chevron icon Twitter logo Facebook logo LinkedIn logo YouTube logo download icon link icon audio icon quote icon posted icon clock icon author icon arrow icon arrow icon plus icon Search icon location icon location icon document icon menu icon plus-alt

Overview

Resource ID: INDIGO-ARES-0078

Link: https://www.sustainableorganizations.org/social-footprint-method/

The Social Footprint Method (SFM) is a context-based approach to measuring, managing and reporting the social sustainability performance of an organization. In this regard, the Social Footprint is simply a narrow application of Context-Based Sustainability, which in its broader form covers sustainability performance in all of its dimensions: social, economic and environmental.

It measures the gap between resources people need and resources organizations decide to produce.
Whereas sustainability in the case of ecological impacts is all about living within our means, sustainability in the case of our social (and economic) impacts is about creating and maintaining the means to live. What mainly differentiates the SFM from other sustainability accounting tools is the manner in which it measures and reports performance relative to organization-specific standards of performance (i.e., for impacts on anthro capitals). Such standards are set by reference to what an organization’s duties and obligations are to its stakeholders (by group) to have (or not have) impacts on anthro capitals in ways that can affect their well-being. No other sustainability method does this!

More details

Impact goal: SDG oriented, Social impact

Internal/external: Internal

Leader: Center for sustainable organizations

Method: Attribution, Observation, Operational data, Diff in diff statistical analysis

Output format: Quant but no index, Non monetary quant index

Scale: Micro

Sourcing: Self driven

Time frame: Ongoing

Type: Framework

Used in sectors: Impact investing, Social enterprises, Sustainability eco

Who: Third sector

Is this information correct?
Do you have more you can add?

Please tell us about it

Get in touch

Important Notice and Disclaimer on INDIGO Data

INDIGO data are shared for research and policy analysis purposes. INDIGO data can be used to support a range of insights, for example, to understand the social outcomes that projects aim to improve, the network of organisations across projects, trends, scales, timelines and summary information. The collaborative system by which we collect, process, and share data is designed to advance data-sharing norms, harmonise data definitions and improve data use. These data are NOT shared for auditing, investment, or legal purposes. Please independently verify any data that you might use in decision making. We provide no guarantees or assurances as to the quality of these data. Data may be inaccurate, incomplete, inconsistent, and/or not current for various reasons: INDIGO is a collaborative and iterative initiative that mostly relies on projects all over the world volunteering to share their data. We have a system for processing information and try to attribute data to named sources, but we do not audit, cross-check, or verify all information provided to us. It takes time and resources to share data, which may not have been included in a project’s budget. Many of the projects are ongoing and timely updates may not be available. Different people may have different interpretations of data items and definitions. Even when data are high quality, interpretation or generalisation to different contexts may not be possible and/or requires additional information and/or expertise. Help us improve our data quality: email us at indigo@bsg.ox.ac.uk if you have data on new projects, changes or performance updates on current projects, clarifications or corrections on our data, and/or confidentiality or sensitivity notices. Please also give input via the INDIGO Data Definitions Improvement Tool and INDIGO Feedback Questionnaire.