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TRANSFORMING IMAGINATIONS? Multiple dimensionalities and temporalities in transformations to sustainability

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TRANSFORMING IMAGINATIONS? Multiple dimensionalities and temporalities in transformations to sustainability

  1. 1. Governance of Sociotechnical Transformations Project TRANSFORMING IMAGINATIONS? Multiple dimensionalities and temporalities in transformations to sustainability – emerging ideas and evidence on sociotechnical imaginaries of energy and urban change in Kenya, Germany and the UK short presentation by Andy Stirling also for Joel Onyango, Rose Cairns & Phil Johnstone presentation to 2021 conference of the Transformations to Sustainability Programme 18th June 2021 - see background paper here
  2. 2. The ‘Governance of Sociotechnical Transitions’ Project About exploring practical salience in struggles towards sustainability, of complex ‘dimensionalities’ and ‘temporalities’ in associated social & political transformations – viewed thro’ the sociotechnical imaginaries that constitute them (and by means of which they are interrogated) This presentation is about just one strand of this work – in UK & Kenya
  3. 3. Dimensionality: recognise ‘polythetic’ imaginaries & transformations A ‘Q-method’ study of urban transformations in Nairobi, Kenya imaginaries of transformation are multiple, subjective and partly in eyes of researchers complex interplay of imaginaries, with global, pan- African and Chinese elements no necessary one-to-one mappings of imaginaries and settings, including among within narrow policy elites Results still being analysed Polythetic research can resolve more complex relations
  4. 4. Temporality: recognise diverse patterns in ‘embedded time’ Polythetic research allows complex processes to be resolved German and UK ‘energy transitions’ are not ‘monotonic’ (as conventionally imagined), but show nonmonotonic patterns Elite UK policy imaginations of ‘energy transition’ are not singular and nation-specific, but multiple and instrumental: ‘nuclear renaissance’ contrasts with ‘nuclear drumbeat’ In UK, a key driving factor is not energy at all, but military
  5. 5. grand challenges nudge ‘the’ transition geoengineering ‘the’ anthropocene planetary management ‘the’ nexus Complex temporalities & dimensionalities: why do they matter? mainstream global policy and research imaginations of ‘sustainability transitions’ - hubristic - fear driven - singular - hierarchical - superiorist - calculative - growth-focused - controlling
  6. 6. - humility (not hubris) about what is known - hope (not fear) about what is possible - diversity (not singularity) in what counts - mutualism (not hierarchy) in organising - equality (not superiority) in driving values - precaution (not calculation) against vulnerability - flourishing (not growth) as guiding aims - care (not control) as means to realisation alternative imaginations of how ‘liberatory transformations’ have always been struggled for Complex temporalities & dimensionalities: why do they matter?

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