Content area

Abstract

Issue Title: New Directions in Sustainability Science

In sustainability science, the tension between more descriptive-analytical and more process-oriented approaches is receiving increasing attention. The latter entails a number of roles for researchers, which have largely been neglected in the literature. Based on the rich tradition of action research and on a specific process-oriented approach to sustainability transitions (transition management), we establish an in-depth understanding of the activities and roles of researchers. This is done by specifying ideal-type roles that researchers take when dealing with key issues in creating and maintaining space for societal learning--a core activity in process-oriented approaches. These roles are change agent, knowledge broker, reflective scientist, self-reflexive scientist and process facilitator. To better understand these ideal-type roles, we use them as a heuristic to explore a case of transition management in Rotterdam. In the analysis, we discuss the implications of this set of ideal-type roles for the self-reflexivity of researchers, role conflicts and potentials, and for the changing role of the researcher and of science in general.

Details

Title
Action, research and participation: roles of researchers in sustainability transitions
Author
Wittmayer, Julia M; Schäpke, Niko
Pages
483-496
Publication year
2014
Publication date
Oct 2014
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
18624065
e-ISSN
18624057
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1778714240
Copyright
Springer Japan 2014