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Special Issue Paper

Problem structuring methods: theorizing the benefits of deconstructing sustainable development projects

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Pages 576-587 | Received 01 Dec 2004, Accepted 01 Aug 2006, Published online: 21 Dec 2017
 

Abstract

Problem structuring methods or PSMs are widely applied across a range of variable but generally small-scale organizational contexts. However, it has been argued that they are seen and experienced less often in areas of wide ranging and highly complex human activity—specifically those relating to sustainability, environment, democracy and conflict (or SEDC). In an attempt to plan, track and influence human activity in SEDC contexts, the authors in this paper make the theoretical case for a PSM, derived from various existing approaches. They show how it could make a contribution in a specific practical context—within sustainable coastal development projects around the Mediterranean which have utilized systemic and prospective sustainability analysis or, as it is now known, Imagine. The latter is itself a PSM but one which is ‘bounded’ within the limits of the project to help deliver the required ‘deliverables’ set out in the project blueprint. The authors argue that sustainable development projects would benefit from a deconstruction of process by those engaged in the project and suggest one approach that could be taken—a breakout from a project-bounded PSM to an analysis that embraces the project itself. The paper begins with an introduction to the sustainable development context and literature and then goes on to illustrate the issues by grounding the debate within a set of projects facilitated by Blue Plan for Mediterranean coastal zones. The paper goes on to show how the analytical framework could be applied and what insights might be generated.

Acknowledgements

We would like to express our gratitude to Blue Plan for the opportunity to cooperate and develop the ideas expressed in this paper. We also like to express particular thanks to Tony Ellul, Heba Hage and Farid Yaker, for contributing to this paper and to Elisabeth Coudert of Blue Plan, for her comments and insights.

Notes

1 These are tools which can be applied in either a quantitative or qualitative manner to scope, plan, analyse, monitor and evaluate projects of all kinds.

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