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Deliberating a Sustainable Welfare-Work Nexus

Lindellee, Jayeon LU ; Koch, Max LU and Alkan Olsson, Johanna LU (2022) Swedish Climate Symposium 2022
Abstract
Very few countries have managed to decouple economic growth from greenhouse gas emissions in absolute terms and where this was achieved at rates too slow to meet the climate targets of the Paris agreement. To do so, technological solutions would need to be combined with sufficiency-oriented policies in a post growth context. Contributing to such a policy strategy, this paper explores the potentials for democratically formulating and establishing a sustainable welfare-work nexus. Theoretically, it employs ‘sustainable welfare’ as an attempt to understand welfare and wellbeing within planetary limits. Empirically, it presents qualitative and quantitative data from an ongoing research project in Sweden. The paper first sketches the... (More)
Very few countries have managed to decouple economic growth from greenhouse gas emissions in absolute terms and where this was achieved at rates too slow to meet the climate targets of the Paris agreement. To do so, technological solutions would need to be combined with sufficiency-oriented policies in a post growth context. Contributing to such a policy strategy, this paper explores the potentials for democratically formulating and establishing a sustainable welfare-work nexus. Theoretically, it employs ‘sustainable welfare’ as an attempt to understand welfare and wellbeing within planetary limits. Empirically, it presents qualitative and quantitative data from an ongoing research project in Sweden. The paper first sketches the welfarework
nexus as developed in the post-war circumstances in Western Europe,
highlighting that this model was at no point in time ecologically generalizable to the rest of the world, and briefly reviews the hitherto debate on sustainable welfare. The empirical analyses start with qualitative data from eleven deliberative forums on sustainable needs satisfaction with emphasis on policies targeted at respecting the upper and lower boundaries of a ‘safe operational space’ within which needs satisfaction may be established within planetary limits. The qualitative data are then triangulated with quantitative data from a representative survey, which was constructed based on the policy suggestions from the forums, hence allowing for an exploration of their popularity in the Swedish population as a whole. (Less)
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author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to conference
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Climate emergency, welfare, work, degrowth, postgrowth, deliberation
conference name
Swedish Climate Symposium 2022
conference location
Norrköping, Sweden
conference dates
2022-05-16 - 2022-05-18
project
Sustainable Welfare for a New Generation of Social Policy
Postgrowth Welfare Systems
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
f08eee8f-dfe7-4c4a-a6cd-162df655afe7
date added to LUP
2022-05-11 13:01:00
date last changed
2022-05-12 09:13:42
@misc{f08eee8f-dfe7-4c4a-a6cd-162df655afe7,
  abstract     = {{Very few countries have managed to decouple economic growth from greenhouse gas emissions in absolute terms and where this was achieved at rates too slow to meet the climate targets of the Paris agreement. To do so, technological solutions would need to be combined with sufficiency-oriented policies in a post growth context. Contributing to such a policy strategy, this paper explores the potentials for democratically formulating and establishing a sustainable welfare-work nexus. Theoretically, it employs ‘sustainable welfare’ as an attempt to understand welfare and wellbeing within planetary limits. Empirically, it presents qualitative and quantitative data from an ongoing research project in Sweden. The paper first sketches the welfarework<br/>nexus as developed in the post-war circumstances in Western Europe,<br/>highlighting that this model was at no point in time ecologically generalizable to the rest of the world, and briefly reviews the hitherto debate on sustainable welfare. The empirical analyses start with qualitative data from eleven deliberative forums on sustainable needs satisfaction with emphasis on policies targeted at respecting the upper and lower boundaries of a ‘safe operational space’ within which needs satisfaction may be established within planetary limits. The qualitative data are then triangulated with quantitative data from a representative survey, which was constructed based on the policy suggestions from the forums, hence allowing for an exploration of their popularity in the Swedish population as a whole.}},
  author       = {{Lindellee, Jayeon and Koch, Max and Alkan Olsson, Johanna}},
  keywords     = {{Climate emergency; welfare; work; degrowth; postgrowth; deliberation}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{05}},
  title        = {{Deliberating a Sustainable Welfare-Work Nexus}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}