3 results on '"DECHY, Nicolas"'
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2. Mise en place d'une démarche de développement durable au sein d'un institut public d'expertise
- Author
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Merad, Myriam, Dechy, Nicolas, Guionnet, Dominique, Marcel, Frédéric, and Institut National de l'Environnement Industriel et des Risques (INERIS)
- Subjects
RISK ,RECHERCHE-INTERVENTION ,[SDE]Environmental Sciences ,ORGANIZATIONAL CHANGE ,DEVELOPPEMENT DURABLE ,CHANGEMENT ORGANISATIONNEL ,GOVERNANCE ,INTERVENTION RESEARCH ,AIDE A LA DECISION---SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT ,RISQUE ,GOUVERNANCE ,DECISION-AID - Abstract
In 2007, the French government organized a series of meetings dealing with environment and sustainable development problematics under the title " Grenelle de l'Environnement ". The conclusions of these meetings were introduced in a new law published in August 2009 (Law N° 2009-967) known as 'Grenelle 1'. Article 1 requires that the State designs a so-called Sustainable Development National Strategy (SDNS) structured around 9 targets. Target 1 consists in fighting against climate change. The SDNS is used as a basis for the involvement of public and private agencies in this perspective. The struggle against climate change and implementation of sustainable development principles within the agency framework raises a number of practical questions: how are adaptive methods and tools to be developed to help the agency reach a new balance given the environmental, economic and social risks induced by these broad targets? Are there any standards of reference and if not can an innovative approach be developed to support decision-making in situations of uncertainty? How can a management dashboard be developed for a proportional allocation of resources adapted to the various stakeholders and decision levels within the agency? How does one compare actions that can have different impacts in different sub-systems and with different time frameworks ? Following a brief historical review of the origin of the challenges of sustainable development and climate change in the introduction part of the paper, we discuss the methodological approach selected and the investigator's intervention program in the first part of the paper. In the second part, we address practical issues for an agency facing the challenges of sustainable development and climate change. To this end we relate the experience of designing a sustainable development framework within a public agency using an organizational approach and a multiple criteria decision aid methodology. Finally, we discuss the decision-makers' choices and the lessons learned by implementing an innovative approach which we set up to face these new challenges.; Les organisations font face à de nouveaux défis soulevés par la mise en application du principe de développement durable. Cet article offre un retour d'expérience et une réflexion sur la mise en place d'une stratégie et d'un plan d'actions développement durable, au sein d'un institut public d'expertise dans le domaine de l'environnement industriel et des risques, et révèle le besoin d'un accompagnement au changement et sa nécessité pour parvenir à ce changement.
- Published
- 2012
3. A pragmatic way of achieving Highly Sustainable Organisation: Governance and organisational learning in action in the public French sector.
- Author
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Merad, Myriam, Dechy, Nicolas, and Marcel, Frédéric
- Subjects
- *
PRAGMATICS , *SUSTAINABILITY , *SOCIAL structure , *LEARNING , *SOCIAL context , *GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Sustainability is becoming more and more the key challenge for organisations. Sustainability depends on internal and external characteristics of the organisation that should or must be preserved within the time and depends on the definition of what is a suitable state of the system (organisation and its environment) within medium and long terms as safety can be seen as feature of sustainability. The concept of sustainability is a key concept for safety researchers and practitioners. The reverse is true as safety concepts are useful to think sustainability which is still rather new. They share common research grounds on management and organisations sciences. In France, as exemplary organisations, public organisations are working on issues related to both the assessment and governance of sustainability. In this paper we propose a "proactive-based assessment" designed to measure an organisation's ability to govern and achieve sustainability. The proposed assessment method relies on three new concepts: "critical capital"; Highly Sustainable Organisation (HSO), and learning stages within an HSO. Although there are some elements of unpredictability in complex systems, sustainability for an organisation is based at least on its ability to learn and adapt. There are different ways of conceiving sustainability for public organisations. Even though there is no consensus on the way public organisations are conceived, there is still a philosophical and political agreement on the need for more sustainability. However, it is still unclear and sometimes not even pointed "what should be sustained for public organisations?". We suggest that the "critical capital" is characterised by internal and external aspects of the organisation that should be preserved within the time such as (i) the way of functioning of the organisation, (ii) the way the missions are performed or exercised by the organisation to meet what is contextually referred as being of public and common needs and (iii) the "organisational memory" that represents the identity of the public organisation and the assets of the public organisation. The term "Capital" does not refer to its definition in economy but to its given definitions in sociology (see for example Ferragina, 2010) and ecology (see for example Jansson, 1994). Criticality is fixed "according to the way public service is conceived, to the contextual constraints (such as economical, environmental, social, cultural and ethical) and according to the degree and the nature of threats (natural and manmade hazards). We suggest that organisational sustainability is the ability of the system to preserve and to maintain, within the time, a critical capital and to adapt to its ecosystem. Accordingly, a loss of organisational sustainability indicate whether the organisation is prone to shift to an undesirable organisational state that would decrease the ability or even cease to provide services to the ecosystem and to maintain its identity. In other words, it is an organisation that loses part of its critical capital. Accordingly, we have proposed a development stage model to make explicit the way we have observed in these organisations a common progression in the initiatives they have taken to address sustainability challenges and build learning and innovation capabilities. The three concepts arise from a four years investigation and observation of more than 60 public organisations in France and the coordination, at a national level, of the French working group on "governance of public organisations" that end up with the publication of four national guidelines in March 2013. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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