Description
Measuring Intangible Values
Rethinking How to Evaluate Socially Beneficial Actions
Routledge Studies in Sustainability Series
Authors: Harder Marie, Burford Gemma
Language: EnglishSubjects for Measuring Intangible Values:
Keywords
Civil Society Organisation Partners; social organisations; CSO Representative; sustainability; Civil Society; social benefits; Spatial Survey; community projects; Unitary Validity; social values; Civil Society Organisations; social justice; CSO Staff; measuring values; CSO Director; human values; CSO Member; Marie Harder; Emancipatory Action Research; Gemma Burford; CSO Group; Specific Disciplinary Approaches; Transformational Social Action; UN; Earth Charter Initiative; Sustainable Behaviour Change; SRL Skill; Business Ethics Research; Intangible Legacies; Quantitative Research; Item Validity; Connected Communities Programme; Vancouver Foundation; AHRC Project; Evaluator Group
Approximative price 50.12 €
In Print (Delivery period: 14 days).
Add to cart the book of Harder Marie, Burford GemmaPublication date: 03-2020
· 15.6x23.4 cm · Paperback
Publication date: 10-2018
· 15.6x23.4 cm · Hardback
Description
/li>Contents
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/li>Biography
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This book explores the complex problem of how to measure the ?success? of social organisations, projects and activities. Whether improving a local situation, organizing a campaign around sustainability, or assessing the intangible effects of perceived social benefits, currently we have only have a very limited range of mechanisms for judging effectiveness. On the one hand, a market-driven logic demands that qualitative perceptions and experiences are quantified into simplified and numerically defined variables. On the other, community projects are left un-assessed, as one-off outcomes of local and situated processes that must somehow automatically ?make things better?. For academics, researchers and other professionals working in this field this has resulted in the deep frustration of not being able to assess the things that are most centrally important: higher human values such as integrity, trust, respect, equality and social justice.
Measuring Intangible Values argues that we can make shared social values ? and their measurement - central to decisions about improving civil society. But because these social values are intangible, we need to develop ways of eliciting and validating them at the local level that can capture people?s shared meanings across multiple goals and perspectives. We need to develop mechanisms for evaluating whether these values are met that use rigorous but also relevant measures. And we need to develop ways of doing this that are scalable, transferable and comparable across different kinds of organisations and fields of activity.
This book will be valuable for researchers in all social science disciplines which touch on human values, such as sociology, social psychology, human geography, social policy, architecture and planning, design and community studies.
Introduction
Part 1: Designing a values-based framework
1. Why values?
2. Articulating values, framing processes 3. Developing a values-based approach: the case of Echeri
Part 2: Key themes in measuring intangible social values
4. Issues in making values tangible
5. Designing processes: the criticality of deep participation 6. Values and validity
Part 3: Putting a values-based framework into practice
7. Sustainability and business ethics
8. Mapping intangible legacies
9. Towards sustainable behavior change in schools
10. Conclusion: what happens when values are central
Appendix: Set 1 Sustainable Development Indicators (SDIs) from original ESDinds Project
Marie Harder is a China National Thousand Talents Professor at Fudan University, Shanghai, and the founder and head of the Values and Sustainability research group at the University of Brighton UK.
Gemma Burford has been a Research Fellow in Sustainable Development at the University of Brighton, UK and previously worked in Tanzania as Founder and Co-Director of the NGO Aang Serian (‘House of Peace’).