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Physical Sciences · Environmental Science

Sustainable Development and Policies
Research Guide

What is Sustainable Development and Policies?

Sustainable Development and Policies refers to the cluster of research at the intersection of green jobs, sustainable development, and low-carbon economy, addressing renewable energy, climate change, environmental sustainability, workforce transition, and policy challenges to foster a sustainable economy.

This field encompasses 16,432 works focused on creating environmentally friendly economies through topics like green jobs and renewable energy. Key areas include workforce transition and policy challenges amid climate change. Research emphasizes social innovation and economic growth alongside environmental sustainability.

Topic Hierarchy

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graph TD D["Physical Sciences"] F["Environmental Science"] S["Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law"] T["Sustainable Development and Policies"] D --> F F --> S S --> T style T fill:#DC5238,stroke:#c4452e,stroke-width:2px
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16.4K
Papers
N/A
5yr Growth
3.7K
Total Citations

Research Sub-Topics

Why It Matters

Sustainable Development and Policies impacts real-world transitions to low-carbon economies by supporting net job creation from energy efficiency and renewable energy policies, as evidenced by Blyth et al. (2014) in 'Low carbon jobs: the evidence for net job creation from policy support for energy efficiency and renewable energy,' which reviews evidence for job gains in these sectors. Rosen (2009) in 'Energy Sustainability: A Pragmatic Approach and Illustrations' outlines harnessing sustainable energy sources and carriers, with 135 citations highlighting improved socioeconomic acceptability in energy systems. Applications extend to green cement manufacturing, where Benhelal et al. (2011) propose designs reducing environmental impact in the cement industry, a sector responsible for significant global emissions.

Reading Guide

Where to Start

'Energy Sustainability: A Pragmatic Approach and Illustrations' by Rosen (2009), as it provides a clear framework of factors like sustainable sources and efficiency, serving as an accessible entry to core concepts with 135 citations.

Key Papers Explained

Rosen (2009) in 'Energy Sustainability: A Pragmatic Approach and Illustrations' establishes pragmatic factors for energy systems, which Blyth et al. (2014) in 'Low carbon jobs: the evidence for net job creation from policy support for energy efficiency and renewable energy' builds on by evidencing policy-driven job gains in those systems. Benhelal et al. (2011) in 'A novel design for green and economical cement manufacturing' applies similar principles to industrial processes, while Hancock (2001) in 'People, partnerships and human progress: building community capital' extends to social dimensions supporting workforce transitions.

Paper Timeline

100%
graph LR P0["Freedom and the Environment
1995 · 302 cites"] P1["Vision in context: Historical an...
1998 · 211 cites"] P2["People, partnerships and human p...
2001 · 162 cites"] P3["Efficient hydrogen production us...
2003 · 211 cites"] P4["Using Traditional Methods and In...
2005 · 109 cites"] P5["Energy Sustainability: A Pragmat...
2009 · 135 cites"] P6["A novel design for green and eco...
2011 · 103 cites"] P0 --> P1 P1 --> P2 P2 --> P3 P3 --> P4 P4 --> P5 P5 --> P6 style P0 fill:#DC5238,stroke:#c4452e,stroke-width:2px
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Most-cited paper highlighted in red. Papers ordered chronologically.

Advanced Directions

Research continues on policy challenges for workforce transitions and low-carbon economies, drawing from established works like Blyth et al. (2014), with no recent preprints available to indicate ongoing developments in green jobs and renewable integration.

Papers at a Glance

# Paper Year Venue Citations Open Access
1 Freedom and the Environment 1995 Journal of democracy 302
2 Efficient hydrogen production using cyclohexane and decalin by... 2003 Applied Catalysis A Ge... 211
3 Vision in context: Historical and contemporary perspectives on... 1998 Journal of the History... 211
4 People, partnerships and human progress: building community ca... 2001 Health Promotion Inter... 162
5 Energy Sustainability: A Pragmatic Approach and Illustrations 2009 Sustainability 135
6 Using Traditional Methods and Indigenous Technologies for Copi... 2005 Climatic Change 109
7 A novel design for green and economical cement manufacturing 2011 Journal of Cleaner Pro... 103
8 Low carbon jobs: the evidence for net job creation from policy... 2014 OPAL (Open@LaTrobe) (L... 85
9 The king's reformation: Henry VIII and the remaking of the Eng... 2006 Choice Reviews Online 83
10 The Reign of Henry VIII 1995 82

Frequently Asked Questions

What defines energy sustainability in this field?

Energy sustainability involves harnessing sustainable energy sources, utilizing sustainable energy carriers, increasing efficiency, reducing environmental impact, and improving socioeconomic acceptability. Rosen (2009) in 'Energy Sustainability: A Pragmatic Approach and Illustrations' examines these factors for moving toward sustainable energy systems.

How do policies support low-carbon jobs?

Policies for energy efficiency and renewable energy create net jobs, as shown in empirical evidence reviewed by Blyth et al. (2014) in 'Low carbon jobs: the evidence for net job creation from policy support for energy efficiency and renewable energy.' This report assesses job impacts across supported technologies.

What methods address climate variability using traditional approaches?

Traditional methods and indigenous technologies cope with climate variability, as detailed by Stigter et al. (2005) in 'Using Traditional Methods and Indigenous Technologies for Coping With Climate Variability.' These approaches leverage local knowledge for environmental management.

What innovations exist for greener cement production?

A novel design for green and economical cement manufacturing reduces emissions and costs, proposed by Benhelal et al. (2011) in 'A novel design for green and economical cement manufacturing.' This targets the cement industry's environmental footprint.

How does building community capital relate to sustainable development?

Building community capital through people and partnerships advances human progress and health as forms of wealth. Hancock (2001) in 'People, partnerships and human progress: building community capital' links this to broader sustainability beyond economic capital.

What is the scope of works in sustainable development and policies?

The field includes 16,432 works on green jobs, sustainable development, low-carbon economy, renewable energy, and policy challenges. It covers workforce transition and environmental sustainability.

Open Research Questions

  • ? How can policy frameworks quantify net job creation from renewable energy transitions across diverse economies?
  • ? What scalable indigenous technologies best mitigate climate variability in agriculture?
  • ? Which energy carrier innovations most effectively balance efficiency and socioeconomic acceptability?
  • ? How do green manufacturing designs for high-emission industries like cement integrate with low-carbon policies?
  • ? What community partnership models optimize environmental sustainability and economic growth?

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