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The term "sustainability" has entered the lexicon of many academic
disciplines and fields of professional practice, but to date does
not appear to have been seriously consid ered within the systems
community unless, perhaps, under other guises. Within the wider
community there is no consensus around what sustainability means
with some authors identifying 70 to 100 definitions of the term.
Some see sustainability as the precise and quantifiable outcomes of
biological systems whilst others see it in terms of processes rele
vant to personal and organizational change with the potential to
effect changes in our rela tionships with out environments.
Internationally it has been increasingly used in relation to the
term "sustainable development"--a term popularised by the Brundland
Commis of definitions sion's report in 1987 entitled "Our Common
Future. " Despite this diversity and polarised perception on its
utility, unlike many other popular terms, it has not had its time
and subsided quietly from our language. It is therefore timely for
the systems com munity to explore the relationship between systems
and sustainability in a range of con texts. Participants in this,
the 5th International Conference of the United Kingdom Systems
Society (UKSS), have been invited to reflect critically on the
contribution of sys tems thinking and action to sustainability-to
the sustainability of personal relationships, the organizations in
which live and work, and our "natural" environment."
The term "sustainability" has entered the lexicon of many academic
disciplines and fields of professional practice, but to date does
not appear to have been seriously consid ered within the systems
community unless, perhaps, under other guises. Within the wider
community there is no consensus around what sustainability means
with some authors identifying 70 to 100 definitions of the term.
Some see sustainability as the precise and quantifiable outcomes of
biological systems whilst others see it in terms of processes rele
vant to personal and organizational change with the potential to
effect changes in our rela tionships with out environments.
Internationally it has been increasingly used in relation to the
term "sustainable development"--a term popularised by the Brundland
Commis of definitions sion's report in 1987 entitled "Our Common
Future. " Despite this diversity and polarised perception on its
utility, unlike many other popular terms, it has not had its time
and subsided quietly from our language. It is therefore timely for
the systems com munity to explore the relationship between systems
and sustainability in a range of con texts. Participants in this,
the 5th International Conference of the United Kingdom Systems
Society (UKSS), have been invited to reflect critically on the
contribution of sys tems thinking and action to sustainability-to
the sustainability of personal relationships, the organizations in
which live and work, and our "natural" environment."
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