ISBN-13: 9789401039437 / Angielski / Miękka / 2012 / 231 str.
ISBN-13: 9789401039437 / Angielski / Miękka / 2012 / 231 str.
This book deals with the challenges posed by the transformation of society towards much-needed sustainability. Especially, it deals with the local features of this change, but seen in a global context. The two cases examined - the municipalities of Linkoping and Atvidaberg - are Swedish, but the problems of how to relate locally to a globalized world are common today. The cases have been deliberately chosen to expose alternative types of choices for the local communities involved. Large Linkoping is, historically, a nodal city of importance in the national grid of regional centres, one that relates to the nation state and represents officialdom. Small Atvidaberg developed in the context of its forest region setting and metallurgy, and today operates directly to wider markets, while still emphasising its very local identity. The fact that these municipalities border each other provides a similar regional context, and differences between them may then not be entirely confused by a debate on drastically different geographical settings.
Sustainability issues at a local level must be seen as related to those of the world at large. The focus is on democracy and identity topics. The two Swedish municipalities cannot, of course, provide a blueprint for what is happening to the future of the rest of the world, but they might, however, provide an increased insight into the issues that are at stake in the specific setting of a highly industrialised or even post-industrialised country, and how these issues may develop not only in that specific historical and cultural context. Through the analysis of sustainable development at the local level in Sweden, it is possible to provide a glimpse of some general tendencies of importance with regard to the local-global issues, indicating challenges that societies in the rich part of the world are facing."