TY - JOUR
T1 - Social representations of governance for change towards sustainability
T2 - perspectives of sustainability advocates
AU - Fischer, Anke
AU - Spekkink, Wouter
AU - Polzin, Christine
AU - Díaz-Ayude, Alberto
AU - Brizi, Ambra
AU - Macsinga, Irina
PY - 2018
Y1 - 2018
N2 - There is a substantial body of literature on public understandings of large-scale ‘environmental’ phenomena such as climate change and resource degradation. At the same time, political science and economics analyse the governance arrangements to deal with such issues. These realms of research rarely meet: there has been little research into people’s understandings of the governance of environmental change. This study adds a psychological perspective to governance research by investigating social representations of governance that promotes societal change towards sustainability, and related practices. It examines data from qualitative interviews with sustainability-interested people in seven European countries (n = 105). The analysis identified building blocks of representations suitable as an analytical framework for future research on governance representations. The diversity of their content reflected a range of pathways to societal change. Representations often seemed to have a creative function as a guiding vision for individuals’ own practices, but their wider transformative potential was constrained.
AB - There is a substantial body of literature on public understandings of large-scale ‘environmental’ phenomena such as climate change and resource degradation. At the same time, political science and economics analyse the governance arrangements to deal with such issues. These realms of research rarely meet: there has been little research into people’s understandings of the governance of environmental change. This study adds a psychological perspective to governance research by investigating social representations of governance that promotes societal change towards sustainability, and related practices. It examines data from qualitative interviews with sustainability-interested people in seven European countries (n = 105). The analysis identified building blocks of representations suitable as an analytical framework for future research on governance representations. The diversity of their content reflected a range of pathways to societal change. Representations often seemed to have a creative function as a guiding vision for individuals’ own practices, but their wider transformative potential was constrained.
KW - Community initiatives
KW - environmental governance
KW - grassroots
KW - practices
KW - social psychology
KW - transition management
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85043451704&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:dfe04787-bb79-4fe1-9645-3959034b368c
U2 - 10.1080/09644016.2018.1448559
DO - 10.1080/09644016.2018.1448559
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85043451704
SP - 1
EP - 23
JO - Global Environmental Politics
JF - Global Environmental Politics
SN - 1526-3800
ER -