Description
Efnisyfirlit
- Cover Page
- Half Title page
- Series Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Figures
- Preface and acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction: Sustainability in museums as a search and learning process
- 1.1 The status quo: orientation on unfamiliar terrain
- 1.2 Preparation: exploration, compilation and inspiration
- 1.3 The content: sustainability, the museum and transformation
- Part I Museums and sustainability
- 2 The museum sector in transition
- 2.1 Global crises as the starting point
- Complexity in the Anthropocene
- Long time horizons and the speed of change
- Uncertainty and risk
- Wicked problems
- Sustainability as a response to global challenges
- 2.2 The concept of sustainability
- Background and context
- Fundamental values and the ethics of sustainability
- The understanding of and discourse on sustainability
- Key ideas of sustainability
- 2.3 Sustainability in the museum: Between utopia and banality
- Sustainability lies at the core of the mission of museums
- Sustainability is a higher-order task
- Obstacles and preserving the status quo
- From “nice-to-have” to “must-have”
- References
- 3 The vision: The sustainable museum
- 3.1 Sustainability as a guiding principle for museums
- Four principles of the sustainable museum
- Dimensions of sustainability in museums
- Strong sustainability and the planetary boundaries of museum work
- Pitfalls: Learning from 35 years of sustainability
- 3.2 Museums and the Great Transformation
- Internal and external sustainability
- Approaches to achieving societal impact
- 3.3 Agenda 2030 as a global frame of reference
- The SDGs in the work of museums
- The blind spots in Agenda 2030
- 3.4 Participatory science as social context
- Public science for the governance of a sustainable democracy
- The participatory science society of the future
- Museums as key actors in the science society
- Note
- References
- 4 Three levers for the transformation
- 4.1 The illusion of neutrality and political activism
- Neutrality and value orientation in museums
- Engagement and political activism
- 4.2 Climate protection and decarbonisation
- Calculating the climate footprint of museums
- From climate accounting to ecological footprinting
- 4.3 The public as change agent
- Diversity, inclusion and disadvantaged target groups
- Sustainability communication in the museum
- From intention to action: Research on behavioural psychology
- Applied communication psychology in the museum
- References
- Part II Sustainable museum management
- 5 Transformational leadership and museum governance
- 5.1 Strategic development through impact orientation
- Measuring the impact of a museum
- 5.2 Governance, leadership and new work
- Museum governance for sustainability
- Leadership style and hierarchies
- New Work and workplace culture
- 5.3 Human resources policy and the workplace
- The museum as employer
- Sustainable human resources policy
- Human resources development
- Notes
- References
- 6 Sustainable management and eco-efficient museum operations
- 6.1 Institutional resilience and a broader approach to accounting
- Admission prices and museum shops
- Diversification of funding
- Economic benefits from sustainable operations
- Sustainability accounting as a driver of organisational transformation
- Museums as degrowth pioneers
- 6.2 Sustainable procurement
- Implementation and procedure
- Challenges for the museum
- Life cycle analysis
- The purchase of goods in museum shops
- 6.3 Buildings and resource use
- Facility management as resource management
- Energy
- Water and wastewater
- Materials and waste management
- Renovation and new construction
- The new role of facility management in the sustainable museum
- Notes
- References
- 7 Realigning collections and sustainable conservation
- 7.1 The need for a hermeneutic re-vision
- De-colonisation and re-contextualisation
- Guardianship and dynamic conservation
- Post-globalisation and digitality
- 7.2 Degrowth and deaccessioning
- Collection strategy and growth
- Simplifying deaccessioning
- New opportunities created by shrinking collections
- 7.3 Archives, storage facilities, safeguarding collections and environmentally efficient processes
- Indoor climate and sustainability
- Risk management
- Energy-efficient storage facilities
- Sustainability in conservation and restoration
- References
- 8 Transdisciplinary research and sustainability science in museums
- 8.1 Sustainability as a scientific field and transdisciplinary research
- Social cohesion through transdisciplinary science
- Transdisciplinary research in museums
- Transdisciplinarity as a means to achieving local embeddedness
- 8.2 From the “public understanding of research” to the communication of epistemological practices
- The philosophy of science as a basis for the mediation of knowledge
- A place for critical reflection on the history of science
- Epistemology as a visitor experience
- 8.3 Citizen Science and open research labs
- Museums as the nucleus of sustainable Citizen Science
- Digitised collections and Big Open Data
- Open research labs in museums
- References
- 9 Collaborative curation and sustainable exhibitions
- 9.1 Sustainable programming and thematic framing
- Demonstrating the links to sustainability
- Exhibitions on core challenges of social transformation
- 9.2 Transformative curating and exhibiting
- Storytelling and narratives of sustainability
- Complexity and uncertainty require new interactions
- Digitality as an opportunity for audience orientation
- Sustainable exhibition design and transformational scenography
- 9.3 Sharing and sustainable production
- Environmentally friendly materials and life cycle assessment
- Media technology and energy efficiency
- Sharing, modular systems and exhibition exchange platforms
- 9.4 From loans to collaborative collecting
- New forms of risk management and the modal split
- Packaging and materials
- Dispensing with courier services and reorganising the loan system
- Rethinking the transportation of cultural goods
- References
- 10 Sustainable education and participation in museums
- 10.1 The museum as a place of learning for transformation
- Transformative learning and sustainability
- The museum as a learning organisation
- 10.2 Education for sustainable development within museum education
- ESD and the sustainable development goals
- ESD as a recalcitrant concept in museums
- Imparting the skills for a sustainable future
- The museum as a place for acquiring competencies
- 10.3 Participation, co-creation and crowdsourcing
- Co-creation and an end to the visitor-centred museum
- Tinkering and the maker culture
- 10.4 From educational programmes to local activism
- Object-based learning in local education networks
- Initiating practical projects
- Cooperating with sustainability initiatives
- Extending and developing the links to sustainable tourism
- References
- Part III Putting sustainability into practice
- 11 Sustainability in museums as a process of change
- 11.1 Sustainability management in the museum
- Determining goals and scope
- Integrating sustainability into everyday museum life
- Managing change successfully
- Process and instruments
- Taking into account the factors for successful change processes
- 11.2 Emergent change and participation
- Enabling continuous participation
- Communicating change within the museum
- Identifying levels of communication and benefits
- 11.3 Actors, roles and positions
- The director as role model
- The sustainability team as a key actor
- The head of sustainability as pilot of the process
- Implementation within departments and working groups
- Accessing external support
- 11.4 Empowerment and meaningful work
- From motivation to meaningful work
- Empowering employees to adopt sustainable behaviour
- Note
- References
- 12 Sustainability strategy, targets and indicators in museums
- 12.1 Mission statement and launch
- Telling the sustainable change story
- Initiating the process
- Outlining a vision
- 12.2 Fields of action and goals
- Defining the material fields of action
- Formulating sustainability strategy and goals
- 12.3 Modular indicator system for sustainable museums
- Defining indicators
- Adapting sustainability indicators
- Indicators specific to museums
- Modular indicator system
- 12.4 Analysis of the status quo and monitoring
- Measuring indicators: methods of data collection
- Monitoring progress
- 12.5 Resources and timeframes
- Setting a realistic timeframe
- Notes
- References
- 13 Implementation and sustainability reporting in museums
- 13.1 The sustainability programme: measures and conflicting goals
- Anticipating conflicts
- Weighing up conflicting goals
- 13.2 Overcoming resistance and taking the first small steps
- Tackling resistance at the individual level
- Overcoming organisational obstacles
- Adapting to the size of the institution
- Small steps, quick wins and low-hanging fruit
- 13.3 The sustainability report: design, production and publication
- Principles and contents
- Transparency and credibility
- Choosing the format and parameters
- Defining goals and target groups
- Producing the report
- Open reflection and attractive design
- Defining the scope and the medium
- Determining publication frequency and estimating expenditure
- External consultancy and the option of a review
- 13.4 Reporting as an opportunity for the museum sector
- Reporting as a joint task for the museum sector
- Introducing reporting in museums
- Notes
- References
- Index
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