New Conceptual Model of Social Sustainability: Review from Past Concepts and Ideas

Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2023 Mar 31;20(7):5350. doi: 10.3390/ijerph20075350.

Abstract

The social dimension of sustainability has remained relatively underdefined, despite the efforts to specify and integrate this dimension into the general sustainability conversation of scholars and practitioners. This study aims to advance the conversation of social sustainability by examining past the multi-disciplinary literature and policy documents, as well as proposing a comprehensive conceptual model of social sustainability. We present a model with five dimensions: safety and security, equity, adaptability, social inclusion and cohesion, and quality of life. Through these dimensions, we propose social sustainability as a process that strives for effective management and allocation of social capital as a constitutive resource, and the confrontation of such controllable and uncontrollable risks as natural disasters and climate change. Our model was constructed with the purpose of providing scholars, policymakers, and practitioners with a comprehensive guideline to create social sustainability policy with human beings as the priority and cultural awareness as a grounding approach to initiating disaster-related and climate-change resilience.

Keywords: adaptation; resilience to climate change; risk; social capital; social sustainability.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Disasters*
  • Humans
  • Natural Disasters*
  • Quality of Life

Grants and funding

This research was funded in part by a grant from the Department of Sociology and from the Global Women’s Studies Program at Brigham Young University.