Building Consensus for Sustainable Development: Evaluation Theory Insights
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.14207/ejsd.2022.v11n3p104Keywords:
Sustainable development, Consensus, Multidimensional evaluation, Willingness to payAbstract
The sustainable development goals orient the development path for each country by defining goals, sub-goals, and indicators for programming and control. The goals achievement is conditioned to the consensus of the populations involved; indeed, politicians cannot or do not want implement projects without gathering the necessary consensus. To achieve the demanded transition, tools evaluating a set of projects achieving targets, well-being, and consensus simultaneously are required. This manuscript enquires the generation of such tools by extensively debating willingness to pay and related techniques by seeking a theory bridging the actual value and actual consensus of projects. The outcome is a theoretical base useful to orient evaluation research toward the design of tools helpful to achieve sustainable development goals.
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.