Abstract
The term sustainability has enjoyed great success, but at the cost of overextending its meaning to the point of trivialization. There is such an overabundance of definitions, concepts, models and political strategies that it is not clear anymore whether the terms ‘sustainability’ and ‘sustainable development’ still bear any meaning. The theory outlined in this chapter counters these tendencies by identifying more precisely the normative field that constitutes the very core of the sustainability concept, while avoiding a too narrow understanding. It points out the ethical presuppositions as well as the requirements for a theoretical framework of a consistent and discursively justified concept of sustainability. This rectifies the vagueness of the term as currently used and offers new possibilities for sustainability communication.
Keywords
- Strong sustainability
- Weak sustainability
- Ethics
- Philosophy
- Natural capital
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- 1.
In the international discourse on sustainability there are only a few approaches that attempt a philosophical and normative analysis from the point of view of inter- and intragenerational justice (see among others, Dobson 2003; Norton 2005). A thorough presentation of these approaches, involving a comparison with the theory of strong sustainability, would go beyond the scope of this chapter.
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Ott, K., Muraca, B., Baatz, C. (2011). Strong Sustainability as a Frame for Sustainability Communication. In: Godemann, J., Michelsen, G. (eds) Sustainability Communication. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-1697-1_2
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