Beyond experiments: Embedding outcomes in climate governance
Publication date
2021-09-01
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Abstract
Concerted action on climate change will require a continuing stream of social and technical innovations whose development and transmission will be influenced by public policies. New ways of doing things frequently emerge in innovative small-scale initiatives – ‘experiments’ – across sectors of economic and social life. These experiments are actionable expressions of novel governance and socio-technical arrangements. Mobilising and generalising the outputs of these experiments could lead to deep reductions in greenhouse gas emissions over the long-term. It is often assumed that the groundswell of socio-technical and governance experiments will ‘scale-up’ to systemic change. But the mechanisms for these wider, transformative impacts of experiments have not been fully conceptualised and explained. This paper proposes a conceptual framework for the mobilisation, generalisation and embedding of the outputs and outcomes of climate governance experiments. We describe and illustrate four ‘embedding mechanisms’ – (1) replication-proliferation; (2) expansion-consolidation; (3) challenging-reframing; and (4) circulation-anchoring – for entwined governance and socio-technical experiments. Through these mechanisms knowledge, capabilities, norms and networks developed by experiments become mobile and generic, and come to be embedded in reconfigured socio-technical and governance systems.
Keywords
Experiments, climate governance, socio-technical systems, sustainability transitions, Geography, Planning and Development, Environmental Science (miscellaneous), Public Administration, Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law, SDG 13 - Climate Action, SDG 8 - Decent Work and Economic Growth, SDG 15 - Life on Land, SDG 17 - Partnerships for the Goals
Citation
Sengers, F, Turnheim, B & Berkhout, F 2021, 'Beyond experiments: Embedding outcomes in climate governance', Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space, vol. 39, no. 6, pp. 1148-1171. https://doi.org/10.1177/2399654420953861