2020
DOI: 10.1017/ics.2020.4
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Combining labour market and unemployment policies with environmental sustainability? A cross-national study on ecosocial innovations

Abstract: Labour market and unemployment policies in particular are rarely connected to issues of environmental sustainability. In the present article, the link is examined by focusing on ecosocial innovations in four European countries – Finland, Germany, Belgium and Italy. These innovations are small-scale associations, cooperatives or organizations that create new integrative practices combining both social and environmental goals. By asking how their social practices are linked with labour market and unemployment po… Show more

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Cited by 22 publications
(28 citation statements)
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“…To our eyes, these hybrid mixtures and collaborations already challenge mainstream understandings that recognise only the market economy and paid labour. Welfare state‐based benefits are part of the economic framework of most ecosocial innovations and can be regarded as meaningful social investments (O’Riordan, 2013; Stamm et al, 2020). Collaboration with labour market agencies enables both public funding for the projects and income benefits for the participants.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…To our eyes, these hybrid mixtures and collaborations already challenge mainstream understandings that recognise only the market economy and paid labour. Welfare state‐based benefits are part of the economic framework of most ecosocial innovations and can be regarded as meaningful social investments (O’Riordan, 2013; Stamm et al, 2020). Collaboration with labour market agencies enables both public funding for the projects and income benefits for the participants.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For the purpose of analysing practices of the sustainable economy in this article, we use qualitative data from a four-year research project that addressed practical grassroots models of transition towards sustainability. To collect these grassroots examples, we created the concept of ecosocial innovations and defined four criteria to identify them, based on a comprehensive literature review of sustainability transitions (see Matthies et al, 2019;Stamm et al, 2017Stamm et al, , 2020. Each example of the ecosocial innovation had to be innovative in character, while contributing in some way to the sustainability transition (Loorbach et al, 2017;Wolfram, 2018).…”
Section: Methods and Datamentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…While there is now a growing consensus about the need for such an eco-social policy agenda, there is far less agreement about what specific social policies might contribute to this reorientation. , The role of social policy in enabling sustainable transitions remains marginal within the literature on decarbonization (Bohnenberger 2020) while the ecological impacts of social policies remain 'largely ignored' (Koch, 2018: 42) within mainstream social policy debates (Stamm et al, 2020). To rectify this double neglect, we revise the concept of a 'participation income' (PI) (Atkinson, 1996), positioning it as a form of 'green conditional basic income' (Bohnenberger, 2020: 596) that retains a commitment to the principle of reciprocity but affirms forms of reproductive and ecological labour (care for people, the environment and social-democratic institutions), and not just paid employment, as fulfilling participation requirements.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%