2020
DOI: 10.3390/su12208716
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Assessment of Sustainability and Priorities for Development of Indian West Coast Region: An Application of Sustainable Livelihood Security Indicators

Abstract: The measurement of sustainability in terms of social, economic, and ecological indicators significantly influences the achievement of sustainable development goals. This paper presents a sustainable livelihood security index (SLSI) by selecting 20 indicators and positions them within the ecological, economic, and social dimensions of sustainable development for the Indian west coast. These indicators were first normalized and, using estimated weights, indices were computed. Important indicators were shortliste… Show more

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Cited by 22 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…Sustainability assessments generally follow the monetary, biophysical, and indicator-based methods (see Figure 1) [47] with the monetary and indicator-based methods as the typical tools of choice when accounting for the social, economic, and environmental impacts of energy projects due to their flexibility in quantifying these dimensions [48][49][50][51]. However, as sustainability evaluations now adapt a multidimensional approach, the indicator-based approach is the most preferable tool in various studies due to its ability to capture the multifaceted nature of sustainability, with both quantitative and qualitative attributes already being considered in its measurement [52][53][54]. The indicator-based approach allows researchers to define attributes to sustainability that best fit the requirements of certain rural electrification projects, such as the case of hydropower projects that require indicators that uniquely influence the environmental aspect of installing hydropower plants [55].…”
Section: Assessing Sustainable Development Impactsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Sustainability assessments generally follow the monetary, biophysical, and indicator-based methods (see Figure 1) [47] with the monetary and indicator-based methods as the typical tools of choice when accounting for the social, economic, and environmental impacts of energy projects due to their flexibility in quantifying these dimensions [48][49][50][51]. However, as sustainability evaluations now adapt a multidimensional approach, the indicator-based approach is the most preferable tool in various studies due to its ability to capture the multifaceted nature of sustainability, with both quantitative and qualitative attributes already being considered in its measurement [52][53][54]. The indicator-based approach allows researchers to define attributes to sustainability that best fit the requirements of certain rural electrification projects, such as the case of hydropower projects that require indicators that uniquely influence the environmental aspect of installing hydropower plants [55].…”
Section: Assessing Sustainable Development Impactsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It was evident that tobacco cultivation significantly enhanced the income of tobacco farmers, and it is a major source of livelihoods for resource-poor farmers in tobaccogrowing regions of the country. The livelihood security at the local/regional level needs to be considered regarding some of the SDGs of the United Nations, such as SDG 2, related to zero hunger; SDG 3, related to good health and wellbeing; SDG 5, related to gender equality; and SDG 8, related to decent work and economic growth (Krishna et al, 2020).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…What is the state of all sectors of an economy that demand energy-residential, industrial, commercial, transportation, service, and agriculture? These energy services, in turn, support local economic and social development by increasing productivity and promoting local income production [62]. Energy availability has an impact on jobs, productivity, and development.…”
Section: Economic Indexmentioning
confidence: 99%