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Toward a post-carbon society : supporting agency for collaborative climate action

Osberg, Gustav LU orcid ; Islar, Mine LU and Wamsler, Christine LU (2024) In Ecology and Society 29(1).
Abstract

Current post-carbon transition trajectories are primarily focused on external solutions, while citizens’ inner lives and roles in collective transformation and system change processes are largely overlooked. To address this gap, this study aims to explore the potential role of citizens as active agents of change. Specifically, it examines how citizens perceive and address climate change, the factors that can empower and motivate them to act, and how they imagine future transformation pathways and their own role within them. Based on a combined SenseMaker and Grounded Theory methodology, we explore citizens’ perspectives and discuss their implications for improving current approaches and discourses, such as lifestyle environmentalism and... (More)

Current post-carbon transition trajectories are primarily focused on external solutions, while citizens’ inner lives and roles in collective transformation and system change processes are largely overlooked. To address this gap, this study aims to explore the potential role of citizens as active agents of change. Specifically, it examines how citizens perceive and address climate change, the factors that can empower and motivate them to act, and how they imagine future transformation pathways and their own role within them. Based on a combined SenseMaker and Grounded Theory methodology, we explore citizens’ perspectives and discuss their implications for improving current approaches and discourses, such as lifestyle environmentalism and post-growth. Our findings provide important insights into the interplay between people’s motivation, sense of agency, and social paradigms, with direct implications for policy and practice. They show that the materialistic growth paradigm under which most people act does not support motivation and engagement in sustainability transformations. Secondly, although intrinsic motivation, along with values such as care and community, increase engagement and transformation, they are seldom reflected in current policy approaches and discourses. Thirdly, a sense of agency is key for lasting individual and collective engagement. Put together, the results indicate that empowering individual and collective agency requires challenging current societal and systemic values that lie at the root of today’s crises. Supporting conditions that allow the emergence of new social paradigms through targeted actions at individual, collective, and system levels is thus crucial to tackling climate change and meeting policy targets.

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Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
climate governance, degrowth, inner transformation, inner transition, paradigms, participation, political agency, sustainability transitions, worldviews
in
Ecology and Society
volume
29
issue
1
article number
16
publisher
The Resilience Alliance
external identifiers
  • scopus:85185913060
ISSN
1708-3087
DOI
10.5751/ES-14619-290116
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
4d13d686-50ff-4c46-97a3-530d091f5932
date added to LUP
2024-03-22 14:42:01
date last changed
2024-03-22 14:42:51
@article{4d13d686-50ff-4c46-97a3-530d091f5932,
  abstract     = {{<p>Current post-carbon transition trajectories are primarily focused on external solutions, while citizens’ inner lives and roles in collective transformation and system change processes are largely overlooked. To address this gap, this study aims to explore the potential role of citizens as active agents of change. Specifically, it examines how citizens perceive and address climate change, the factors that can empower and motivate them to act, and how they imagine future transformation pathways and their own role within them. Based on a combined SenseMaker and Grounded Theory methodology, we explore citizens’ perspectives and discuss their implications for improving current approaches and discourses, such as lifestyle environmentalism and post-growth. Our findings provide important insights into the interplay between people’s motivation, sense of agency, and social paradigms, with direct implications for policy and practice. They show that the materialistic growth paradigm under which most people act does not support motivation and engagement in sustainability transformations. Secondly, although intrinsic motivation, along with values such as care and community, increase engagement and transformation, they are seldom reflected in current policy approaches and discourses. Thirdly, a sense of agency is key for lasting individual and collective engagement. Put together, the results indicate that empowering individual and collective agency requires challenging current societal and systemic values that lie at the root of today’s crises. Supporting conditions that allow the emergence of new social paradigms through targeted actions at individual, collective, and system levels is thus crucial to tackling climate change and meeting policy targets.</p>}},
  author       = {{Osberg, Gustav and Islar, Mine and Wamsler, Christine}},
  issn         = {{1708-3087}},
  keywords     = {{climate governance; degrowth; inner transformation; inner transition; paradigms; participation; political agency; sustainability transitions; worldviews}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{1}},
  publisher    = {{The Resilience Alliance}},
  series       = {{Ecology and Society}},
  title        = {{Toward a post-carbon society : supporting agency for collaborative climate action}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.5751/ES-14619-290116}},
  doi          = {{10.5751/ES-14619-290116}},
  volume       = {{29}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}