Social innovation that connects people to coasts in the Anthropocene

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenÜbersichtsarbeitenForschung

Standard

Social innovation that connects people to coasts in the Anthropocene. / Celliers, Louis; Mañez Costa, María; Rölfer, Lena et al.
in: Cambridge Prisms: Coastal Futures, Jahrgang 1, e24, 27.03.2023.

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenÜbersichtsarbeitenForschung

Harvard

APA

Celliers, L., Mañez Costa, M., Rölfer, L., Aswani, S., & Ferse, S. (2023). Social innovation that connects people to coasts in the Anthropocene. Cambridge Prisms: Coastal Futures, 1, Artikel e24. https://doi.org/10.1017/cft.2023.12

Vancouver

Celliers L, Mañez Costa M, Rölfer L, Aswani S, Ferse S. Social innovation that connects people to coasts in the Anthropocene. Cambridge Prisms: Coastal Futures. 2023 Mär 27;1:e24. doi: 10.1017/cft.2023.12

Bibtex

@article{535c6e5e94dc4fcaabd93d1e0329dd09,
title = "Social innovation that connects people to coasts in the Anthropocene",
abstract = "Post-industrial society is driving global environmental change, which is a challenge for all generations, current and future. The Anthropocene is the geological epoch in which humans dominate and it is rooted in the past, present, and future. Future sustainability is building on the momentum of the fundamental importance of studying human dynamics and governance of coupled social and ecological systems. In the Anthropocene, social innovation may play a critical role in achieving new pathways to sustainability. This conventional narrative review uses a qualitative analysis anchored in the Grounded Theory Method and a systematic collection and analysis of papers to identify broad types of social innovations. Scientific journal articles published since 2018 were prioritised for inclusion. The six types of social innovation proposed are (a) authentic engagement; (b) artful and engaging communication; (c) urging and compelling change; (d) governance for social-ecological systems; (e) anticipation in governance; and (f) lived experiences and values. The six innovations proposed in this paper can be embedded within, and form part of, social action using a science-society compact for the sustainable development of coasts in the Anthropocene.",
keywords = "Anthropocene, Coasts, Future, Social innovation, Sustainability, Environmental Governance, Environmental planning",
author = "Louis Celliers and {Ma{\~n}ez Costa}, Mar{\'i}a and Lena R{\"o}lfer and Shankar Aswani and Sebastian Ferse",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press.",
year = "2023",
month = mar,
day = "27",
doi = "10.1017/cft.2023.12",
language = "English",
volume = "1",
journal = "Cambridge Prisms: Coastal Futures",
issn = "2754-7205",
publisher = "Cambridge University Press",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Social innovation that connects people to coasts in the Anthropocene

AU - Celliers, Louis

AU - Mañez Costa, María

AU - Rölfer, Lena

AU - Aswani, Shankar

AU - Ferse, Sebastian

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press.

PY - 2023/3/27

Y1 - 2023/3/27

N2 - Post-industrial society is driving global environmental change, which is a challenge for all generations, current and future. The Anthropocene is the geological epoch in which humans dominate and it is rooted in the past, present, and future. Future sustainability is building on the momentum of the fundamental importance of studying human dynamics and governance of coupled social and ecological systems. In the Anthropocene, social innovation may play a critical role in achieving new pathways to sustainability. This conventional narrative review uses a qualitative analysis anchored in the Grounded Theory Method and a systematic collection and analysis of papers to identify broad types of social innovations. Scientific journal articles published since 2018 were prioritised for inclusion. The six types of social innovation proposed are (a) authentic engagement; (b) artful and engaging communication; (c) urging and compelling change; (d) governance for social-ecological systems; (e) anticipation in governance; and (f) lived experiences and values. The six innovations proposed in this paper can be embedded within, and form part of, social action using a science-society compact for the sustainable development of coasts in the Anthropocene.

AB - Post-industrial society is driving global environmental change, which is a challenge for all generations, current and future. The Anthropocene is the geological epoch in which humans dominate and it is rooted in the past, present, and future. Future sustainability is building on the momentum of the fundamental importance of studying human dynamics and governance of coupled social and ecological systems. In the Anthropocene, social innovation may play a critical role in achieving new pathways to sustainability. This conventional narrative review uses a qualitative analysis anchored in the Grounded Theory Method and a systematic collection and analysis of papers to identify broad types of social innovations. Scientific journal articles published since 2018 were prioritised for inclusion. The six types of social innovation proposed are (a) authentic engagement; (b) artful and engaging communication; (c) urging and compelling change; (d) governance for social-ecological systems; (e) anticipation in governance; and (f) lived experiences and values. The six innovations proposed in this paper can be embedded within, and form part of, social action using a science-society compact for the sustainable development of coasts in the Anthropocene.

KW - Anthropocene

KW - Coasts

KW - Future

KW - Social innovation

KW - Sustainability

KW - Environmental Governance

KW - Environmental planning

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85184049968&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1017/cft.2023.12

DO - 10.1017/cft.2023.12

M3 - Scientific review articles

AN - SCOPUS:85184049968

VL - 1

JO - Cambridge Prisms: Coastal Futures

JF - Cambridge Prisms: Coastal Futures

SN - 2754-7205

M1 - e24

ER -

DOI