Authors
Andrea Joslyn Nightingale, Siri Eriksen, Marcus Taylor, Timothy Forsyth, Mark Pelling, Andrew Newsham, Emily Boyd, Katrina Brown, Blane Harvey, Lindsey Jones, Rachel Bezner Kerr, Lyla Mehta, Lars Otto Naess, David Ockwell, Ian Scoones, Thomas Tanner, Stephen Whitfield
Publication date
2020/4/20
Source
Climate and development
Volume
12
Issue
4
Pages
343-352
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Description
Climate change research is at an impasse. The transformation of economies and everyday practices is more urgent, and yet appears ever more daunting as attempts at behaviour change, regulations, and global agreements confront material and social-political infrastructures that support the status quo. Effective action requires new ways of conceptualizing society, climate and environment and yet current research struggles to break free of established categories. In response, this contribution revisits important insights from the social sciences and humanities on the co-production of political economies, cultures, societies and biophysical relations and shows the possibilities for ontological pluralism to open up for new imaginations. Its intention is to help generate a different framing of socionatural change that goes beyond the current science-policy-behavioural change pathway. It puts forward several moments of …
Total citations
201920202021202220232024953961119266
Scholar articles
AJ Nightingale, S Eriksen, M Taylor, T Forsyth… - Climate and development, 2020
AJ Nightingale, S Eriksen, M Taylor, T Forsyth… - Climate and Development, 2019