Notes on Contributors
In: IDS bulletin: transforming development knowledge, Band 48, Heft 4
ISSN: 1759-5436
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In: IDS bulletin: transforming development knowledge, Band 48, Heft 4
ISSN: 1759-5436
In: IDS bulletin: transforming development knowledge, Band 48, Heft 4
ISSN: 1759-5436
In: IDS bulletin: transforming development knowledge, Band 48, Heft 4
ISSN: 1759-5436
In: IDS bulletin: transforming development knowledge, Band 48, Heft 4
ISSN: 1759-5436
In: IDS bulletin: transforming development knowledge, Band 48, Heft 4, S. 1-14
ISSN: 1759-5436
World Affairs Online
This paper provides some of the conceptual and methodological underpinnings being developed in the ongoing TAPESTRY project which is part of the Transformations to Sustainability (T2S) Programme. We debate how the notion of transformation may be conceptualized from 'below' in marginal environments that are especially marked by high levels of climate-related uncertainties. We propose the notion of transformation as praxis — where the focus is on bottom-up change, identities, wellbeing and the recovery of agency by marginalized people and explore how 'patches' and the 'marginal' offer critical conceptual templates to examine whether and how systemic transformative changes are being assembled and effected on the ground by hybrid and transformative alliances. The article concludes by discussing potential challenges of such engagements, alongside pursuing a normative and political approach to T2S.
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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 inadvertent concealment in contemporary debates that stem directly from the way issues are framed and imagined in contemporary discourses. By placing values, normative commitments, and experiential and plural ways of knowing from around the world at the centre of climate knowledge, we confront climate change with contested politics and the everyday foundations of action rather than just data.
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