Transformative Emergence: Research Challenges for Enabling Social-ecological Tipping Points Toward Regional Sustainability Transformations

Av J. David Tàbara, Diana Mangalagiu, Bohumil Frantál, Johan Lilliestam, Jenny Lieu, Siri Veland, Franziska Mey, Raphaela Maier, Mauro Sarrica, Antoine Mandel, Amanda Martinez-Reyes

A crucial task to accelerate global decarbonisation is to understand how to enable fast, equitable, low-carbon transformations in Coal and Carbon Intensive Regions (CCIRs). In this early literature review we underlined the relevance of the boundary concept of social-ecological tipping points (SETPs) and showed that the research and policy usage of SETPs applied to accelerate structural regional sustainability transformations faces three key challenges: (I) integrating theoretical and empirical contributions from diverse social and ecological sciences, together with complexity theory (II) designing open transdisciplinary assessment processes able to represent multiple qualities of systemic change and enable regionally situated transformative capacities, and (III) moving away from one-directional metaphors of social change, or static or homogeneous conceptions of individual agency and single equilibrium in energy transitions; and instead, focus on understanding the conditions and capacities for the emergence of systemic transformations and regenerative processes across multiple levels and forms of agency. We refer to these complex and place-situated processes as learning to enable regional transformative emergence.

Til publikasjon:
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-50762-5_16
https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3168952

Forrige
Forrige

Tipping Away from Coal?: Exploring Narratives and Tipping Dynamics in the Phaseout of Coal on Svalbard

Neste
Neste

Veien til bærekraftig mobilitet og attraktive transporttjenester i Lofoten. Utredning av tilbud og behov for mobilitets- og transportløsninger i Lofoten