Towards a thick understanding of sustainability transitions - Linking transition management, capabilities and social practices
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In: Ecological Economics, Vol. 109, 01.01.2015, p. 211-221.
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Towards a thick understanding of sustainability transitions - Linking transition management, capabilities and social practices
AU - Rauschmayer, Felix
AU - Bauler, Tom
AU - Schäpke, Niko
PY - 2015/1/1
Y1 - 2015/1/1
N2 - Scientific activities which are targeted to engage and enact on societal problems - and governance of sustainability transition itself is one such activity - are necessarily prescriptive endeavours, have to recognize the fundamental normativity of sustainable development, need to be based on a thick description of the issues to change, and should embrace the multi-dimensional importance that individuals take in societal change. Societally relevant research on and for sustainability transitions therefore has to produce systems, target, as well as transformative knowledge. The challenges of sustainability transitions require furthermore that the individual and the societal levels have to be linked as to relate individual agency and structural change within the different knowledge types. Taking transition management as a rather obvious starting point to enrich the concept of sustainability transitions, the paper elaborates that its conceptual basis is too thin to address the first two types of knowledge. In its current elaborations, transition management does furthermore not cover individual agency as potential driver of transitions. We therefore suggest complementing transition management approaches with the more descriptive practice theory and the more normative and individualistic capability approach. We suggest a heuristic combination that places individuals back into the study of sustainability transitions.
AB - Scientific activities which are targeted to engage and enact on societal problems - and governance of sustainability transition itself is one such activity - are necessarily prescriptive endeavours, have to recognize the fundamental normativity of sustainable development, need to be based on a thick description of the issues to change, and should embrace the multi-dimensional importance that individuals take in societal change. Societally relevant research on and for sustainability transitions therefore has to produce systems, target, as well as transformative knowledge. The challenges of sustainability transitions require furthermore that the individual and the societal levels have to be linked as to relate individual agency and structural change within the different knowledge types. Taking transition management as a rather obvious starting point to enrich the concept of sustainability transitions, the paper elaborates that its conceptual basis is too thin to address the first two types of knowledge. In its current elaborations, transition management does furthermore not cover individual agency as potential driver of transitions. We therefore suggest complementing transition management approaches with the more descriptive practice theory and the more normative and individualistic capability approach. We suggest a heuristic combination that places individuals back into the study of sustainability transitions.
KW - Sustainability Science
KW - conceptual framework
KW - governance approach
KW - knowledge; sustainability
KW - Sustainable development
KW - theoretical study
KW - management practice
KW - transition management
KW - capability approach
KW - practice theory
KW - transdisciplinarity
KW - sustainability transitions
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84949117714&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.ecolecon.2014.11.018
DO - 10.1016/j.ecolecon.2014.11.018
M3 - Journal articles
VL - 109
SP - 211
EP - 221
JO - Ecological Economics
JF - Ecological Economics
SN - 0921-8009
ER -