).
The boundaries of sustainable development can also be seen and evaluated in terms of institutionalization
process and organizational process. In so far, sustainability is formalized, organized and institutionalized
frame of development paradigm (Anaedu and Lars-Goran 2002; Bertelsmann Stiftung and Sustainable
Development Solutions Network 2018; Robert et. al. 2005; Maser 1997), therefore, the boundaries of
sustainable development can also be evaluated in terms of formal organization. “Formal organizations are
typically understood to be systems of coordinated and controlled activities that arise when work is embedded
in complex networks of technical relations and boundary-spanning exchanges. But in modern societies, formal
organizational structures arise in highly institutional contexts. Organizations are driven to incorporate the
practices and procedures defined by prevailing rationalized concepts of organizational work and
institutionalized in society. Organizations that do so increase their legitimacy and their survival prospects,
independent of the immediate efficacy of the acquired practices and procedures. There can develop a tension
between on the one hand, the institutionalized products, services, techniques, policies, and programs that
function as myths (and may be ceremonially adopted), and efficiency criteria on the other hand. To maintain
ceremonial conformity, organizations that reflect institutional rules tend to buffer their formal structures from the
uncertainties of the technical activities by developing a loose coupling between their formal structures and actual
work activities” (Meyer and Rowan, 1977). In terms of sustainability the structured rules, directives and articulative
principles can be seen as the boundaries of sustainable development. The notion of complexity of organization
applies in the context of sustainable development. As sustainability is integral part in resolving the constraints of
developmental discourses and have various challenges in maintaining interrelation boundaries of social, economic
and environmental connections. "The most effective organizations achieve a degree of differentiation and
integration in organizational boundary-spanning functions which is compatible with environmental demands"
(Lawrence & Lorsch, 1967). The sustainable development boundary is thin if worked with the multinational,
multidimensional and at the scholarly level multidisciplinary approaches. However, addressing boundary? …
essential to explore more to pave the future direction.
To outline boundary of sustainable development is tremendously difficult because of its complexity, coverage and
multicriterial nature in development paradigms. The boundaries of sustainable development shifts as the SDG are
achieved. As UN 2015 in Transforming our world: the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development notes “a call for
action by all countries – poor, rich and middle-income – to promote prosperity while protecting the planet. They
recognize that ending poverty must go hand-in-hand with strategies that build economic growth and address a range
of social needs including education, health, social protection, and job opportunities, while tackling climate change
and environmental protection’. As measurable outcomes are visible the boundary will change (Bhandari 2018).
The boundary and definition of sustainable development changes with the advancement of epistemology of
sustainability. As Hannan and Freeman (1989) state ‘the boundary definition of organizations is itself a variable
that changes as technology and other environmental forces affect it. Determining how to exactly classify a particular
organization is becoming increasingly more difficult’. This notion completely applies with the complexity notion
of sustainability and also useful for boundary setting.
Sustainable development complexity can be analyzed through the organizational theoretical lenses in three level
— ‘first organizations are complex because of complex adaptive systems, differentiations in agents, variations on
decision making and problem solving techniques and networks, information technology and algorithmic
complexity, second, organization hold complex adaptive systems, loose coupling and models, edge of chaos,
simple rules and complex behavior, emergence and recombination and evolution and thirdly, organizational
interdependence, cellular automata, micro-behavior and macro-structure complex inter-organizational dynamics,
sensitivity to initial conditions and path dependence (Baum and Rowley, 2005). Adaptation of sustainable
development – in multisectoral development has pass / experience through complex adaptive systems, because
each country has difference social, cultural, geographical and political limitation or boundaries. The complexity
also exists in decision making system because each countries definition of public participation may differ due to
their own governance system.

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Figure 3. The depiction of meta-frame of organization


Source: Baum and Rowley (2005).

Baum and Rowley (2005) depiction of meta-frame (flow chat 1) of organization can be helpful to see the
complexity structures of sustainable development. However, there is the need of modification on the basis of
sustainability parameters. The implementation and evaluation of sustainable development perspectives
depends on how sustainability principles (in current scenario SDGs goals and targets) are interrelated with
each other and how this complexity can be minimized. There is research gap on sustainability complexity and
its boundaries. The sustainability boundaries also be evaluated with the lenses of institutional perspectives;
which is another field of further research. As nicely illustrated in Pesch (2014) descriptions of institutional
domains on the one hand and of second-order problems that are related to these domains on the other hand,
we may conclude that we are faced with a dilemma in case of promoting sustainable development. In its very
essence, sustainable development pertains to problems that transcend the boundaries of institutional domains.
To resolve environmental degradation and the depletion of resources, we have to fulfill the following
necessities: appropriate knowledge has to be produced; the external effects of our economic system have to
be integrated into private transactions, having major effects for the distribution of economic wealth and
economic burdens; effective collective decisions have to be made that transcend national boundaries and that
are subject to broad societal consent; and the creation and implementation of sustainable technologies have to
be facilitated. In all, the tendencies of institutional domains to displace goals have to be overcome (Pesch,
2014: 48).
Sustainable development boundaries can be obstacles to achieve the progress and there is need of new policy
formation which can create instruments to promote boundary-crossing collaborations, to achieve the
sustainable development goals. “Understanding how best to move along the road toward sustainability, as
contrasted with understanding the levels and types of unsustainability, is an issue that has not yet been
addressed in detail. Sustainability is a systems problem, one that defies typical piecemeal approaches such as:
Will there be enough ore in the ground for technological needs? Will there be enough water for human needs?
How can we preserve biodiversity? Can global agriculture be made sustainable? (Graedel and Voet, 2010: 3).
This concern of Graedel and Voet (2010), provides another gap of sustainability discourse; however, the
efforts to answer the posed questions provides the path way to the scholarly world. In advancing sustainable
development epistemology, each stakeholder has unavoidable role and responsibility, however, core
responsivities lie to higher educational institutions (Wallendorf, 1989; Yao and Bai, 2008; Waheed et.al.,
2011; Yarime and Tanaka 2012; Versteijlen et.al., 2017).
‘The boundaries of the sustainability system are determined by four dimensions based on the finiteness of the
fossil energy system, the development of a post-fossil energy system, the problem of climate change, and the
chosen sustainability paradigm. This sustainability approach could enable sustainable development

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opportunities for the present generation without affecting the welfare of future generations’ (Schlor et al.,
2015:52).
The sustainable development notion provides the hope in the world, by reviving security in the society,
providing the environment to share and cope with problems and produce goods, deliver services, maintain
order, and gives a way to survive from individual level to societal stage. The sustainability notion hopes to
minimize the challenges, helps to establish order in the society (Richter, 2009; Meuleman, 2013). In relation
to linkage with day to day individual and societal settings the SDGs are the fundamental building blocks of
modern societies, and the basic vehicles through which collective action is being undertaken. The eminence
of sustainable development discourses is new paradigms of modern world and it is obvious to be prepared to
face various consequences particularly in implementation, since there are limitless boundaries has to identified
and addressed. Sustainability notion has to cross various isomorphism processes which creates boundary-
spanning demands for economic development (Bhandari, 2018). Further to achieve the sustainable
development goals, the concern stakeholders have to incorporate structural elements isomorphic process
(which will create more boundaries) to address the complexity and interdepend boundaries.
3. What are the linkages with creativeness and sustainability?
“Truth reveals itself in degrees, and we can progress from an incomplete to a more and ever more complete
comprehension of truth. Truth is not a thing, not an object that we either have in entirety or have not at all.”
Johann Wolfgang von Goetфhe (1749-1832)
“Creativity is understood as the human capacity, through imagination or invention, to pro use something new
and original in order to solve problems. It is a unique and renewable resource. Creativity enables individuals
to expand their abilities and develop their full potential. In today’s global, knowledge-based societies, creative
assets are generating new forms of revenue and employment that are spurring growth, in particular among
youth. Releasing diverse sources of inspiration and innovation, creativity contributes to building open,
inclusive and pluralistic societies. As a multi-faceted human resource that involves processes, environments,
persons and products, creativity can inspire positive transformative change for future generations. Creativity,
embracing cultural expression and the transformative power of innovation, can contribute to finding
imaginative and better development outcomes” (UNESCO 2013:1-2).
The notion of sustainability and creativity has interchangeable, interrelated and interdepended relationship. In
sustain is the difficulties, the living being adopt with the surroundings and sustain according to the exiting or
changing environment. The survival with the fittest notion can work here at the biological environment. When
social dimension is involved, the survival with the fittest still exits, however, it goes further on searching on
options of survival. We can see these characteristics among the animal species of various ecosystems. If we
look back to the human development and evolution, at least from the primitive society to modern society we
can see how adoptability was developed by human to survive and how creativity was applied in process of
survival and development.
The notion of sustainability through creativity has long history as history of human survival and development.
However, at least in terms of the concept and applicability we can track as back as the written history was
began. The development process was to some extend in the planet until the industrial revolution began. The
notion of development changed to competition with nature and the human creativity actually disturbed the
natural process to co-exist and development. The human creativity to sustain began to dominant nature.
Many countries have been working on how to continue economic growth without harming the environment,
as pathway the concept of sustainable development (SD) has been discussed and utilized since last two decades
or so. Green Economy (GE) and the Creative Economy (CE) initiative initiated by two United Nation (UN)
agencies, UN-Environment Program (UNEP) and UN- Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD),
try to capture the notion of the vulnerability of human welfare, caused by the degradation of global
environment, which can be understood as the result of the widespread application of an unsustainable model
of economic development; however still is A fuzzy assumption- in attaining the global sustainability .The
Green Economy (GE), which can be consider a part of creativity, do not alter with SD, however, provides
further steps practically and theoretically. This training program aims to provide theoretical and practical

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aspects of GE and equip participants to be able to prepare strategic plan for green growth and skilled them for
professionalism and effectiveness in the performance of their duties in their respected organizations.
Both initiatives capture concerns raised over the past 40 years to address climate change to frame the treaty
agreements. The establishment of the IPCC, UNFCC, Kyoto Protocol, and Clean Development Mechanism
are among notable outcomes. One can take GE and CE initiates as untested tools that assume too much about
greening as an engine for growth, sectoral opportunities, hurdles and enabling conditions, the value of
ecosystems and biodiversity, and the vicious cycle of environmental losses and persistent poverty. Both GE
and CE emphasize green industry and business, but they lack means to provide the know-how to perceive
global economic growth. GE and CE also fail to address strategic uncertainty such as: the likelihood of adverse
effects; the consequences of change; the speed of change; discontinuities; and especially uncertainty over the
effectiveness of policy instruments.
Both GE and CE initiatives are silent on how social and institutional capital can be enhanced and how
creativity can be fostered. I argue that to overcome these problems, there is a need for existing structures to
evolve and to create a new institutional framework which can coordinate and manage activities of all related
stakeholders. It requires an effective institutional structure, strong policy, and framework for policy
implementation and can work effectively, efficiently, equitably and transparently. To frame this, one need to
define a new, innovative and ambitious architecture which can foster social capital.
Many scholars have tried to examine the creativity and sustainability /sustainable development (Giddings
et.al., 2002; Callanan and Ferguson, 2015; Mitchell and Walinga, 2017; Basadur, Gelade and Basadur, 2014;
Cheng, 2018; Corral-Verdugo et. al., 2009; Bhandari, 2017, 2018). The table 4, adopted from Mitchell and
Walinga (2017: 1875), provides some glimpse of how creativity is applied in sustainability.
Table 5. Examples of factors facilitating creativity for sustainability
Factors facilitating creativity Applied to sustainability
Stimulating and rewarding curiosity and exploration. Creating a comfortable and non-threatening environment.
Building internal motivation. Designing an environment that supports and rewards sustainability
focused ideas and solutions. Leaders may motivate creative thinking
by getting employees to identify with a vision.
Building confidence and willingness to take risks: Fostering recognition and awareness of self-doubt. Using
eliminating defensiveness and self-doubt; building brainstorming techniques.
favorable self-perception.
Encouraging divergent thinking: fluency and Utilizing thinking aids that facilitate the application of divergent
flexibility in thinking. thinking and elicitation of new ideas.
Encouraging acquisition of domain specific Fostering more sustainability-specific knowledge. The more
knowledge. Relevant knowledge is a prerequisite for sustainability knowledge and expertise an individual posse, the more
creative functioning. he/she is likely to generate sustainable solutions and ideas.
Encouraging openness to ideas. Challenging prejudgments and using different domains of knowledge,
analogies, metaphors, and exercises in imaginative play.
Encouraging building on, or combining ideas from Sharing sustainability ideas can stimulate members of a group or
others. network to think of other even more novel or radical ideas.
Source: Mitchell and Walinga. 2017:1875.

Quantifying creativity is not easy, however, through economic parameters quantifiable or visual outcome can
be drawn. As Giddings et. al. (2002) note “the economy is often given priority in policies and the environment
is viewed as apart from humans. They are interconnected, with the economy dependent on society and the
environment while human existence and society are dependent on, and within the environment. The separation
of environment, society and economy often leads to a narrow techno-scientific approach, while issues to do
with society that are most likely to challenge the present socio-economic structure are often marginalized, in
particular the sustainability of communities and the maintenance of cultural diversity” (Giddings et.al.
2002:187). Here, the notion of green economy, creative economy, ecosufficiency and sustainable development
broadly aimed to forester the global economy without hampering the earth ecosystem and boost social justice.
According to the UNEP (2010), social justice may include: 1) not compromising future generations’ capability
to meet their needs; 2) the rights of poor countries and poor people to development and the obligations of rich
countries and rich people to changing their excessive consumption levels; 3) equal treatment of women in
access to resources and opportunities; and 4) ensuring decent labor conditions. Additionally, issues of good
governance and democracy are also seen as critical for ensuring social justice and equity (UNEP 2010:2).

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Another way of looking creativity can be as Callanan and Ferguson (2015) note “Creativity. We hack it. We
map it. We study it. We rate it. We take it places. We build industries around it. We invest in it. We recognize
we need it, even when it hurts. We know our future depends on it.... Creativity is the spark. When the spark
catches, it catalyzes an expression, an experiment, a "creation." If the spark turns into an invention, an
entrepreneur can build an enterprise around it” Callanan and Ferguson (2015). This can be seen in different
phases, ie. Generating, conceptualization, optimizing and implementation, table 3 (Basadur, Gelade, and
Basadur, 2014).
Table 6. Different phases of creativity
Quadrant IV Quadrant I
Implementing creating options in the form of actions that get Generating creating options in the form of new possibilities–
results and gaining acceptance for implementing a change or a new problems that might be solved and new opportunities that
new idea. might be capitalized upon.
Quadrant III Quadrant II
Optimizing creating options in the form of ways to get an idea Conceptualizing creating options in the form of alternative
to work in practice and uncovering all the factors that go into ways to understand and define a problem or opportunity and
a successful plan for implementation. good ideas that help solve it.
Source: Basadur, Gelade, and Basadur, (2014:82).

Sustainability and creativity have strong interconnections. In another word, to maintain


Sustainability, creativity, innovation, improvement and empowerment of all concern stakeholders is
necessary.
“Any group that attempts to manage a common resource (e.g., aquifers, judicial systems, pastures) for optimal
sustainable production must solve a set of problems in order to create institutions for collective action; there
is some evidence that following a small set of design principles in creating these institutions can overcome
these problems” (Elinor Ostrom, 1990).
According to UNESCO (2013), “Creativity is understood as the human capacity, through imagination or
invention, to pro use something new and original in order to solve problems. It is a unique and renewable
resource. Creativity enables individuals to expand their abilities and develop their full potential. Similarly,
sustainability can be understood as the “development that meets the needs of the present without
compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own need” (Our Common Future, 1987). How
meets the needs of the present with minimal or without out harming the nature? The millennium development
goals were the attempt to minimize the anthropogenic disturbances on nature and natural resources. However,
they were not quantifiable and evaluation mechanism was not strong enough. The Sustainable Development
Goals (which has 17 major goals and 100s of targets), has established rigorous way of program planning, and
implementation with clear evaluation process.
Creativity and sustainability are intertwingled. Moreover, sustainability can only be attained properly, when
concern stakeholders incorporate the innovation, cooperation beyond the political boundaries, with the
involvement of governments, enterprises, research institutions, public bodies, civil society associations,
financial institutions and other related bodies (Fusco 2010). To achieve the goals of sustainability, proper
mechanism of evaluation process, as well as institutional arrangements needs to be implemented.
4. What is the institutional architecture to attain the SDGs?
“Institutions are not static; and institutionalization is not an inevitable process; nor is it unidirectional,
monotonic or irreversible” (Weaver and Rockman, 1993).
“Institutionalism, as that term is used here, connotes a general approach to the study of political institutions,
a set of theoretical ideas and hypotheses concerning the relations between institutional characteristics and
political agency, performance and change. Institutionalism emphasizes the endogenous nature and social
construction of political institutions. Institutions are not simply equilibrium contracts among self-seeking,
calculating individual actors or arenas for contending social forces. They are collections of structures, rules
and standard operating procedures that have a partly autonomous role in political life” (Marsh and Olsen,
2005:3).

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“Institutions are the rules of the game in a society or, more formally, are the humanly devised constraints that
shape human interaction. Three important features of institutions are apparent in this definition: (1) that they
are “humanly devised,” which contrasts with other potential fundamental causes, like geographic factors,
which are outside human control; (2) that they are “the rules of the game” setting “constraints” on human
behavior; (3) that their major effect will be through incentives” (North, 1981, 1990:3 as in Acemoglu and
Robinson 2008:2). This notion of operation with incorporation of rules, norms, and values are the fundamental
principles for institutionalization process.
Sustainability concept is already institutionalized, with established discourses and is a major pillar for
socioeconomic, and environment policy, planning and implementation. Sustainability is core prerequisite for
the United Nations member countries. As noted in the United Nations (2015) in the Preamble of
“Transforming our world: the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development”,
“This Agenda is a plan of action for people, planet and prosperity. It also seeks to strengthen universal peace in
larger freedom. We recognize that eradicating poverty in all its forms and dimensions, including extreme
poverty, is the greatest global challenge and an indispensable requirement for sustainable development. All
countries and all stakeholders, acting in collaborative partnership, will implement this plan. We are resolved to
free people from the tyranny of poverty and want and to heal and secure our planet. We are determined to take
the bold and transformative steps which are urgently needed to shift the world onto a sustainable and resilient
path. As we embark on this collective journey, we pledge that no one will be left behind. The 17 Sustainable
Development Goals (SDGs) and 169 targets which we are announcing today demonstrate the scale and ambition
of this new universal Agenda. They seek to build on the Millennium Development Goals and complete what
these did not achieve. They seek to realize the human rights of all and to achieve gender equality and the
empowerment of all women and girls. They are integrated and indivisible and balance the three dimensions of
sustainable development: the economic, social and environmental” (United Nations 2015:3).
It is noteworthy to note that, the preamble adequately explains the UN commitment for sustainability and to
achieve the 2030 agendas of SDGs on institutionalized way. Further, on partnerships documents states
“Partnership”- “We are determined to mobilize the means required to implement this Agenda through a
revitalized Global Partnership for Sustainable Development, based on a spirit of strengthened global
solidarity, focused in particular on the needs of the poorest and most vulnerable and with the participation of
all countries, all stakeholders and all people. The interlinkages and integrated nature of the Sustainable
Development Goals are of crucial importance in ensuring that the purpose of the new Agenda is realized. If
we realize our ambitions across the full extent of the Agenda, the lives of all will be profoundly improved and
our world will be transformed for the better” (UN, 2015:3). The declaration also openly offers the partnership
with civil society organization, international organization, higher education institution and other stakeholders.
The declaration document states that, each country must prepare own plan to achieve 17 SDGs and 169 targets
with their own institutional set up. There are 91 points in the declaration, SDGs are under pint 59. Before documents
declares the goals and target, it states “59. We recognize that there are different approaches, visions, models and
tools available to each country, in accordance with its national circumstances and priorities, to achieve sustainable
development; and we reaffirm that planet Earth and its ecosystems are our common home and that ‘Mother Earth’
is a common expression in a number of countries and regions” UN 2015:14).
These all efforts can be taken as the preparation of the institutional architecture of sustainability. These bold
steps to attain the sustainability, highlights the scope and limitations of our planet’s natural resources and
ecological systems. Though it presented a great scope of future development with the wise use of available
resources, it also presented a scenario how humankind’s current and future uses of resources would diminish
the carrying capacities of our ecosystems. The UN Declaration 2015 point 53 accepts this notion “53. The
future of humanity and of our planet lies in our hands. It lies also in the hands of today’s younger generation
who will pass the torch to future generations. We have mapped the road to sustainable development; it will be
for all of us to ensure that the journey is successful and its gains irreversible”. The member governments have
accepted this urgency of declaration and have created legal instruments, and institutions within their
governments since the 1972 Stockholm Conference. Regarding the importance of institution on sustainability
the Vice-Chairs of WSSD Anaedu and Engfeldt wrote:
Ensuring an effective institutional framework for sustainable development at all levels is key to the realization of
the goals of sustainable development. To achieve these goals and to meet the emerging challenges, the sustainable

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development governance architecture needs to be strengthened at the international, regional, and national levels as
these are inextricably linked and mutually interdependent. There is a clear need to enhance the responsiveness of
the current institutional arrangements for the full implementation of Agenda 21, bearing in mind all relevant
principles, including, the principle of common but differentiated responsibilities of States (2002:2).
‘The above statement embraces the definition what Brundtland outlined in 1987 “development that meets the needs
of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs” (p. 41). In line with
the SD, the WSSD (2002) suggested to focus on six major areas in order to attain global sustainability. These
include: Poverty eradication; Sustainable management and conservation of natural resources; Making globalization
fit with the sustainable goals; Improving governance at all levels; and Providing funding for research to find
alternative means through scientific and technological innovation to sustain the development (WSSD 2002;
Schomberg 2002). Anaedu and Engfeldt (2002) proposed for the strong institutional development at the
international, national, and regional levels in order to improve functioning in these areas. Prior to the WSSD
meeting, the UN urged that it’s Rio declaration signatory countries must submit a profile of their institutional
strengths and weakness and should show their commitments to SD (Bhandari 2017).
An institutional perspective on organizations suggests that the processes and structure of an organization are a
product of pressures exerted by the state, professions, and other members of an organization’s field. Under this
perspective organizational structures are not only a product of their objective functionality and market dependency
as suggested by contingency, agency, and transaction cost theories, but rather are a combination of social meaning,
symbolism and “action-generating properties” (Tolbert & Zucker, 1999: 171).
Theoretically, institutions be social structures that have attained a high degree of resilience. Institutions are
composed of cultural-cognitive, normative, and regulative elements that, together with associated activities and
resources, provide stability and meaning to social life. Institutions are transmitted by various types of carriers,
including symbolic systems, relational systems, routines, and artifacts (Scott 2004:48). Institutions operate at
different levels of jurisdiction, from the world system to localized interpersonal relationships. Institutions connote
stability but are subject to change processes, both incremental and discontinuous. Likewise, in relating to the
environmental frame institutions provide the platform for the social practices, assign roles to the participants in
these practices, and govern the interactions among the occupants of the various roles (Young, Schroeder and King
2002: xiv; Bhandari, 2018).
Institution covers large spectrum in the social context which include social networks, gender roles, legal system,
politico-administrative system, and the state more generally—all of which interact with each other. Institutions are
either state or non-state. State institutions cover many aspects, such as the public provision of basic education and
health services, public order and safety, and infrastructure. The nature of governance will determine the availability
and quality of these public services and, hence, the extent to which the poor have access to them. Non-state
institutions are social institutions, values, and norms. A key social institution is social capital, which consists of
informal norms or established relationships that enable people to pursue objectives and act in concert for common
benefit. Social capital is particularly important for the poor. Ethnicity and gender roles, which still remain
pronounced in the global context and lead to discrimination against minorities and females, are other institutions
that underlie poverty and inequality (ADB, 2002:2). As indicated in the ADB report, institutional characteristics
are largely explained in terms of economic institutions fueled by political power and political institutions. Economic
institutions matter for economic growth because they shape the incentives of key economic actors in society. In
particular, they influence investments in physical and human capital and technology and the organization of
production. Economic institutions not only determine the aggregate economic growth potential of the economy,
but also the distribution of resources in the society. Likewise, political power in society is also endogenous; which
includes the political institutions as the form of government, system of governance like democracy versus
dictatorship or autocracy, and the extent of constraints on politicians and political elites (ADB 2002; as in
Acemoglu and Robinson, 2008:6-7).
Table 7. Definitions
Institution a cluster of rights, rules, and decision-making procedures that gives rise to a social practice, assigns roles to participants
in the practice, and guides interactions among occupants of these roles
Multilevel governance that operates at two or more levels of social organization (e.g., local, regional, national levels)
New institutionalism a school of thought that explores the role of social institutions as sources of governance
Organization a group of people joined together to achieve a specific purpose. Typically, an organization has personnel, offices,
equipment, a budget, and, often, legal personality (Young, Schroeder and King 2002, 2008)

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In relating to the environmental management institutions can be understood as the body of the environmental
regimes’ creator. Regimes constitute important components of governance systems at levels of social
organization ranging from the local to the global. Institutions are distinct from organizations, which are
material entities typically possessing personnel, offices, budgets, a legal personality, and so forth.
Organizations play important roles in the administration and management of regimes dealing with a wide
range of topics (e.g., the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the International Maritime Organization, and
IUCN etc.) (Young, Schroeder and King 2002: xxi). In such case international institutions such as
international conservation organizations like IUCN; multilateral agencies, such as the ADB and the World
Bank, bilateral agencies like USAID, DFID have been playing the instrumental role for the institutionalization
of environment conservation through explicit arrangements, such as treaties and conventions, that regulate
behavior (Choo 2005:41) as well as by creating the policy for the governments but also to international
organizations (IOs). IOs have been largely focusing for the involvement of concern stakeholders, beneficiaries
and the community in the selection, design, implementation, and monitoring of environment and development
projects. Similarly, IOs are also creating the partnerships with civil society groups, such as NGOs and CBOs,
and helping them for further strengthened. IOs also has been playing important role for fostering the
decentralized local government agencies instead of working solely with central government agencies
including the local stakeholders of related fields (Acemoglu and Robinson, 2008: 56-57).
UN is the key player of institutionalize the sustainability. UN has been operating and organizing events and
forums throughout the history-(Rio Earth Summit in 1992, Johannesburg Summit on Sustainable
Development in 2002) and so on (Charnovitz, 1996, 1997; Gemmill and Bamidele-Izu, 2002:8) which
ultimately boosting to institutionalize the sustainability discourses.
Theoretically, institutionalization of sustainability itself in trajectory. Institutionalization of sustainability is
still young and new relevant perspectives, which can fully capture the underline essence still to be developed.
There is a need of refining principles and practices to achieve the goals of sustainability. The boundaries of
sustainability are beyond the limit. Technically, the world is getting smaller, however, the demands are
widening and the gap of haves and not haves is increasing at the unprecedented rate. Therefore, the path
ahead is very challenging. However, theoretically, institutionalization is an active process and many scholars
have shown the intuitional changes and process of changes (Lawrence, and Lorsch, 1967; Galbraith, 1967;
Williamson, 1975; Hannanand, and Freeman 1977; Zucker, 1977; Meyer, and Rowan 1977; North 1981;
Keohane 1988; March and Olsen 1989, 2005; Powell, 1990; Oliver 1991; Opschoor 1991; Thelen and Steinmo
1992; Hannan, and Carroll, 1992; Aldrich and Fiol 1994; Strang, and Meyer 1994; Mearsheimer, 1995;
Charnovitz 1996, 1997; Hall, and Taylo 1996; Theret, 2000; Valentin and Spangenberg 2000; Nielsen 2001;
Young, et.el. 2002; Scott, 2004; Choo, 2005; Pfahl, 2005; Colyvas, and Powell 2006; IUCN 2006; Hák,
Moldan, and Dahl, 2007; Duffield 2007; Acemoglu and Robinson 2008; Jepperson, and Platje 2008; Singh,
et.el. 2009). Isomorphism process occurs within the institution. “Isomorphism is the constraining process that
forces one unit in a population to resemble other units that face the same set of environmental conditions”
…… “We identify three mechanisms through which institutional isomorphic change occurs, each with its own
antecedents: 1) coercive isomorphism that stems from political influence and the problem of legitimacy; 2)
mimetic isomorphism resulting from standard responses to uncertainty; and 3) normative isomorphism,
associated with professionalization. This typology is an analytic one: the types are not always empirically
distinct. For example, external actors may induce an organization to conform to its peers by requiring it to
perform a particular task and specifying the profession responsible for its performance. Or mimetic change
may reflect environmentally constructed uncertainties.' Yet, while the three types intermingle in empirical
setting, they tend to derive from different conditions and may lead to different” (DiMaggio and Powell,
1983:150).
In relation to institutional sustainability the concern is getting deeper, more innovative approaches are
emerging. The 2015 declaration “Transforming our world: the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development”
paves a positive pathway for the future; however, the outcome depends on how actual stakeholders act, plan
and progress for the institutionalization of sustainability architecture. Higher educational institutions are key
stakeholders for transferring or communicate the sustainability agendas through the curriculum. As such
“sustainability does not simply require an ‘add-on’ to existing structures and curricula but implies a change
of fundamental epistemology in our culture and hence also in our educational thinking and practice” (Sterling
2004:50). However, the it is necessary to examine on “how far institutions and higher education as a whole

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are able to respond sufficiently to the wider context of the crisis of unsustainability and the opportunities of
sustainability. The common perception is often that little more than a change in teaching or curriculum is
necessary – that is, an adaptive adjustment in learning provision. A full response, however, commensurate
with the size of the challenge, implies a change of educational paradigm – because sustainability indicates a
change of cultural paradigm which is both emergent and imperative’ (Sterling 2004:50). The educational
institution has to deal with the super complex scholarship of sustainability; whereas, sustainability touches all
aspects of human life (Martins et. al., 2006) as well as Earth’s carrying capacity.
Conclusion
The current world is interconnected economically, culturally, socially and politically due to technological
development and globalization process. The diffusion of knowledge is also spreading at accelerating rate to
the entire world. The demand of international laws was never as high as it is because of transnational problems
HIV/AIDS, terrorism, as well as the globalizing, social, economic and bio-physical environmental problems.
Institutions create ‘set of rules, typically formalized in international agreements and embodied in
organizations that stipulate the ways in which states should cooperate and compete with each other. They
prescribe acceptable forms of state behavior and proscribe unacceptable kinds of behavior’ (Mearscheimer
1995), therefore multidisciplinary approaches are needed to build strong institution (international institutions),
which can help to minimize the global problems as listed on the United Nations 2015 declaration
“Transforming our world: the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development”. “14. We are meeting at a time of
immense challenges to sustainable development. Billions of our citizens continue to live in poverty and are
denied a life of dignity. There are rising inequalities within and among countries. There are enormous
disparities of opportunity, wealth and power. Gender inequality remains a key challenge. Unemployment,
particularly youth unemployment, is a major concern. Global health threats, more frequent and intense
natural disasters, spiraling conflict, violent extremism, terrorism and related humanitarian crises and forced
displacement of people threaten to reverse much of the development progress made in recent decades. Natural
resource depletion and adverse impacts of environmental degradation, including desertification, drought,
land degradation, freshwater scarcity and loss of biodiversity, add to and exacerbate the list of challenges
which humanity faces. Climate change is one of the greatest challenges of our time and its adverse impacts
undermine the ability of all countries to achieve sustainable development. Increases in global temperature,
sea level rise, ocean acidification and other climate change impacts are seriously affecting coastal areas and
low-lying coastal countries, including many least developed countries and small island developing States. The
survival of many societies, and of the biological support systems of the planet, is at risk” (UN 2015:15). The
declaration nicely articulate, how the people of the planet and planet is in trouble in present time and it tries
to address these issues through SDGs. However, the challenges are deeper, and the world has not peaceful
politically, socially, economically and the biophysical environment is deteriorating each and every day. There
is still need of illuminating educational theory and practice which will enable human to think the world is our
house and all living beings are our relatives and neighbors “Bashudhaiva Kutumbakkam” (Bhandari 2019).
There is tradeoff between developing and developed world and there is no coherent frameworks or cooperation
among the nations and even the various approaches in use to minimize the gap between North and South. So
far there is no clear indication of how the aims of sustainability “to maintain the wellbeing of human and
nature” will achieve.
And finally, I would like to conclude my responses with the quote of Margaret Mead and Marshall (1961).
“Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed people can change the world. Indeed, it is the only
thing that ever has.” (Mead). Yes, the change maker / charismatic leader, the thinker can be even a person
who can influence for betterment of her / his community through small program and can be important step to
empower society to archive desired goals. We have many such examples - Grameen Bank, Bangladesh,
Greening program of Kenya, road belt or self-sufficiency - community forest program of Nepal. Here I would
like to directly quote one of interesting conceptual program proposed by a prominent scholar of environmental
domain from University of Louisiana Lafayette, Dr. Durga Poudel.
A decade ago, Professor Durga D. Poudel published a grassroots-based groundbreaking framework of Asta-
Ja meaning eight Ja in Nepali letter, Jal (water), Jamin (land), Jungle (forest), Jadibuti (medicinal and
aromatic plants), Janshakti (manpower), Janawar (animal), Jarajuri (crop plants) and Jalabayu (climate) as
fundamental resources for economic development and socio-economic transformation in Nepal (Poudel,
2008). This publication was followed by a series of other publications on Asta-Ja Framework, which include,
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policy framework, strategic framework, and capacity building framework. Other subsequent publications on
this framework include management of Asta-Ja system and the focus of Asta-Ja on national planning and
development. Asta-Ja Framework suggests “Jalabayu” as the driving force for all other elements (Jal, Jamin,
Jungle, Jadibuti, Janashakti, Janawar, and Jarajuri) and require full consideration of all eight elements while
utilizing Asta-Ja resources for economic development. For example, for sustainable agricultural development
(i.e. Jarajuri), all other seven Jas must be well utilized, conserved and developed. In other words, no
sustainable agricultural production is possible without conservation of land, forest, water, appropriate
Janashakti, and adequate consideration of Jalabayu. The eight principles of Asta-Ja Framework: community
awareness, capacity-building, policy decision making, comprehensive assessment, interrelationships and
linkages, sustainable technology and practices; institutions, trade and governance, and sustainable socio-
economic transformation and community development provide practical guidelines for design and successful
implementation of policies and programs relating to Asta-Ja resources at the grassroots level.
Source: Paudel (2008) (copied and pasted with permission- 7-17-2019).

He states that if we keep the climate in central and manage properly, sustainably management of other seven
aspects i.e. Water, land, forest, medicinal and aromatic plants, manpower, animal, crop plants would be easy.
Here noticeable aspect is public participation in resources management. There are numerous examples of
locally sustainably managed landscapes with the indigenous knowledge and techniques. However, such
examples do not get highlights, because of inequal participation in decision making systems. The United
Nations (2015) in the “Transforming our world: the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development” declaration-
3 states “We resolve, between now and 2030, to end poverty and hunger everywhere; to combat inequalities
within and among countries; to build peaceful, just and inclusive societies; to protect human rights and
promote gender equality and the empowerment of women and girls; and to ensure the lasting protection of the
planet and its natural resources”. (Declaration 3 page 3). However, in so far, instead of decrease inequality
has been increased (Bertelsmann Stiftung and Sustainable Development Solutions Network 2018). UN
declaration has been effective, however, there is no symbols of poverty reduction, opportunities are only
accessible rich or who is in the power. Gender gap is not decreased, the rate of youth unemployment is on
rise. Similarly, the impact of environmental degradation continues and frequent and intense natural disasters
are common globally in recent decades. There are no symbols minimizing conflicts (local, national and
international), and violence, extremism, terrorism, have been uncontrolled. Environmental degradation, which
is one of the major threats of contemporary world, however, still there is no institutional architecture to address
this challenge. Desertification, drought, land degradation, freshwater scarcity and loss of biodiversity, are still
common circumstances. Global temperature is increasing, sea level is rising, and ocean acidification
continues. Within four years of declaration implementation, there is no remarkable symptoms of
improvements in listed problems. Even the G 20 Nations scenario of achieving SDGs is insignificant
(Bertelsmann Stiftung and Sustainable Development Solutions Network 2018). As such UN Declaration
“Transforming our world: the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development 2015” absolutely adds new hope
discourse of sustainability; however, in so far, practicality seems questionable.
As principle, sustainability discourses capture the notion of social, economic and environmental boundaries,
creativeness and innovation, and institutional architectures serve as tool to attain sustainability; however, the
global challenges are mounted in every sphere of the globe. To achieve real sustainability strong commitment
and instinctive motivation is needed. The program like Astha-J needs to get promoted and implemented. In so
far, the invisible walls are everywhere and “my profit first” is the dominant approach of current development
paradigms. To overcome the global challenges the concept of “BashudaivaKutumbakkam”- The entire world
is our home and all living beings are our relatives” and Live and let other live- the harmony within,
community, nation and global” is needed.
As I noted, earlier, my family, communities, and various societies (wherever I have been), including the nature
and culture, traditions combinedly nurtured me, without any expectations. My intention, of life is to give or
contribute to the society in fullest whatever I have. I would be more than happy, if readers find this information
useful. I am open to engage in any kind of collaborative research, teaching, or any other tasks which can
contribute to overcome or minimize the devastating impact of climate change and contribute to achieve the
SDGs at any level.

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Acknowledgements
I would like to thank to Mr. Ram Chandra Gautam (my guru in every sphere of life), Prof. Douglas Capogrossi
(my mentor, President of Akamai University, Hawaii), Prof. Bishnu Paudel (Guru of all of us), Mr. Kedar
Neupane (UNHCR-Geneva), Dr. Ambika Adhikari (mentor for environment conservation), Prof. Gopi Uprety
(Tribhuvan University, Nepal), Professor Durga D. Paudel (University of Louisiana Lafayete), Prof. Tulsi
Dharel, (Centennial College, Toronto, Canada), Profs. Steven Brechin, Cecelia Green, Perter Castro, Hans
Buechler, Marj DeVault (my mentor of research- Syracuse University), Prof. Keshav Bhattarai (Arizona State
University), Dr. Puru Shrestha, Mr. Medini Adhikari (Equality Foundation), Mr. Guna Raj Luitel (INJA-
Global), Dr. Top Khatri, Dr. Sanjaya Mishra, Dr. Samuel H. Sage, Prof. Shvindina Hanna, Mr. Rajan Adhikari,
Mr. Govinda Luitel, Mr. Pradeep Banskota, Gyanendra Bahadur Thapa, Mr. Durga Paudel (DNWC), Dr. Bijay
Kattel, Dr. Jan Carey, Mr. William Turpie, Peter T. Se, Jahid Rahman, Mohamad Masum, and many others
for their valuable suggestions, supports and encouragements throughout.
I would also like to remember my mentors (who are no more physically- including) Mr. Narayan Paudel
(DNWC), Prof. Bhakta Lal Upadhaya, Prof. Ganesh Bhandari, Prof. Bill Katz, Mr. Edward Tedeschi, Mr.
Krishna Bhusan Bal, Prof. Damodar Bharadwaj, Prof. Dilliram Timsina, Prof. Bal Krishna Pokhrel, Prof.
Bhanu Bhakta Pokhrel, Prof. Narendra Chapagai, Prof. Herman Housing, and Laxmi Devi Bhandari,
(grandma), Abhkesher Gautam and Jalapa Devi Gautam (m-Grandparent), Loknath Bhandari (my father),
Dwarika Nath Devkota (Father in law), Maya Nath Bhandari, Dayananda Thakur, Dhaulai Mandal…….. for
their unconditional support to me on my journey towards environment management, sustainability, social and
environmental justice.
I would like to thank to my wife and lifelong motivator, mentor Prajita Bhandari for her insightful comments,
and inputs. I would also like thank to our son Prameya, daughter Manaslu, daughter in law Kelsey and
granddaughter Neena and our family friend Abhimanyu for helping me to find relevant resources in the field
of sustainability, inequality, social division, stratifications and gender issues. I would also like to thank to my
mother Hema Devi, brothers Krishna, Hari, sisters Kali, Bhakti, Radha, Bindu, Sita and their families for
encouraging me by providing peaceful environment. Thank you to all who directly or indirectly helping me
on this complex trajectory of life.
About Prof. Medani P. Bhandari
Prof. Medani P. Bhandari completed his M.A. in Anthropology (Tribhuvan University, Nepal), M.Sc.
Environmental System Monitoring and Analysis (ITC-The University of Twente, the Netherlands), M.A.
Sustainable International Development (Brandeis University, Massachusetts, USA), M.A. and Ph.D. in
Sociology (Syracuse University, NY, USA). He is dedicated to conservation of nature and natural resources
and social empowerment through research and action project. His purpose of life is to give or contribute to
the society fullest through whatever he has, earned, learned or experienced. He has worked with various
organizations as consultant- United Nations Environment Program (UNEP)/Adelaide University, the United
Nations Development Program (UNDP), the IUCN, the World Wildlife Fund (WWF), the World Resource
Institute (WRI), Winrock International, the Japan Environment Education Forum, and the Pajaro Jai
Foundation (PJF), along with others. During 2015-17, he served as a Professor of Natural Resources and
Environment at the Arabian Gulf University, Bahrain. Prof. Bhandari has spent most of his career focusing
on the Sociological Theories; Environmental Sustainability; Social Inclusion, Climate Change Mitigation and
Adaptation; Environmental Health Hazard; Environmental Management; Social Innovation; Developing
along the way expertise in Global and International Environmental Politics, Environmental Institutions and
Natural Resources Governance; Climate Change Policy and Implementation, Environmental Justice,
Sustainable Development; Theory of Natural Resources Governance; Impact Evaluation of Rural Livelihood;
International Organizations; Public/ Social Policy; The Non-Profit Sector; Low Carbon Mechanism; Good
Governance; Climate Adaptation; REDD Plus; Carbon Financing; Green Economy and Renewable Energy;
Nature, Culture and Power. Prof. Bhandari’s major teaching and research specialties include: Sociological
Theories and Practices; Environmental Health; Social and Environmental research methods; Social and
Environmental Innovation; Social and Environmental policies; Climate Change Mitigation and Adaptation;
International Environmental Governance; Green Economy; Sustainability and assessment of the Economic,
Social and Environmental impacts on society and nature. In brief, Prof. Bhandari has sound theoretical and
practical knowledge in social science and environment science. His field experience spans across Asia, Africa,

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the North America, Western Europe, Australia, Japan and the Middle East. Professor Bhandari has published
4 books on environmental domain, 3 volumes of poems with Prajita Bhandari, hundreds of poems and essays
on creative writing, and more than 60 scholarly papers in international scientific journals. Currently, he is
serving as a Professor of Inter-Disciplinary Department - Natural Resource & Environment / Sustainability
Studies, at the Akamai University, USA and Professor of the Department of Finance and Entrepreneurship,
Sumy State University (SSU) Ukraine; and International Program Coordinator, Atlantic State Legal
Foundation, NY, USA (remotely).
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