The aim of this thematic group is to develop an open forum for pluralistic and theoretically informed debates on the spaces, places and scales at which sustainability transitions unfold. It will foster dialogue between and across disciplines in order to develop spatial perspectives on sustainability transitions.
Over the past ten years, it has become increasingly evident, that a more elaborate geographical perspective on sustainability transitions is needed. Many of today’s grand challenges transcend the boundaries of specific cities, regions, or nations and translocal/transnational spatial relationships and multi-scalar dynamics play a significant role in shaping transition trajectories and possibilities. At the same time, places differ in their structural preconditions and the capacity to engage in experimenting with radically new socio-technical configurations. Where and how transitions unfold depends on change dynamics that co-evolve between (and have impacts on) various places around the world in spatially complex and uneven ways.
The thematic group will foster dialogue on emerging research streams comprising (but not limited to):
-Developing a multi-scalar take on key transition concepts like technological innovation systems, niche experimentation, or socio-technical regimes
-Understanding the context-specific structural conditions and dynamics that enable/constrain ‘green’ path development in cities, regions, and countries
-Elucidating the place-making politics and the spatially unequal impacts of sustainability transitions
-Understanding how transition and green innovation dynamics co-evolve between different regions of the world, and especially between developed, emerging and developing economies
We aim at creating an open and inclusive forum of exchange that enables the transitions community to benefit from salient theoretical and empirical debates in closely related fields. Our group will facilitate scholarly exchange through scientific activities, e.g. at international conferences and in focused workshops and webinars, but in the mid-term we also seek to promote GeoST thinking among practitioners, especially with civil society groups and policy-makers.
The group has organized two webinar series that feature debates between transition scholars and geographers on salient theoretical interfaces. We have also established the GEIST working paper series, which provides an open platform for the early and wide dissemination of pre-publication research papers related to GeoST themes. In combination with our website and X profile, we have created a vibrant online meeting venue for scholars in this vibrant and quickly expanding research community.
Future activities:
-Organize special sessions at international scientific conferences like IST, GeoInno, EuSPRI, AAG, the annual meeting of the Regional Studies Association or the Global Conference on Economic Geography
-Craft joint (agenda) papers, special issues, edited volumes etc. in geography and transition outlets
-Organize workshops and follow-up webinars and explore synergies with closely related STRN thematic groups
We welcome anyone interested in contributing to the group. Currently, Christian Binz (Eawag), Lars Coenen (Western Norway University of Applied Sciences), Huiwen Gong (University of Stavanger), Teis Hansen (University of Copenhagen), Christina Hoicka (University of Victoria), Jim Murphy (Clark University), Gesa Pflitsch (University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna), Johan Miörner (Lund University), Markus Steen (SINTEF), Bernhard Truffer (Eawag / Utrecht University), and Xiaoshan Yap (EPFL) are managing the group’s activities.
If you are interested in contributing, please get in touch with christian.binz@eawag.ch.