Abstract
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 …
Original language | English |
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Publisher | Routledge |
ISBN (Print) | 9781138079588 |
Publication status | Published - 28 Sep 2018 |
Publication series
Name | Routledge Studies in Sustainability |
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Publisher | Routledge |
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Dive into the research topics of 'Measuring Intangible Values: Rethinking How to Evaluate Socially Beneficial Actions'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Profiles
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Marie Harder, Fellow Royal Society of the Arts (FRSA)
- School of Arch, Tech and Eng - Professor of Sustainable Waste Mngmt
- Experimental Design Practices Research and Enterprise Group
- Radical Methodologies (RaM) Research and Enterprise Group
- Values and Sustainability Research and Enterprise Group
Person: Academic