4.7 Article

The role of narratives in socio-technical transitions-Fukushima and the energy regimes of Japan, Germany, and the United Kingdom

Journal

ENERGY RESEARCH & SOCIAL SCIENCE
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages 237-246

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.erss.2015.11.001

Keywords

Discourse analysis; Transition research; Landscape-regime interaction; Narrative analysis; Nuclear energy; Renewable energy; Socio-political environment; Structuration theory; Sustainability transitions

Funding

  1. Friedrich-Ebert Foundation

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In order to reconfigure global socio-economic systems to be compatible with social imperatives and planetary boundaries, a transition towards sustainable development is necessary. The multi-level perspective (MLP) has been developed to study long-term transformative change. This paper complements the MLP by providing an ontological framework for studying and understanding the role of narratives as the vehicle of meaning and intermediation between individual and social collective in the context of ongoing transitions. Narratives are established as an analytical entity to unpack how disturbances at the level of the socio-technical landscape are translated into and contribute to the transformation of socio-technical regimes. To illustrate and test the approach, it is applied to the case of the Fukushima catastrophe: The narratives in relation to nuclear power in Japan, Germany and the United Kingdom are scrutinized and it is explored how these narratives have co-determined the policy responses and thus influenced ongoing transformation processes in the power sectors of the respective countries. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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