2020
DOI: 10.1016/j.erss.2020.101668
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Just transitions: Histories and futures in a post-COVID world

Abstract: The energy landscape is changing dramatically. Communities are being impacted in different ways. Positive impacts include reductions in air pollution and new tax revenues from renewables. Negative impacts include lost jobs and foregone tax revenues after closure of large fossil fuels generation facilities and coal mines. The contours of this transition have been further altered by recent events such as the global oil market crash and the COVID-19 pandemic. While economic and social issues can be addressed thro… Show more

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Cited by 87 publications
(63 citation statements)
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“…Matthew Henry and colleagues (this volume [33] ) take an equally useful global analytical lens, reinforcing the recent call for a “Just Transition.” This debate about a “Just Transition” is ongoing across many countries and provinces, with at least 14 national commissions, policies, or task forces in place across Canada, China, Czech Republic, Germany, Ghana, Indonesia, New Zealand, Scotland, South Africa, Spain, the United States and Vietnam. As Table 2 indicates, a “Just Transition” is backed by powerful coalitions and groups around the world.…”
Section: Connections With Energy Justice and Vulnerabilitymentioning
confidence: 86%
“…Matthew Henry and colleagues (this volume [33] ) take an equally useful global analytical lens, reinforcing the recent call for a “Just Transition.” This debate about a “Just Transition” is ongoing across many countries and provinces, with at least 14 national commissions, policies, or task forces in place across Canada, China, Czech Republic, Germany, Ghana, Indonesia, New Zealand, Scotland, South Africa, Spain, the United States and Vietnam. As Table 2 indicates, a “Just Transition” is backed by powerful coalitions and groups around the world.…”
Section: Connections With Energy Justice and Vulnerabilitymentioning
confidence: 86%
“…In this case, COVID-19 could act as a starting point to change some behaviors relative to the business-as-usual system. This intermediate position is those with the greatest presence in the analyzed literature and is based on the consolidation of a "Green New Deal" [18,[33][34][35] centered on sustainable consumption, reduction of the economy in scale, promotion of the circular material economy [9,11,19,30,32,36,37] and supported by the "Green Economy" and "Blue Economy" [38][39][40][41]. Considering the profound implications of a paradigm shift, thinking about a gradual process of change seems more likely in the short and medium term.…”
Section: Debates On the Post-pandemic Scenario At The Global Levelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Guiding society between social conditions and planetary boundaries, as proposed by Raworth (2017), provides an organising framework for GER post-Covid. Meanwhile, the theory and practice of degrowth (Kallis, 2018), social ecology (Clark, 2009) and sustainable transition (Henry et al, 2020, Rosenbloom, et al, 2020), provide useful entry points to understand the structural barriers to social and ecological transformation.…”
Section: A Turning Point?mentioning
confidence: 99%