Abstract

Sustainability transitions are shaped by specific dynamics, dependencies, and influences among the actors and elements that are part of the system. Systemic constellations as a social science research method can offer tangible visualizations of such system dynamics and thereby extract valuable, often hidden knowledge for research. This article builds on two online exploratory system constellation exercises about sustainability transitions, with two major objectives: (i) to introduce and disseminate (exploratory) systemic constellations as a method for (sustainability) research, and (ii) to extract their potential for (online) collaborative and transdisciplinary research, with a focus on sustainability transitions. Our exploratory research design includes participatory action research that took place during the virtual International Sustainability Transitions Conference 2020, Vienna, Austria. Data were analyzed following an interpretative-hermeneutic approach. The main findings consist of visualizations about sustainability transition dynamics between selected actors in Germany and Portugal that are discussed in light of the literature on constellation work and sustainability transitions, triggering new assumptions: (i) a strong sustainability narrative does not (necessarily) lead to action and transformation and (ii) transformation requires integrating narratives beyond weak and strong sustainability. We conclude with a list of potentials of exploratory constellations for sustainability research and online formats that offer novelties such as a constant bird-eye perspective on the system while simultaneously engaging with the system.

Highlights

  • IntroductionPublisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations

  • We found the distinction between weak and strong sustainability narratives useful for the exploratory constellation exercise, as it would allow a visual positioning of certain actors in relation to these concepts in a specific system

  • We present the findings of the constellation exercise, namely how the representative elements acted in the respective context for Germany and Portugal

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Summary

Introduction

Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. Sustainability transition processes are shaped by and depend on multiple factors, with specific dynamics, dependencies, and influences among them. To tackle the complex global problems the world is facing [1,2,3], sustainability transitions strive for societal transformation and require collaborative efforts, on the individual and collective level [4] with multiple challenges regarding politics and governance, civil society and culture, and businesses and industries [5]. Sustainability transitions have become an important academic field within Sustainability Science, but overall a field of joint experimentation for science and society, bringing together practitioners, citizens, enterprises, governmental entities, and academics

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