Sustainability: Science, Practice, & Policy (Jul 2006)

The sustainability of telework: an ecological-footprinting approach

  • Markus Moos,
  • Jean Andrey,
  • Laura C. Johnson

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 1
pp. 3 – 14

Abstract

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This paper demonstrates the importance of a comprehensive framework to assess how telework affects sustainability. Sustainability-policy evaluation rarely considers substitution effects despite broad recognition that overall lifestyles must be analyzed to gauge how policy-induced behavioral changes translate into net environmental impact. Case-study data indicate that telework has far-reaching, complex, and varied effects on lifestyle practices, with potentially important environmental implications. Because adjustments occur across numerous consumption categories, the assessment of telework’s environmental dimensions must move beyond single-issue studies and single-dataset analysis. Ecological-footprint analysis, in combination with qualitative data, can suggest solutions to sustainability problems.

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