2019
DOI: 10.3390/su11030603
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Developing Policy Pathways: Redesigning Transition Arenas for Mid-range Planning

Abstract: Sustainability transitions require new policy pathways that significantly reduce the environmental impacts caused by, for example, energy production, mobility and food production. Transition management (TM) is one of the approaches aiming at the creation of new ways to govern transitions. It uses transitions arenas (TA) as a key process and platform where new policy pathways are created in collaboration with multiple (frontrunner) stakeholders. TM’s ambitious and demanding agenda is not easy to implement. Ther… Show more

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Cited by 27 publications
(15 citation statements)
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References 41 publications
(85 reference statements)
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“…[6]) these are comparable to the processes of transition arenas in sustainability transitions research (see e.g. [1,36,37]), for example. The novelty in this approach was reaching outside of the academic actors for multi-actor conceptualisation in global change and focusing on a very complex, transdisciplinary, diverse and a large-scale topic, which due to its nature has no single owner or advancer in the Finnish research landscape.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 63%
“…[6]) these are comparable to the processes of transition arenas in sustainability transitions research (see e.g. [1,36,37]), for example. The novelty in this approach was reaching outside of the academic actors for multi-actor conceptualisation in global change and focusing on a very complex, transdisciplinary, diverse and a large-scale topic, which due to its nature has no single owner or advancer in the Finnish research landscape.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 63%
“…In urban planning, urban design and social policy, acceptance of integrated research to policy pathways via participatory methods are emerging. These policy development methods are used for urban design planning, participation within system evaluation of how fields or sectors work together, as well as for understanding complex fields of social policy concurrently, and how these affect end users (Hyysalo, Lukkarinen et al 2019;Frantzeskaki, Broto et al 2017;Stoker and Evans 2016;Evans and Terrey 2016). This is understood as a democratisation of policy making and innovation.…”
Section: Housing Aspirations: Why and How They Mattermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this way, co-design of policy can be thought of as taking the concept of deliberative development, in which future residents are integrally involved in the visioning and design of their future dwellings (Sharam 2016) and applying this to institutional housing settings, housing governance, housing assistance provision and to a scaledup form of deliberative development in urban precinct and regional participatory policy development. These forms of innovative research to policy practice have foundations in urban design and transitions innovation for sustainable built environment context internationally (Hyysalo, Lukkarinen et al 2019;Frantzeskaki, Broto et al 2017;Stoker and Evans 2016;Evans and Terrey 2016). Understanding the ways residents might engage in participatory policy co-design practice is a direction that stems directly from this research, and may lead to considerable future housing policy innovation if adopted and undertaken openly and with care.…”
Section: Key Findings and Implications For Policy Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Considering the pace of the required change toward sustainable mobility, combining technological innovations with demand-side management and acceleration of innovations with sectoral policies, is vital for achieving such change [6,30,37]. It is equally important to phase out unsustainable technologies and practices [38] and start developing new sociotechnical systems [39] and strengthen their social embeddedness [39]. One of the most popular conceptualizations for sustainable mobility is developed by Banister [37].…”
Section: Sociotechnical Change and Sustainable Mobilitymentioning
confidence: 99%