Industrial societies are currently evolving along a fundamentally unsustainable trajectory, contributing to climate change, resource depletion and loss of biodiversity. A recent Deep Transitions framework (Schot and Kanger, 2018; Kanger and Schot, 2019) argues that this trajectory has been built up through the First Deep Transition: a 250-year co-evolution of multiple socio-technical systems. However, to date the Deep Transitions framework has completely neglected the spatial dimension of this process. This makes it unable to explain (1) how socio-technical systems emerge in, gravitate towards, become linked in and disperse from certain locations; (2) how global constraints condition actors' responses in specific locations and how these res...
The multi-level perspective (MLP) is a widely-adopted framework for analysing stability, change and ...
The concept of spatial resilience has brought a new focus on the influence of multi-scale processes ...
The multi-level perspective (MLP) is a widely adopted framework for analysing stability, change and ...
The contemporary world is confronted by a double challenge: environmental degradation and social ine...
In the past decade, the literature on transitions toward sustainable socio-technical systems has mad...
The contemporary world is confronted by a double challenge: environmental degradation and social ine...
Research ArticleIndustrial society has not only led to high levels of wealth and welfare in the West...
In the past decade, the literature on transitions towards sustainable socio-technical systems has ma...
The spatial dimension of sustainability transitions is central to understanding how systems change, ...
Socio-technical transitions towards more sustainable modes of production and consumption are receivi...
Industrial society has not only led to high levels of wealth and welfare in the Western world, but a...
Schot and Kanger (2016) argue that the shift from an unsustainable to a sustainable society requires...
The multi-level perspective (MLP) is a widely-adopted framework for analysing stability, change and ...
The concept of spatial resilience has brought a new focus on the influence of multi-scale processes ...
The multi-level perspective (MLP) is a widely adopted framework for analysing stability, change and ...
The contemporary world is confronted by a double challenge: environmental degradation and social ine...
In the past decade, the literature on transitions toward sustainable socio-technical systems has mad...
The contemporary world is confronted by a double challenge: environmental degradation and social ine...
Research ArticleIndustrial society has not only led to high levels of wealth and welfare in the West...
In the past decade, the literature on transitions towards sustainable socio-technical systems has ma...
The spatial dimension of sustainability transitions is central to understanding how systems change, ...
Socio-technical transitions towards more sustainable modes of production and consumption are receivi...
Industrial society has not only led to high levels of wealth and welfare in the Western world, but a...
Schot and Kanger (2016) argue that the shift from an unsustainable to a sustainable society requires...
The multi-level perspective (MLP) is a widely-adopted framework for analysing stability, change and ...
The concept of spatial resilience has brought a new focus on the influence of multi-scale processes ...
The multi-level perspective (MLP) is a widely adopted framework for analysing stability, change and ...