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Provedor de dados:  Ecology and Society
País:  Canada
Título:  Conceptualizing, Observing, and Influencing Social–Ecological Transitions
Autores:  Fischer-Kowalski, Marina; Institute of Social Ecology, Alpen Adria University; marina.fischer-kowalski@uni-klu.ac.at
Rotmans, Jan; DRIFT (Drift Research Institute for Transitions) Erasmus University, Rotterdam, The Netherlands; rotmans@fsw.eur.nl
Data:  2009-07-22
Ano:  2009
Palavras-chave:  Social metabolism
Sociometabolic regimes
Transition management
Resumo:  This article creates a meeting ground between two distinct and fairly elaborate research traditions dealing with social “transitions”: the Dutch societal transitions management approach, and the Viennese sociometabolic transitions approach. Sharing a similar understanding of sustainability transitions—namely as major transformational changes of system characteristics—and a background epistemology of complex systems, autopoeisis, and evolutionary mechanisms, they address the subject from different angles: one approach asks how transformative changes happen and what they look like, and the other approach tries answer the question of how to bring them about. The Viennese approach is almost exclusively analytical and deals with a macro (“landscape”) level of human history with a time scale of decades to centuries; the Dutch approach is based on intervention experiences and deals with a shorter time frame (decades) of micro–meso–macro levels of industrial societies. From both their respective angles, they contribute to some of the key questions of sustainability research, namely: how can a transformative change toward sustainability be distinguished from other types of social change? By which mechanisms can obstacles, path dependencies, and adverse interests be overcome? And what are the key persistent problems that call for such a transition?
Tipo:  Peer-Reviewed Synthesis
Idioma:  Inglês
Identificador:  vol14/iss2/art3/
Editor:  Resilience Alliance
Formato:  text/html application/pdf
Fonte:  Ecology and Society; Vol. 14, No. 2 (2009)
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