Projects per year
Abstract
Because of the urgency of accelerating transitions, we examine the emerging understanding of the concept of ‘disruption’ in the context of sustainability transition studies to critically assess its value, pitfalls and potentials. By conducting a qualitative systematic review of 47 articles, we analyse how disruption is seen in this literature and what is being disrupted. We identify four non-technical dimensions of disruption, adding ‘behaviour, practices and cultural models’ to previously suggested dimensions, i.e., markets and business models, regulations and policy, and actors and networks. We summarise what the literature identifies as disruption in transitions and draw on other literatures (e.g. social practice theory and institutional theory) to elaborate the dimensions of disruption. We provide a new definition of disruption in sociotechnical transitions, with focus on both speed and magnitude of change. We end by highlighting the importance of disruptive practices and low-tech solutions alongside disruptive technologies and policies.
Original language | English |
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Journal | Environmental Innovation and Societal Transitions |
Volume | 38 |
Pages (from-to) | 110-126 |
Number of pages | 17 |
ISSN | 2210-4224 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Mar 2021 |
MoE publication type | A2 Review article in a scientific journal |
Fields of Science
- 1172 Environmental sciences
- 5142 Social policy
Projects
- 1 Finished
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EE-TRANS: Eating and Energy Use Reconfigured? Disruptions and Novel Transition Pathways in Food and Energy Systems
Niva, M. (Principal Investigator), Laakso, S. (Participant) & Heiskanen, E. (Participant)
01/09/2018 → 31/08/2022
Project: Research project