Browsing by Subject "Sustainable economic development"
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Item The economic development potential of the green economy(2011-08) Craig, Stephen L.; Oden, Michael; Mueller, ElizabethThis paper aims to examine the prospects for success for sustainable economic development planning on the local level. The first section provides background on this question, examines how best to define the Green Economy, and discusses the four most important factors influencing its future growth. This includes the current economic landscape and the hopes that have been pinned on sustainable development. The paper then examines the classification issues that have helped shape the nature of the discussion of this subject, and explores the most prominent methods and partnerships currently being designed and utilized in an attempt to stimulate local sustainable development and job growth. Also discussed is the effect that the current political climate is having on government investment in renewable energy and conservation at the federal and state level. The paper then designates the cities of Oakland, Toledo, and Austin as case studies as a way to illustrate how these efforts are playing out in the current landscape. Each city has been chosen because it is a leader in an influential sustainable economic development strategy that is being pursued by other cities around the country. Given the four factors influencing growth in the Green Economy, the paper evaluates the strengths and weaknesses demonstrated by each approach. Finally, the paper identifies the most important lessons that can be applied to the biggest challenges of local sustainable economic development strategies.Item Water, knowledge, and the post-industrial landscape(2016-05) Selkirk, Kaethe Marie; Oden, Michael; Moore, StevenIn this thesis I study the ways in which Milwaukee, Wisconsin has positioned itself for sustainable water-based economic development. More specifically, I examine the role of local knowledge in decision-making processes between WWII and 2014, and the degree to which past experience has allowed Milwaukee to engage a development strategy that is economically, environmentally, and socially sustainable. I argue that Milwaukee has positioned itself for sustainable water-based economic development by learning from past experience. Success and failure has informed decision-making across time, culminating in the city’s ability to generate a sustainable economic strategy using local knowledge and water resources. Historical and empirical methods were used to develop this hypothesis. Strategic research methods, including the content analysis of texts and interviews, allowed me to identify water-specific events and practices that have influenced the city’s social systems and built environment within three distinct eras (1947 – 1967); (1967 – 2000); (2000 – 2014). Water-specific events, practices, and knowledge are framed as logics. Logics associated with each era describe how water is conceptualized at a specific point in time, while revealing the values and reasoning behind water-related decision-making at the municipal level. Strategic analysis shows that Milwaukee’s conceptualization of water is dynamic and malleable. Changes occur in tandem with, or in response to new conditions. My research results in an understanding of how Milwaukee has positioned itself for sustainable water-based economic development and how successful those efforts have been. This understanding highlights two key findings: (1) Milwaukee’s water practices as related to economic growth, and how those have changed across space and time; and (2) Milwaukee’s interpretation of water resource abundance today. A primary conclusion is that the ways in which Milwaukee has positioned itself stem directly from incorporating local knowledge into decision-making. However, the city has not yet learned how social equity is a necessary dimension of sustainable development.