Considering the Human-Dimension to Make Sustainable Transitions Actionable
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. In Search of the Human-Dimension in Socio-Technical Sustainable Transition Research
3.1. Current Analysis Approaches
3.2. Power, Agency, and Politics
3.3. Governing Transitions
3.4. Civil Society, Culture, and Social Movements
3.5. Transitions in Practice and Everyday Life
3.6. Geography of Transitions
3.7. Ethical Aspects
3.8. About Businesses and Industries
3.9. Research Methodologies
4. Defining the Human-Dimension Framework
4.1. Human-Centered Lenses
4.2. Making Transitions Actionable through the Human-Dimension Conceptual Framework
5. Macro-Level Analysis of Delft Sustainable Development City-Making
5.1. Landscape Development
5.2. Regime Developments
5.3. Niche Developments
6. Adding the Human-Dimension
6.1. Needs (I Need)
6.2. Beliefs (I Think)
6.3. Values (I Want)
6.4. Decisions (I Do)
6.5. Affections (I Care For)
6.6. Sense of Belonging (I Am)
6.7. Self-Perceived Capacity (I Can)
7. Discussion and Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Theme [3] | Gap |
---|---|
Current analysis approaches | Shared characteristics/needs between individuals either in, or across, regime and/or niches. |
Power, agency, and politics | Individual perception (of one-self and others) of power and agency. How it affects conflict and contestation. |
Governing transitions | Within a plurality of actors, who are intermediaries, and what they need during the implementation of policies. |
Civil Society, Culture, and Social Movements | How culture affects individual decisions and how it permeates groups. |
Transitions in Practice and Everyday life | Contextual, Social and Self-organizing factors, affecting the change of individual mindset. |
Geography of transitions | Emerging relations and how they benefit or affect transition maintenance. |
Ethical Aspects | Marginalized groups experiences in transitions. |
Businesses and industries | Organizational innovation affecting roles and agencies of individuals. |
Research Methodologies | Human dimension in action, at a micro-social dynamic, and as connection. |
Theme | Extrinsic Factors | Intrinsic Factors |
---|---|---|
Transition pathways | Relations and alignment between individuals either in, or across, regime and/or niches. | Shared characteristics/needs between individuals either in, or across, regime and/or niches. |
Power, agency, and politics | Power-relations: “who gets what, when and how.” | Individual’ perception of one-self and others, which affect the capacity of individuals to make their own free choices: deal with conflict and the capacity of contestations. |
Governing transitions | Implementation of policies: adopted or not. | Needs of connecting actors to implement the policies. |
Civil society, culture and social movements | Operational guidelines for individual actions. Civil-society categories. | Models of action: beliefs, cognitive categories. Models of actions: norms, values. |
Transitions in practice and everyday life | Contextual factors: technologies, countries and cultures. Social factors: ethnicity, class and gender. Self-organization Capacity. | Perception between actors. Agency to act in everyday life. Changes of mindset. |
Geography of transitions | Location affects flows, metabolisms, network & circulation to the (re) production of urban life. | Maintenance of flows affected by individual relations. |
Ethical aspects | Social Justice: poverty or race, gender, age or ethnic disparities. | Belonging to marginalized groups: non-users, non-dominant, and non-stated-based actors. |
Businesses and industries | Organizational innovation. | Perceived agency to act within the organization. |
Methodologies | System innovation in-the-making. Micro-level investigations and network effects. Connection between the micro- and macro-levels of analysis. | Actors’ negotiations. Socio-psychological dynamics. |
Intrinsic Factor | Discursive Model |
---|---|
Needs | I need… |
Beliefs | I think… |
Values | I want… |
Decisions | I do… |
Affection | I care for… |
Sense of belonging | I am… |
Self-perceived capacity | I can… |
Human-Dimension | Interviewed Group | Quote |
---|---|---|
Needs (I need) | Government | “… when you have a plan, and you have a general idea of what you want, one group thinks it’s a good idea, but another group thinks it’s a bad idea. Then you can invite both groups to have a discussion with each other… that also helps us have insights about the opinions, and that can be very useful.” |
“… sometimes priorities are not matching, and when people do not get what they really want, then they are really disappointed. It doesn’t matter what the argument was; the plan is not good; it is not okay.” | ||
“You don’t have all the knowledge here inside (the municipality). We have a lot of experience, a lot of knowledge, but there’s much more knowledge outside.” | ||
Industry (Developers) | “The development is in everyone’s interest. What good is it for the municipality owning a property that has been there (in the developing area) for three years? Nobody cares. Neither do residents. Nobody. Well, well, those are our problems.” | |
Business (SME) | “… all the decisions and all the plans that are made by politicians. They are bigger scale, and so it makes it very abstract, and I don’t believe that all this can be made in a very detailed plan on a big scale.” | |
“if you don’t take this responsibility, people (won’t) hear you, the municipality does not hear you. They will not take into account your wishes.” | ||
Academy | “… so that’s where the challenge lies and whether it’s going to be a success, is to a large extent dependent on these short-term parties, well, willing to see the value and, these long-term solutions.” | |
Citizens | “The municipality really loved all our ideas like what we want to do here (the land) and with the neighborhood… But yeah, because the process took so much time, they are actually kind of killing our enthusiasm.” | |
Beliefs (I think) | Government | “Sustainability plus is a unique selling point. And this unique selling point, hum, I think, stands for a certain value of the building you make. I think that you can make it economically interesting to invest in sustainability,” |
“What we’ve tried to tell them (Industry and Businesses) is to see it in a helicopter view. Your asset is the whole area, and to make this asset, the most worthful, and make the most profit; It’s good to invest in this area and not only your own plot.” | ||
Industry (Developers) | “… accumulating ambitions in almost every area of development. So, in Delft Zuid as well, Delft campus. But I think one of the distinctive parameters of Delft Zuid is its potential to be a mobility hub.” | |
Business (SME) | “… this (developing area) is a place with a lot of different people and different activities. And I like them to be interrelated with each other… This is more important for me than an old historical place. I like that, but it’s most important to have a dynamic place…” | |
Academy | “… what all these municipalities want, they want good houses, they would like to have nice jobs, etcetera. But yeah, heavy industry, which is needed actually, yeah, they don’t want it. So they don’t have enough, uh, areas located in their physical plans for that type of industry. So if you want to get rid of these industries, it is quite difficult.” | |
“There’s so much potential in that area, I think it would be very nice if it becomes a hub for mobility to the university and to Delft… If you expect the university to grow, then you need this.” | ||
Citizens | “I think that the system doesn’t allow for the idealistic goals.” | |
“… I think the people, the public servant we worked with, is also very frustrated from the process so you can see the frustration, he/she is being professional in hiding it.” | ||
Values (I want) | Government | “… the readiness to change, the awareness of having to change policy. If I don’t want to change my policy, I don’t have to participate in a participation process. The only thing I can do is explain it once again. But if I cannot change my plan or my vision, why should I start a participation project, If nothing will change? So there must be an awareness of time and willingness to change things and also can change things.” |
“If they can make a building for half the price… if it is not sustainable, and sustainability is not an issue, then they will make a building half of price as a “sustainable building.” It’s all about money with these guys. If they can make 50 cents on the Euro, they will earn 50 cents on the Euro.” | ||
“… sometimes you want things for the future, that people right now are really opposed to purchasing… it’s difficult for people to see the steps really far away. So sometimes you have to do something that’s not popular, because, then we’re there. And that’s really okay. And people are really happy when this is what we’re doing. So that’s very difficult.” | ||
Industry (Developers) | “… To build a large building. To create a mix function area. That’s our goal. And that is our business.” | |
“… it’s also an experiment, so you have no idea if it will work. But I think it’s really nice to try it, to let it (make it) work.” | ||
“There is an increased shortage of student housing, it is increasing in the next year to up to 3000 for units for students. We want them to be affordable for students, international as well as national. That is our main interest.” | ||
Business (SME) | “I hope that there will still be some space for companies here, but I’m not sure if this is realistic.” | |
“Our ‘blue line project’ I connect with the development, and the ambition for Delft to become the knowledge capital of The Netherlands.” | ||
“… so if we have to move, we may go to the area of Eindhoven. So that’s my main concern.” | ||
“… it’s not to (be a game of) winning or losing, but much more of understanding each other.” | ||
Academy | “The challenge is: are parties willing to wait and put aside their individual interests for the greater good?” | |
Citizens | “You have the initiative, and you help them also because you have a shared vision.” | |
Decisions (I do) | Government | “… I’m not deciding. I give advice” |
“… the main goal is to make better plans together, and not to get as many people being happy with a plan, that’s a possible consequence.” | ||
“… in the municipality you are living in your own bubble and you already make a lot of steps, and when the other side—so the citizens—when they don’t, let’s say it like this: last year when we were doing the project, we already made a lot of steps and were fully into the project. And when I have a year of history and then I’m eager to involve you, then it’s new for you. So I am way further than you. So that is not matching. So that’s also a lesson for us. Decide when you share things, or ask. Sometimes sharing is enough. Then people know about it.” | ||
Industry (Developers) | “… via two or maybe three interviews, we call it a dialogue because the interview for me is one way, more one way. It’s more of a dialogue.” | |
“… students are good pioneers; it does not need to be done or completed. Students are a flexible type of tenants. They will put off things like noise, or other kinds of stuff that in other situations wouldn’t be acceptable… ” | ||
Affection (I care for) | Government | “So we had about eight meetings, and they were shocked about it because they said well, “why are there so many? Why are there so many people wanting to think about it? That’s not good—that’s a bad sign because they are against our plans.” And I said no, this is good. That is great because this shows a lot of engagement. That isn’t a part of the city where people are being born and die at the same place. So, they are really happy to live there… So, you should be happy about it and embrace it… if you don’t have that engagement anymore, they don’t have trust in the government.” |
“Because now we have about 15 people thinking about what is the best way to make it there. But I think a lot of people here can tell us a lot. For instance, “when I’m walking there at 11 o’clock in the evening, I’m not feeling safe.” So, they have a lot of experience we can use. And now we are not even asking.” | ||
“… we have our own policy on, for example, housing. We know exactly what we need for the next 10 years. So that is the perspective on what we think is needed. But for example, in Tanthof a lot of people lived there their whole life, and they are really happy. They want to stay there, but now the elderly are living in the family apartments. That is not the best match. So maybe for Tanthof, it would be interesting to build more for elderly people. But then they stay in their own area. That is one of the things we already know from Tanthof.” | ||
Industry (Developers) | “… there are all kinds of environmental contours in which companies have their rights. And there you will build in the middle of it. That is how those problems arise, and that is why the project leaders we sit down with are civil servants, who are often hired. They would all want to, but they just can’t.” | |
“the current companies that are situated in Schieoevers North, they want to have a place for new developments, and now we’re kind of pushing them away. So you want to incorporate them.” | ||
Business (SME) | “… it is very dark over there (development area)… there’s not too much social control on it… you find all kinds of stuff like needles from a drug addiction that’s there… And there is much more traffic by students, also female students. I’m also a father, and I would not like to have my daughter on the bike, (here) without more light, without proper social control.” | |
Citizens | “…Participation… it scares them because it’s, it’s everything different. Like there is no set way that a certain process is going, so every time there’s an initiative there that it’s a new way and I think that’s what scares them.” | |
Sense of Belonging (I am) | Government | “… a lot of people do that as they have a lot of passion and they really want it like a 10, an A+, it has to be good. And from the professional way, from the municipality, not everything has to be a 10.” |
Citizens | “… it’s also that I like this. I like old places with history in it, and when it’s all new and smooth and expensive, maybe I don’t feel so good there.” | |
“It’s not really okay because yeah, when one person says I don’t like the smell (of an industrial business), for example, then the company has to leave. Yeah. So it’s not so simple to combine this.” | ||
Self-perceived Capacity (I can) | Government | “You’ve seen these eight ambitions (sustainable ambitions set for the plan) I presented three or four months ago in Rotterdam, made by Marco Brockman. And well, actually, these are the only more or less boundaries we have.” |
“… I can say it won’t be 60 m high, it will only be 50 m high, then that’s a fact for them (Industry area developers) as well. And, then it’s their choice to make a plan for 50 m or not. What they can also do, of course, is then say, well,—we’ll do nothing, then we leave it as it is.—Good luck, municipality. We have a building half demolished now; we leave it as it is.—Unless you say well-developing company, go ahead with your 60-m high-rise building—So, yeah, it’s not the situation, and let’s be clear on that. But if they want to, they could play it like that hard.” | ||
“… people want to have these conditions because then they know this is already decided, and this is the part which I can decide on. Otherwise, in the end, you have a problem because you don’t, you can’t measure your inputs on those conditions. And then it gets fluent, and then it goes wrong.” | ||
Industry (Developers) | “… the municipality also gives us boundaries for what we can do, what you cannot do, and we need to. We need to listen to these boundaries, so we can’t really do something different.” | |
“So it’s important for the municipality and the company to be the selected company to organize… there are organizations that are willing and support the area development, instead of saying,—okay, I am gonna pull the brakes, very firmly because I’m not happy with what is going—.” | ||
“You have to understand that the Delft municipality is a pretty poor municipality. They had large ambitions in the past in the Spoorzone, and they haven’t recovered yet from that. So there is a need to earn money.” | ||
Business (SME) | “… circular economy is also difficult because we work with new materials and cannot use old materials. Yeah, when there are possibilities to use materials that are made out of old materials, Yeah, that would be nice, but I don’t see it.” | |
“Okay, they have this ‘people-planet-profit’ idea… I’ve always found it funny that people and the planet are not so difficult to implement but the profit part is, it’s a bit more, a bit more tricky.” | ||
Citizens | “… in communication having the right skills to really understand what is going on. So, during this process (the development), many communications and not valuing our time in a place like I think, combined with other people, like over $400. So, if I charge my normal income, that’s a loss for me. That’s actually in hindsight that prices weren’t too much so hesitant to do it again.” | |
“I think the most time we spend on facilitating internal communication. —Well, so can you help us sell this internally? Can you make a plan? Okay, you make this one, can you make that one? I can’t convince my colleagues?— “ | ||
“… a municipality is not a business and is not really debt-free. There are a lot of rules and restrictions. But yeah, a bit of freedom to stretch those limits.” |
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López Reyes, M.E.; Zwagers, W.A.; Mulder, I.J. Considering the Human-Dimension to Make Sustainable Transitions Actionable. Sustainability 2020, 12, 8813. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12218813
López Reyes ME, Zwagers WA, Mulder IJ. Considering the Human-Dimension to Make Sustainable Transitions Actionable. Sustainability. 2020; 12(21):8813. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12218813
Chicago/Turabian StyleLópez Reyes, María Elena, Willem A. Zwagers, and Ingrid J. Mulder. 2020. "Considering the Human-Dimension to Make Sustainable Transitions Actionable" Sustainability 12, no. 21: 8813. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12218813