Driving Change towards Sustainability in Public Bodies and Civil Society Organisations: Expert Interviews with UK Practitioners
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- The large number and high fluctuation rate of their primary stakeholders;
- The fact that they engage with them at points of important change, for instance when moving house, starting school, or having an accident or illness [7];
2. Theoretical Framework
3. Materials and Methods
4. Results
- Professional knowledge and reflection;
- Stakeholder support and engagement;
- Driving and enabling change.
4.1. Professional Knowledge and Reflection
“[…] we thought it was very important to be externally scrutinised, not just by other health professionals, but by similar people in other sectors.”James
“[…] and every time you get the opportunity to have a new staff member, because we’re quite transient staff community […], it does give you the opportunity to go, hang on a minute, are we going to do this differently? Are we going to do it the same and sort of refocus?”Emma
“That was a very common question: do you have any, what is your theory of change? And it’s a question we asked ourselves a lot, and ultimately the answer was, we have many theories of change. But we need to use the right theory of change […] in the right setting, at the right opportunity.”James
“And there are situations in which objectives compete. And sometimes I mean, I can think of one instance […] where I did decide to push very hard […] and to say that on this, the environment prevails. […]. And I did succeed in that. But I’m very sparing about doing that. If I tried to do that all the time, I would alienate people.Robert
“Most people were fascinated in the skills and the knowledge about how to change things. So, if you ask me […], what did I learn in 10 years, I learned almost nothing about climate change because I sort of knew it already. I was picking it up anyway. […]. I learned about communication, engagement and managing change.”James
“[…] it honestly probably took me […] years to really understand how this place makes decisions. And I think that is again, that’s just a university thing. Generally, it’s just the way that decisions are made here are by committee and that is not what I was used to where I worked before.”John
4.2. Stakeholder Support and Engagement
“So, I’ve been lucky because the head who was here before, he’s moved up as head of primary. So, he’s taken that, we’ve greened him up, and he’s taken that with him. […]. And he’s basically had dialogue with all the heads. So, I’ve had support from you know, head of primary, which is amazing.”Olivia
“So, for example, at the time, I said to HR: “It would be really cool if we put sustainability into everyone’s job descriptions, I’ll write the sentence for you can we just add in?” And […], they’re like: “Okay.” […]. If you have relationships with people, then you can, you can kind of ask for things.”Emma
“What then happened is, that strategy, we went through a consultation period with students and staff last year, and the environmental sustainability piece, was really, really well supported […]. So initially, sustainability was intended to mean economic sustainability with a little bit of environmental sustainability. And actually, the focus has sort of really shifted much more to environmental sustainability […].”John
“One person is a crank, two people is a pressure group three people is staff opinion, numbers matter. Okay? And then get your story straight, get your narrative straight, don’t compete, collaborate, go and visit the chief executive in packs […].”James
“And then we formatted some of our work around it becoming a green team with leadership positions and if you wanted that, but also, it’s about bringing like-minded students together to form projects and ideas.”Emma
“[…] so, getting representatives from each class, so they can have a voice, a bit like the school council that we have, sort of local democracy in school […]. So, if we need to reduce food waste, we’ll, you know, I’ll ask them questions and then they’ll come up with ideas […]. So that just kind of, it is led by the kids really and what they notice in school, so they realise people aren’t recycling, then they sort that out.”Olivia
“So, I guess one of our biggest models of change was listening to people. […] my theory was […], if you listen to someone long enough, they’ll tell you what their values are and thus you could adapt your model of change to fit their values.”James
“And then just every time you know, the students will come and challenge us on different things. So, we’ll think more about palm oil and then you’re like: oh, um, let’s go do something on palm oil. Or, you know, the plastics and periods that came from student ideas and student dissertation work. And we went: all right, can we now stock like a reusable [menstrual] cup in?”Emma
“[…] now that we’re setting carbon targets, people are talking about carbon rather than sustainability. And like, that’s slightly changing the language. And so, it’s only fair that we almost go back and go: “Does everybody, is everyone comfortable with this language?” And, you know, […], we’re not all that comfortable with it. So how can we like re-educate ourselves to be able to just rephrase some of the things that we’re doing in that context.”Emma
“[…] our model of change for the public, which was to do continuous surveys to show that actually, you are not alone in wanting this change. You’re not odd, you’re not a maverick, this is quite normal to want this sort of change, but it won’t happen by individuals, it has to happen by collective action.”James
“[…] the other kids are a bit younger, and they can’t quite cope with the excitement in the classroom. But the older kids will go mentor them. So, they’ll go down and chat to them about what we’ve been talking about in our meetings. And then the kids deliver assemblies and do the lessons […]”Olivia
“[…] for the schools, frankly, one of the key interests is we have money to tackle some of these things that actually have often long been an issue for them.”John
“It’s really probably quite important to say that if I walked away now, I think the, you know, the ongoing structures are not in place, there are not enough people who are educated enough or keen enough or any of that. We’ve got, the policy framework is good. […] but you just, you need that, you need the driver, and you need the education […]. So that is a real weakness in terms of change management, I would say. It’s a fantastic team, the eco team, but none of them are going to step into what I do.”Ava
4.3. Driving and Enabling Change
“[…] we did plenty of Ipsos Mori surveys of patients, and they basically thought what we were doing was a really good idea. And the reason we did that was because a lot of people when you go back to one of your earlier questions about barriers, a lot of people, like doctors and nurses and managers, said: we’re not doing this because patients don’t want it. So, I said: how do you know patients don’t want it? You haven’t asked them. We asked them. We did a survey, and they say they want it.”James
“[…] so, the representatives from each class come along to green team meetings […]. […] And then when we come together, we talk about what we’ve been doing in class, what topics we’re covering, so everyone knows what, you know, people are studying in school so that we can think about how we can help them out.”Olivia
“The second thing I did was keep an absolute rigorous database of everybody I ever met […]. This was an absolute Golden Rule. You must keep records of everybody you meet […] in a central database […]. So, people will come up and say: I’m all alone in this hospital. And I said: no, you’re not, there are five other people. These are their names and emails, meet them for coffee. You know, get together, hunt in packs.”James
“[…] but it’s finding the staff, so I stood up at a whole trust inset, which is like […] odd staff […]. Just like: if anyone’s interested, come see me lunch time.”Olivia
“I would love to say with hindsight […]: yes, there was a strategy and it looked like this. But in the moment, I was a new manager as well. It was the first time I was managing a proper team in that way. […]. And then that has actually become more strategic over time for sure.”Emma
“[…] I think the structures that we’ve put in place in terms of management systems and formal reporting has caught a lot of structure […]. But then it is, behind the scenes, some of that can sort of seem a bit ad hoc in terms of individual initiatives or ideas or opportunities. But again, thinking about the science labs site, that has been us talking to a few informed people in the labs to understand different opportunities, explore opportunities, and then bringing that into our more structured management system.”John
“[…] every school and function have been tasked with thinking about what they’re going to do about sustainability in their area, a bit like you would have to do for health and safety. […]. And that’s opening up some really interesting conversations […].”John
“[…] we need to start from a point where people are bought in, through genuinely knowing more, but also being excited and inspired to want to change. And I’ve really seen a change of like, you know, commercial staff now were like, so proud of the changes they’re making in, you know, in the shop. And they’re owning that project […].”Emma
“And essentially, just sort of, again, for me, I think the best tactic of change is, do something and then make it the business as usual. […]. But you’ve got to do it first to then be like: oh, last year we did this. So, we do it again. And that’s what we do every year”Emma
“And just seeing whether there were opportunities to drop in an extra little bit, bolt on something rather than sort of, everyone must teach sustainability as a separate subject. […]. So yeah, it’s just kind of woven in over the years, it’s become part of what we do […].”Olivia
“I suppose the other model of change […] which is very important to us, which is the idea of back casting […]. If you work backwards and say, if we need to be there, within 25–30 years, we need to get to this point within five years or three years or so, this is what we need to do today.”James
“One thing I’ve said in this interview, which I constantly feel it necessary to heavily qualify, is the notion that a lot of small action adds up to a greater whole. Well, it does, but […] we need to do far, far more, we need to do so much more that it does actually involve not small changes but really larger radical changes, which is precisely what people don’t want to face. So, I posed a problem there […] rather than the answer.”Robert
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Name | Seniority Level | Sector | Scope of Organisation | No. of Staff |
---|---|---|---|---|
James | Senior level | Health | Governing | <100 |
Robert | Mid-level | Faith | Governing | 100–500 |
Olivia | Project-level | Primary education | Individual | <100 |
Emma | Mid-level | Higher education | Individual | 100–500 |
Ava | Project-level | Faith | Individual | <100 |
John | Mid-level | Higher education | Individual | >1000 |
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Rieg, N.A.; Gatersleben, B.; Christie, I. Driving Change towards Sustainability in Public Bodies and Civil Society Organisations: Expert Interviews with UK Practitioners. Sustainability 2023, 15, 8292. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15108292
Rieg NA, Gatersleben B, Christie I. Driving Change towards Sustainability in Public Bodies and Civil Society Organisations: Expert Interviews with UK Practitioners. Sustainability. 2023; 15(10):8292. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15108292
Chicago/Turabian StyleRieg, Nicola Andreij, Birgitta Gatersleben, and Ian Christie. 2023. "Driving Change towards Sustainability in Public Bodies and Civil Society Organisations: Expert Interviews with UK Practitioners" Sustainability 15, no. 10: 8292. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15108292
APA StyleRieg, N. A., Gatersleben, B., & Christie, I. (2023). Driving Change towards Sustainability in Public Bodies and Civil Society Organisations: Expert Interviews with UK Practitioners. Sustainability, 15(10), 8292. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15108292