Twenty-five years of social multi-criteria evaluation (SMCE) in the search for sustainability: Analysis of case studies
Ecological Economics 188 : (2021) // Article ID 107131
Abstract
Social multi-criteria evaluation (SMCE) is a decision-making tool used in complex and uncertain social-ecological
contexts such as those related to the management of natural resources and sustainability. It has been widely used
since it was devised twenty-five years ago, but no comprehensive reviews exist for case studies specifically
considering sustainability. Therefore, the aim of this study is twofold: first, to review the principles of SMCE
according to sustainability; and second, to contrast the integration of sustainability within the SMCE framework
by means of an analysis of case studies. Relying on an exhaustive bibliographical review, the analysis undertaken
has covered the empirical evidence gap in the SMCE field by providing a systematic inventory of 41 case studies
and analysing them regarding their general features, how they fulfil the SMCE process steps, and the characteristics
of the results in each case. Furthermore, our general findings on the SMCE method relate to: (i) the
feasibility of the operationalization of the strong sustainability principle; (ii) the incorporation of the social
actors’ views through participatory processes in the search for sustainability; (iii) the difficulty of reaching
“compromise solutions” and the scarce real policy implementation of the outcomes in analysed cases.