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Structural barriers to sufficiency: the contribution of research on elites

Koch, Max LU orcid ; Emilsson, Kajsa LU orcid ; Lee, Jayeon and Johansson, Håkan LU (2024) In Buildings and Cities 5(1). p.268-282
Abstract
‘Sufficiency’ has become a key term within sustainability science. The satisfaction of basic human needs for all and for multiple generations is only possible if coupled to the implementation of ecological ceilings that prevent wealthy groups from disproportionate production and consumption patterns and energy use. While much sufficiency research has focused on the poor and how to provide corresponding social floors (i.e. an adequate level of sufficiency), this conceptual paper theorises structural barriers to implementing ecological ceilings for production and consumption by considering research on elites. The argument is illustrated with examples from urban spaces that are increasingly structured to accommodate the preferences of... (More)
‘Sufficiency’ has become a key term within sustainability science. The satisfaction of basic human needs for all and for multiple generations is only possible if coupled to the implementation of ecological ceilings that prevent wealthy groups from disproportionate production and consumption patterns and energy use. While much sufficiency research has focused on the poor and how to provide corresponding social floors (i.e. an adequate level of sufficiency), this conceptual paper theorises structural barriers to implementing ecological ceilings for production and consumption by considering research on elites. The argument is illustrated with examples from urban spaces that are increasingly structured to accommodate the preferences of economic elites. A better scholarly understanding of the structural barriers to sufficiency dissemination can be facilitated through a systematic account of the political, social and symbolic strategies deployed by elites to accumulate and legitimise power. Conversely, a consideration of sufficiency principles would also be beneficial for research on elites, which has so far focused on social inequality and sidelined the ecological crisis. The discussion highlights how research on sufficiency and elite consumption may interact to be mutually beneficial. A research agenda is proposed to understand economic elites as barriers to the dissemination of sufficiency principles. (Less)
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author
; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
elites, sufficiency, social-ecological transformation
in
Buildings and Cities
volume
5
issue
1
pages
268 - 282
publisher
Web Portal Ubiquity Press
external identifiers
  • scopus:85201569994
ISSN
2632-6655
DOI
10.5334/bc.439
project
Economic Elites in the Climate Change Transformation: Practices, justifications and regulations of unsustainable lifestyles in Sweden
Regulating the Polluter Elite: Exploring policy measures limiting carbon footprints of the rich
Postgrowth Welfare Systems
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
cc80ee5c-648c-40c0-84b1-c061d9f55d62
alternative location
https://journal-buildingscities.org/articles/10.5334/bc.439
date added to LUP
2024-07-19 18:54:44
date last changed
2025-04-04 13:51:22
@article{cc80ee5c-648c-40c0-84b1-c061d9f55d62,
  abstract     = {{‘Sufficiency’ has become a key term within sustainability science. The satisfaction of basic human needs for all and for multiple generations is only possible if coupled to the implementation of ecological ceilings that prevent wealthy groups from disproportionate production and consumption patterns and energy use. While much sufficiency research has focused on the poor and how to provide corresponding social floors (i.e. an adequate level of sufficiency), this conceptual paper theorises structural barriers to implementing ecological ceilings for production and consumption by considering research on elites. The argument is illustrated with examples from urban spaces that are increasingly structured to accommodate the preferences of economic elites. A better scholarly understanding of the structural barriers to sufficiency dissemination can be facilitated through a systematic account of the political, social and symbolic strategies deployed by elites to accumulate and legitimise power. Conversely, a consideration of sufficiency principles would also be beneficial for research on elites, which has so far focused on social inequality and sidelined the ecological crisis. The discussion highlights how research on sufficiency and elite consumption may interact to be mutually beneficial. A research agenda is proposed to understand economic elites as barriers to the dissemination of sufficiency principles.}},
  author       = {{Koch, Max and Emilsson, Kajsa and Lee, Jayeon and Johansson, Håkan}},
  issn         = {{2632-6655}},
  keywords     = {{elites; sufficiency; social-ecological transformation}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{07}},
  number       = {{1}},
  pages        = {{268--282}},
  publisher    = {{Web Portal Ubiquity Press}},
  series       = {{Buildings and Cities}},
  title        = {{Structural barriers to sufficiency: the contribution of research on elites}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.5334/bc.439}},
  doi          = {{10.5334/bc.439}},
  volume       = {{5}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}