Sustainability transitions in consumption-production systems

Author:

Geels Frank W.1ORCID,Kern Florian2ORCID,Clark William C.3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Manchester Institute of Innovation Research, Alliance Manchester Business School, The University of Manchester, Manchester M15 6PB, United Kingdom

2. Institute for Ecological Economy Research, Berlin 10785, Germany

3. Harvard Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138

Abstract

The need for faster and deeper transitions toward more sustainable development pathways is now widely recognized. How to meet that need has been at the center of a growing body of academic research and real-world policy implementation. This paper presents our perspective on some of the most powerful insights that have emerged from this ongoing work. In particular, we highlight insights on how sustainability transitions can be usefully conceptualized, how they come about and evolve, and how they can be shaped and guided through deliberate policy interventions. Throughout the paper, we also highlight some of the many how questions that remain unresolved and on which progress would be especially helpful for the pursuit of sustainable development. Our approach to these “how” questions on sustainability transitions draws on two strands of solution-driven research and policy advice: one emerging from studies of how human societies interact with nature and the other emerging from studies of how those societies interact with their technologies. Consumption-production systems have been a focus of extensive work in both strands. To help build bridges between them, we recently brought together a cross-section of relevant scholars for a PNAS Special Feature on “Sustainability transitions in consumption-production systems.” Their contributions are summarized in a companion paper we have written to introduce the Special Feature [F. W. Geels, F. Kern, W. C. Clark, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A . (2023)]. We draw on that work in the Perspective we present here as well as our reading of the relevant literatures.

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference88 articles.

1. InterAcademy Partnership (IAP), IAP Statement on Transition to Sustainability (IAP, 2000).

2. J. E. Stiglitz, J.-P. Fitoussi, M. Durand, Measuring What Counts: The Global Movement for Well-Being (New Press, 2019).

3. United Nations, The Sustainable Development Goals Report 2023: Special edition (United Nations, 2023).

4. Our future in the Anthropocene biosphere

5. An agenda for sustainability transitions research: State of the art and future directions

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