Abstract

During the second half of the 20th century, the crisis of societal relations to nature emerged as the subject of an international scientific, political, and popular debate. Anthropogenic climate change, loss of biodiversity, resource peaks, or local air and water pollution are symptoms of this crisis. Social ecology provides an inter- and transdisciplinary take on sustainability research and is well-equipped to respond to the research challenges associated with this crisis. Social ecology comprises different schools of thought, of which two initiated this special issue on “State of the Art and Future Prospects” for the research field. The approaches to social ecology of the ISOE—Institute for Social-Ecological Research in Frankfurt, Germany, and the Institute of Social Ecology (SEC) in Vienna, Austria are based on a common understanding of the challenges posed by social-ecological crises. In how these social ecologies tackle their research questions, conceptual differences become evident. In this article, we provide an overview of social ecology research as it is conducted in Frankfurt and in Vienna. We discuss how this research responds to the ongoing crisis and conclude by identifying important future prospects for social ecology.

Highlights

  • During the second half of the 20th century, a deepening crisis of the societal relations to nature emerged as the subject of an international scientific, political, and popular debate [1]

  • We identify how social ecology addresses the crisis of the societal relations to nature and discuss some of the research frontiers that have recently emerged

  • Frankfurt Social Ecology defines itself as a critical, transdisciplinary science of societal relations to nature (SRN)

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Summary

Introduction

During the second half of the 20th century, a deepening crisis of the societal relations to nature emerged as the subject of an international scientific, political, and popular debate [1]. The development of policy interest in sustainability was accompanied by an intensifying social-ecological crisis: anthropogenic climate change, widespread and extremely rapid loss of biodiversity, resource peaks and fluctuating supply, and local air and water pollution are symptoms of this crisis. In all these symptoms, humans are both ‘perpetrators’ and ‘victims’. Not a conceptual monolith but comprises different schools of thought [6] This special issue predominantly brings together contributions from two such schools: the ISOE—Institute for Social-Ecological Research in Frankfurt, Germany, and the Institute of Social Ecology (SEC) in Vienna, Austria. We conclude by reflecting on important future perspectives for social ecology

Frankfurt Social Ecology
Social Ecology Vienna
Where to in Times of Crisis?
Transformation through Social-Ecological Innovation
Global and Transregional Interdependencies
Future Prospects for Social-Ecological Research
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