Many pathways toward sustainability: not conflict but co-learning between transition narratives
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In: Sustainability Science, Vol. 12, No. 3, 01.05.2017, p. 393-407.
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Many pathways toward sustainability
T2 - not conflict but co-learning between transition narratives
AU - Lüderitz, Christopher
AU - Abson, David J.
AU - Audet, René
AU - Lang, Daniel J.
PY - 2017/5/1
Y1 - 2017/5/1
N2 - Sustainability transitions aim to comprehensively address key challenges of today’s societies through harmonizing ecological integrity and social viability. During the last decades, increasing attention has focused on the conceptual development and identification of trajectories that navigate societies toward sustainability. While a broad agreement exists with regard to the need for mainstreaming sustainability into the core of decision-making and everyday practices, different transition pathway narratives are advocated to foster urgently needed structural and societal changes. In this article, we describe four archetypes of present transition narratives, examining the system properties (from underpinning intent to mechanistic parameters) that each narrative seeks to transform. We review the articulated critiques of, and provide exemplary case studies for, each narrative. The four transition narratives are (1) the green economy, (2) low-carbon transformation, (3) ecotopian solutions and (4) transition movements. Based on our analysis, we argue that despite the assumption that these narratives represent competing pathways, there is considerable complementarity between them regarding where in a given system they seek to intervene. An integrative approach could potentially help bridge these intervention types and connect fragmented actors at multiple levels and across multiple phases of transition processes. Effectively mainstreaming sustainability will ultimately require sustainability scientists to navigate between, and learn from, multiple transition narratives.
AB - Sustainability transitions aim to comprehensively address key challenges of today’s societies through harmonizing ecological integrity and social viability. During the last decades, increasing attention has focused on the conceptual development and identification of trajectories that navigate societies toward sustainability. While a broad agreement exists with regard to the need for mainstreaming sustainability into the core of decision-making and everyday practices, different transition pathway narratives are advocated to foster urgently needed structural and societal changes. In this article, we describe four archetypes of present transition narratives, examining the system properties (from underpinning intent to mechanistic parameters) that each narrative seeks to transform. We review the articulated critiques of, and provide exemplary case studies for, each narrative. The four transition narratives are (1) the green economy, (2) low-carbon transformation, (3) ecotopian solutions and (4) transition movements. Based on our analysis, we argue that despite the assumption that these narratives represent competing pathways, there is considerable complementarity between them regarding where in a given system they seek to intervene. An integrative approach could potentially help bridge these intervention types and connect fragmented actors at multiple levels and across multiple phases of transition processes. Effectively mainstreaming sustainability will ultimately require sustainability scientists to navigate between, and learn from, multiple transition narratives.
KW - Sustainability Science
KW - Leverage points
KW - Meta-narratives
KW - Narrative analysis
KW - Sustainability mainstreaming
KW - Sustainability science
KW - Sustainability transformation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84996879334&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s11625-016-0414-0
DO - 10.1007/s11625-016-0414-0
M3 - Journal articles
AN - SCOPUS:84996879334
VL - 12
SP - 393
EP - 407
JO - Sustainability Science
JF - Sustainability Science
SN - 1862-4065
IS - 3
ER -