Achievements, Challenges, and Dialogues to examine and encourage research and efforts addressing well-being, inequality and alternative concepts and measures of prosperity, such as the Millennium Consumption Goals. This workshop will assess progress on knowledge creation and practice in the field of sustainable consumption and production (SCP), especially in the context of the current discussions on the “Green Economy”.
The workshop will include a dialogue between knowledge producers/researchers and knowledge users - practitioners, advocates, educators, and policy makers. In addition, it will bring regional perspectives from North America, Europe, Africa, Asia Pacific and Latin America, through its partnering programmes and organizations.
The workshop will aim to achieve the following seven objectives:
• To identify some of the most critical research questions to be investigated in the next 5-10 years, from the perspective of researchers as well as practitioners, educators, and policy makers.
• To review and assess the current state of knowledge on SCP around the globe, particularly in different regions.
• To create a bridge between researchers and practitioners from different regions around the world in a creative process of exchange of information, knowledge, and perspectives on sustainable production and consumption.
• To review the state-of-the-art concerning how change is achieved and what mechanisms are effective to achieve a switch to sustainable consumption and production patterns.
Main theme: The theme of the workshop is “Global and Regional research on SCP: achievements, challenges, and dialogues”, and addresses the following issues:
How can rethinking global and national goals for sustainable development? What are the implications for research?
This workshop will bring this literature and experience together through review papers from various perspectives, make this available to practitioners and the wider public, including RIO+20 participants, and promote support for new research based on practitioners’ research needs.
Format of the workshop:
The two and a half-day workshop will be divided between a focus on the production of SCP research and its communication and application in practice. The program thus will have elements of (1) academic research engaged in studying various questions and issues regarding production and consumption, and (2) research use and practices engaged in the application of research concepts and findings in policy making and advocacy, education, advocacy and business.
Invited participants will submit scientific and practitioner’s papers before the workshop. Scientific papers are invited which review (part of) the research field, and take stock of what has been achieved in terms of research from a specific interdisciplinary or regional perspective.
Practitioners’ papers (policy makers, educators, civil society and business representatives) will present their views, perspectives, and questions regarding the role of research as well as the obstacles in translating knowledge to action.
Keynote speakers will include Tim Jackson, Chandran Nair, Peter Victor, Inge Røpke, and Juliet Schor. Discussions will also consider regional, (trans)disciplinary, and policy perspectives.Invited participants: The workshop is by invitation only. The aim is 40-60 participants, half researchers and half practitioners; equally from various global regions. Participants will be drawn from participating networks in the Global Research Forum and beyond. Partners are encouraged to forward names of prominent scholars, practitioners, policy makers, educators, and representatives from minorities and disenfranchised groups from around the world, with a strong interest in SCP issues.
13.–15.06.2012
Global Research Forum on SCP