The politics of deliberate destabilisation for sustainability transitions

Publication date

2021-09

Authors

van Oers, Laura MariaISNI 000000049252816X
Feola, G.ORCID 0000-0003-1069-503XISNI 0000000352267447
Moors, EllenORCID 0000-0002-9724-5308ISNI 0000000045359886
Runhaar, HensORCID 0000-0001-7790-097XISNI 0000000136977006

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Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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cc_by

Abstract

This paper advances scholarship on deliberate destabilisation for sustainability transitions. To understand how deliberate destabilisation plays out in practice, the politics of such processes must be confronted. To this end, we bridge research on the political economy of sustainability transitions with recent theorisations of the deliberate destabilisation of unsustainable socio-technical regimes and propose a set of analytical dimensions and guiding questions for the study of the latter. The added value of a political economy perspective to understand the politics of deliberate destabilisation in capitalist economies is demonstrated through the historical example of the phase-out of hen battery cages in the Netherlands. The poultry sector in the Netherlands embodies an industrial approach to food and farming, orientated towards producing large amounts of standardised and cheap food. We foster new insights on the influence of intertwined political and economic interests for deliberate destabilisation processes, which may reproduce, rather than transform, unsustainable and unjust socio-technical regimes.

Keywords

Capitalism, Political economy, Sustainability transition governance, Sustainable agriculture, The Netherlands, Technology phase-out, Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment, Environmental Science (miscellaneous), Social Sciences (miscellaneous), SDG 2 - Zero Hunger, SDG 8 - Decent Work and Economic Growth, SDG 12 - Responsible Consumption and Production

Citation

van Oers, L, Feola, G, Moors, E & Runhaar, H 2021, 'The politics of deliberate destabilisation for sustainability transitions', Environmental Innovation and Societal Transitions, vol. 40, pp. 159-171. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eist.2021.06.003