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Contribution Details

Type Book Chapter
Scope Discipline-based scholarship
Title Information and communication technologies for a more sustainable world
Organization Unit
Authors
  • Lorenz Hilty
Editors
  • Darek M Haftor
  • Anita Mirijamdotter
Item Subtype Original Work
Refereed Yes
Status Published in final form
Language
  • English
Booktitle Information and Communication Technologies, Society and Human Beings: Theory and Framework
ISBN 978-1-60960-057-0
Place of Publication Hershey PA, USA
Publisher IGI Global
Page Range 410 - 418
Date 2011
Abstract Text As has been discussed for decades, a reduction of the input of natural resources into industrial production and consumption by a factor of 4 to 10 is a necessary condition for Sustainable Development. This paper discusses the potential contribution of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) to such a dematerialization of the industrial societies and introduces a conceptual framework which accounts for positive and negative impacts of ICT on physical flows. This framework addresses three levels: the ICT life cycle itself, life cycles of other products influenced by ICT applications, and patterns of production and consumption. The conclusion is that ICT will only contribute to Sustainable Development if this technology is recognized and used as an enabler of a deep structural change; a transition towards an economic system in which value-creation is mainly based on information processing while keeping the physical properties of material within some limits that ensure that it can be recycled. This structural change will include the transition from a material-property-transfer mode to a service-transfer mode of consumption in areas where this is technically feasible and beneficial in terms of resource productivity. In such a post-industrial society, which may also be called a sustainable information society, open technological standards will play a crucial role, since they allow for complexity reduction while keeping competition alive, thus minimizing the risk of unmastered complexity in new critical infrastructures.
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Digital Object Identifier 10.4018/978-1-60960-057-0.ch033
Other Identification Number merlin-id:2463
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