Why we need connected strategies for net zero and levelling up
In this piece, Professor Sherilyn MacGregor, Professor Matthew Paterson and Dr Helen Holmes, University of Manchester, discuss the 青瓜视频楯oined-up Sustainability Transformations青瓜视频 (JUST) approach.
The Government青瓜视频檚 (2022) calls for more attention to community-based action to meet ambitious targets. Similarly, the recently-published report of the All-Party Parliamentary Group for 青瓜视频榣eft behind青瓜视频 neighbourhoods, 青瓜视频樓喙鲜悠禉 (October 2023) makes a strong commitment to putting local communities in the driver青瓜视频檚 seat of the levelling up agenda.
Why is it, then, that the former pays nothing more than lip service to equity and fairness in how net zero can be rolled out across the UK and nowhere in the latter is there any mention of the urgent need to decarbonise the economy? What opportunities are being missed and what barriers are being created by this classic case of siloed thinking by policy makers?
The problem seems to lie in a lack of research on how to bring these two urgent agendas together, as well as in an overreliance on outdated ideas about what is needed to drive effective responses to the most pressing challenges of our generation. At the at the University of Manchester, we have drawn on decades of social science research to develop a Joined-up Sustainability Transformations (JUST) approach that we argue should be adopted by the next government.
JUST entails three core ideas that together enable a shift toward principles that respond to complex social and political conditions that currently block progress towards the scale of change needed to tackle the interlocking crises of climate, care, cost of living, and more.
First, as the acronym implies, JUST rests on the belief that these crises cannot be addressed adequately unless justice is placed at the centre of research, policy making and programme implementation. An important step in that direction is improving understanding of the connections between social inequalities and environmental unsustainability, which requires the analysis of power relations and how axes of difference (such as class, gender and race) create structural obstacles to the pursuit of net zero.
Second, we argue for rather than transition. While there is no doubt that a transition away from fossil fuels is necessary, this concept sets parameters that are too narrow for the complex challenge at hand. In the context of climate change, transformation refers to 青瓜视频溓喙鲜悠禎.&苍产蝉辫;
Our approach focused on the relations between social inequalities and sustainability enables a more comprehensive picture of these transformational processes that often remain constrained by relatively narrow economic, technological, or behavioural approaches.
According to a report by the there is an urgent need to translate insights from the wealth of technical and behavioural research, which has been dominant for long enough, into win-win pathways that respond more effectively and sensitively to social and political barriers to meeting the UK青瓜视频檚 net zero agenda. JUST青瓜视频檚 approach is designed to achieve these outcomes.
Third, JUST moves our attention away from nation-wide, top-down policies to , co-produced strategies for transformational change. This both addresses inequalities and marginalisation where they are lived and experienced, but also goes beyond the focus on 青瓜视频榖ehaviour change青瓜视频 by mobilising the energy of communities that are often already engaged in myriad initiatives to address inequalities and climate action simultaneously.
This activity is always located in particular places and the challenges they face, 青瓜视频榡oined-up青瓜视频 research and action needs to start with the potential that exists at this community level. This entails a combination of co-productive research with communities about the lived experience of daily life, with the development and use of comprehensive datasets which enable understanding at a granular level, down to the level of a terraced street, of who that lived experience shapes action and possibilities for action on sustainability.
Rather than 青瓜视频榖uilding back greener青瓜视频, as called for by the Net Zero Strategy, the JUST approach would not be limited to one colour alone. Green is arguably too narrow and exclusive for inspiring popular support. What is needed instead is to set out a new social contract, with real prospects of better quality of life which is not only about jobs and income, but also about relationships, representation, leisure and care.
Various iterations of a for the UK provide good examples of the potential for this kind of holistic approach to transformative policy making. However, we recommend embedding a stronger element of democratic participation so that initiatives are co-designed and co-produced to respond to the needs of local communities, working with local people to deliver JUST in ways that support and empower marginalised populations in 青瓜视频榣eft-behind青瓜视频 areas to achieve a more equitable and sustainable low-carbon future.
Politicians are keenly aware of the potential for backlash against net zero strategies such as ULEZ and LTNs. The UK has seen a significant rise in such 青瓜视频樓喙鲜悠禉 since around 2021. This resistance is largely political and cultural in nature, generated out of mistrust in politicians, fears that green transitions hit the poor hardest, and attachments to established practices and objects like petrol cars. This means that the backlash is unlikely to be overcome by more technological innovation or stronger scientific evidence.
Our JUST approach has potential to counteract negative assumptions and fears that reduce public support for climate policy, by overcoming mistrust through participative strategies, targeting policy action to reduce not intensify inequalities, and to generate spaces for imagining and valuing new ways of living.
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