Acknowledging temporal diversity in sustainability transformations at the nexus of interconnected systems

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschungbegutachtet

Standard

Acknowledging temporal diversity in sustainability transformations at the nexus of interconnected systems. / Weiser, Annika; Lutz, Lotte Marie; Lang, Daniel Johannes et al.
in: Journal of Cleaner Production, Jahrgang 162, 20.09.2017, S. 273-285.

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschungbegutachtet

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{675bdb51fb3241f2975873dd9c64a156,
title = "Acknowledging temporal diversity in sustainability transformations at the nexus of interconnected systems",
abstract = "The language of the global sustainability discourse in science and society is laden with time rhetoric, and time has been identified as one major contextual condition for sustainability transformations. Still, time and temporal dynamics are often not explicitly considered or conceptualized in research and strategy-building towards sustainability transformations in social-ecological and socio-technical systems: While existing approaches to time such as the concept of time ecology mainly inform system knowledge, many transformation concepts are found to lack an in-depth integration of time. This sets up the challenge to acknowledge and operationalize temporal system dynamics in transformation processes, in order to be able to plan and act purposefully towards long-term sustainable development. In this article, we take a first step to meet this challenge and propose an approach towards operationalizing and integrating the findings of time ecology for these sustainability transformation concepts. The presented time-in-transformations-approach consists of three subsequent steps. Each step informs specific features of the transformation process and is operationalized on the basis of insights from time ecology. By applying these steps to the exemplary case of the mineral-energy nexus, we show how our approach might enable a better temporal system understanding and support a structured reflection on human perception of change and typical temporal patterns. The approach leads to two main outcomes: First, it can inform how to design and carry out interventions in a way that they consider a system's temporal resilience and transformability. Second, an active consideration of temporal dynamics can inform strategy-building towards coherent sustainability transformations across sectors and regulatory levels, spatial and temporal scales. Therefore, it can contribute to a shared and operational understanding of temporal diversity and may thus meaningfully complement existing approaches to analyze, assess and purposefully intervene into systems across sector boundaries.",
keywords = "Sustainability Science, Interventions, Governance, Temporal diversity, Mineral-energy nexus, Renewable energy, Sustainable metal use",
author = "Annika Weiser and Lutz, {Lotte Marie} and Lang, {Daniel Johannes} and Klaus K{\"u}mmerer",
year = "2017",
month = sep,
day = "20",
doi = "10.1016/j.jclepro.2017.06.039",
language = "English",
volume = "162",
pages = "273--285",
journal = "Journal of Cleaner Production",
issn = "0959-6526",
publisher = "Elsevier Ltd",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Acknowledging temporal diversity in sustainability transformations at the nexus of interconnected systems

AU - Weiser, Annika

AU - Lutz, Lotte Marie

AU - Lang, Daniel Johannes

AU - Kümmerer, Klaus

PY - 2017/9/20

Y1 - 2017/9/20

N2 - The language of the global sustainability discourse in science and society is laden with time rhetoric, and time has been identified as one major contextual condition for sustainability transformations. Still, time and temporal dynamics are often not explicitly considered or conceptualized in research and strategy-building towards sustainability transformations in social-ecological and socio-technical systems: While existing approaches to time such as the concept of time ecology mainly inform system knowledge, many transformation concepts are found to lack an in-depth integration of time. This sets up the challenge to acknowledge and operationalize temporal system dynamics in transformation processes, in order to be able to plan and act purposefully towards long-term sustainable development. In this article, we take a first step to meet this challenge and propose an approach towards operationalizing and integrating the findings of time ecology for these sustainability transformation concepts. The presented time-in-transformations-approach consists of three subsequent steps. Each step informs specific features of the transformation process and is operationalized on the basis of insights from time ecology. By applying these steps to the exemplary case of the mineral-energy nexus, we show how our approach might enable a better temporal system understanding and support a structured reflection on human perception of change and typical temporal patterns. The approach leads to two main outcomes: First, it can inform how to design and carry out interventions in a way that they consider a system's temporal resilience and transformability. Second, an active consideration of temporal dynamics can inform strategy-building towards coherent sustainability transformations across sectors and regulatory levels, spatial and temporal scales. Therefore, it can contribute to a shared and operational understanding of temporal diversity and may thus meaningfully complement existing approaches to analyze, assess and purposefully intervene into systems across sector boundaries.

AB - The language of the global sustainability discourse in science and society is laden with time rhetoric, and time has been identified as one major contextual condition for sustainability transformations. Still, time and temporal dynamics are often not explicitly considered or conceptualized in research and strategy-building towards sustainability transformations in social-ecological and socio-technical systems: While existing approaches to time such as the concept of time ecology mainly inform system knowledge, many transformation concepts are found to lack an in-depth integration of time. This sets up the challenge to acknowledge and operationalize temporal system dynamics in transformation processes, in order to be able to plan and act purposefully towards long-term sustainable development. In this article, we take a first step to meet this challenge and propose an approach towards operationalizing and integrating the findings of time ecology for these sustainability transformation concepts. The presented time-in-transformations-approach consists of three subsequent steps. Each step informs specific features of the transformation process and is operationalized on the basis of insights from time ecology. By applying these steps to the exemplary case of the mineral-energy nexus, we show how our approach might enable a better temporal system understanding and support a structured reflection on human perception of change and typical temporal patterns. The approach leads to two main outcomes: First, it can inform how to design and carry out interventions in a way that they consider a system's temporal resilience and transformability. Second, an active consideration of temporal dynamics can inform strategy-building towards coherent sustainability transformations across sectors and regulatory levels, spatial and temporal scales. Therefore, it can contribute to a shared and operational understanding of temporal diversity and may thus meaningfully complement existing approaches to analyze, assess and purposefully intervene into systems across sector boundaries.

KW - Sustainability Science

KW - Interventions

KW - Governance

KW - Temporal diversity

KW - Mineral-energy nexus

KW - Renewable energy

KW - Sustainable metal use

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85024100781&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1016/j.jclepro.2017.06.039

DO - 10.1016/j.jclepro.2017.06.039

M3 - Journal articles

VL - 162

SP - 273

EP - 285

JO - Journal of Cleaner Production

JF - Journal of Cleaner Production

SN - 0959-6526

ER -

DOI

Zuletzt angesehen

Aktivitäten

  1. Organizational Practices for the Aging Workforce: Validation of an English Version of the Later Life Workplace Index
  2. Contingencies Of Art Policy: Comparing Probabilistic and Deterministic Cultural Planning Modes in Baltimore and Hamburg
  3. Update on legal and policy aspects of mall satellites: sustainability, frequency interference, registration and ownership
  4. How viable are institutional innovations for national long-term governance? Lessons from a comparative empirical analysis
  5. Berufungskommission "Politikwissenschaft: Politisches System der Bundesrepublik Deutschland und der EU" - 2018 (Veranstaltung)
  6. Of mice, polemics and toxins (dis)placed on stage of public consultation. Situational analysis of the GMO-discourse in Poland
  7. Experiencing Exhibitions: ‘eMotions’ As an Interdisciplinary Study of Measuring and Analysing Visitor Experiences in Museums
  8. Flussgebietsmanagement. Vom emissionsorientierten Gewässerschutz zur ökologischen Bewirtschaftung von Flusseinzugsgebieten
  9. Conference presentation: Integrated Reporting: Current state of empirical research, limitations and future research implications
  10. Analysis of Climate Adaptation Strategy Development: Strategy-Making in the German Länder - The Cases of Lower Saxony and Bavaria
  11. Fachtagung ,,Entwicklungsraum gewinnen – aber wie? Gewässer und Auenentwicklung zwischen Flächennutzung und Hochwasserschutz'' - 2010
  12. Using the arts as a tool for governing postindustrial cities: Music City Hamburg?! Musikalische Annäherungen an die Kreative Stadt

Publikationen

  1. Determination of the antifungal agent posaconazole in human serum by HPLC with parallel column-switching technique
  2. Do we need livestock grazing to promote Polylepis australis tree recruitment in the Central Argentinean Mountains?
  3. Establishment success in a forest biodiversity and ecosystem functioning experiment in subtropical China (BEF-China)
  4. Model-based estimation of pesticides and transformation products and their export pathways in a headwater catchment
  5. Effects of anthropogenic disturbances on soil microbial communities in oak forests persist for more than 100 years
  6. Utilizing international networks for accelerating research and learning in transformational sustainability science
  7. Ecological changes and local knowledge in a giant honey bee (Apis dorsata F.) hunting community in Palawan, Philippines
  8. An analysis of local institutions governing common pasture use for biodiversity and society in Transylvania, Romania
  9. Horizontal, but not vertical canopy structure is related to stand functional diversity in a subtropical slope forest
  10. Modeling Effective and Ineffective Knowledge Communication and Learning Discourses in CSCL with Hidden Markov Models
  11. Jayhun - Grenzüberschreitendes Wasserressourcenmanagement des Amu Darya für eine nachhaltige Zukunft im Aralseebecken
  12. Grundgesetz und europäische Integration – Die Europäische Union nach dem Lissabon-Urteil des Bundesverfassungsgerichts
  13. Patterns of species composition and species richness in moist (ash-alder) forests of northern Germany (Schleswig-Holstein)
  14. Simulation of the fate of Boscalid and its transformation product 4-Chlorobenzoic acid in a vineyard-terraces catchment
  15. Identifizierung und Bewertung ausgewählter Arzneimittel und ihrer Metaboliten (Ab- und Umbauprodukte) im Wasserkreislauf
  16. Dispersal of vascular plants by game in northern Germany. Part I: Roe deer (Capreolus capreolus) and wild boar (Sus scrofa)
  17. Ya'ar Bar'am - An old Quercus calliprinos forest of high nature conservation value in the Mediterranean region of Israel
  18. Aus unmittelbarer Nähe online beobachten – Chancen multiperspektivischer Unterrichtsaufnahmen für die Lehrkräftebildung
  19. Erratum to: Gambling to leapfrog in status? (Review of Economics of the Household, (2017), 15, 4, (1291-1319), 10.1007/s11150-015-9306-9)
  20. Biodegradability and genotoxicity of surface functionalized colloidal silica (SiO2) particles in the aquatic environment
  21. New Methods for the Analysis of Links between International Firm Activities and Firm Performance: A Practitioner’s Guide
  22. Estimation of the cancer risk to humans resulting from the presence of cyclophosphamide and ifosfamide in surface water
  23. Use of Chemotaxonomy To Study the Influence of Benzalkonium Chloride on Bacterial Populations in Biodegradation Testing
  24. Bird's Response to Revegetation of Different Structure and Floristics-Are "Restoration Plantings" Restoring Bird Communities?
  25. Application of modern coexistence theory to rare plant restoration provides early indication of restoration trajectories
  26. Modellierung effektiver und ineffektiver Chatdiskurse im Computer-Supported Collaborative Learning mit Hiden Markov Models
  27. Einträge von Bioziden und Transformationsprodukten aus Fassadenauswaschungen in urbane Oberflächengewässer und Grundwasser
  28. Handlungsmöglichkeiten zur Minderung des Eintrags von Humanarzneimitteln und ihren Rückständen in das Roh- und Trinkwasser
  29. Ergebnisse vergleichender Untersuchungen in Natur- und Wirtschaftswäldern und Folgerungen für eine naturnahe Buchenwirtschaft
  30. Warum Max Bense unzeitgemäß war und es heute nicht mehr ist oder: Wieviel Geist steckt in den 'Digitalen Geisteswissenschaften'?
  31. Editorial: Governance for Sustainable Development in the Face of Ambivalence, Uncertainty and Distributed Power: an Introduction
  32. Canopy leaf traits, basal area, and age predict functional patterns of regenerating communities in secondary subtropical forests