1. Six modes of co-production for sustainability
- Author
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Jeanne L. Nel, Lakshmi Charli-Joseph, Ruth Brennan, Jasper Montana, Maria Tengö, Angela T. Bednarek, Julie G. Zaehringer, Henrik Österblom, Paul Chatterton, Tobias Haller, C. Wyborn, Melanie Ryan, Bruce Evan Goldstein, Jon Hutton, Rosemary Hill, Renée Jane Rondeau, Tomas Pickering, Christopher Cvitanovic, Elena M. Bennett, Nathan J. Bennett, Angela M. Guerrero, Beria Leimona, Andra Ioana Horcea-Milcu, Claudia Munera, Josephine Chambers, Rebecca L. Gruby, Robin S. Reid, Marja Spierenburg, Amos Brandeis, Nicole Klenk, Pongchai Dumrongrojwatthana, Kathleen A. Galvin, Maraja Riechers, Patrick Steyaert, María E. Fernández-Giménez, Anca Serban, Jessica Cockburn, K. Curran, América Paz Durán, Salamatu J. Fada, Jonathan Green, Jean-David Gerber, and Urban Futures
- Subjects
Earth Observation and Environmental Informatics ,Knowledge management ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Co-production of knowledge ,Geography, Planning and Development ,910 Geography & travel ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,Forest and Nature Conservation Policy ,law.invention ,Power (social and political) ,Politics ,law ,Aardobservatie en omgevingsinformatica ,Agency (sociology) ,Life Science ,Bos- en Natuurbeleid ,Sociology ,Environmental planning ,Nature and Landscape Conservation ,media_common ,Sustainable development ,Global and Planetary Change ,Programmateam ESG ,Ecology ,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,business.industry ,Programme team ESG ,Cognitive reframing ,sustainability ,330 Economics ,Urban Studies ,Transdisciplinarity ,society ,Sustainability ,CLARITY ,business ,Food Science ,Diversity (politics) - Abstract
The promise of co-production to address complex sustainability challenges is compelling. Yet, co-production, the collaborative weaving of research and practice, encompasses diverse aims, terminologies and practices, with poor clarity over their implications. To explore this diversity, we systematically mapped differences in how 32 initiatives from 6 continents co-produce diverse outcomes for the sustainable development of ecosystems at local to global scales. We found variation in their purpose for utilizing co-production, understanding of power, approach to politics and pathways to impact. A cluster analysis identified six modes of co-production: (1) researching solutions; (2) empowering voices; (3) brokering power; (4) reframing power; (5) navigating differences and (6) reframing agency. No mode is ideal; each holds unique potential to achieve particular outcomes, but also poses unique challenges and risks. Our analysis provides a heuristic tool for researchers and societal actors to critically explore this diversity and effectively navigate trade-offs when co-producing sustainability. Co-production includes diverse aims, terminologies and practices. This study explores such diversity by mapping differences in how 32 initiatives from 6 continents co-produce diverse outcomes for the sustainable development of ecosystems at local to global scales.
- Published
- 2021
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