Practices
Practices, our conceptual lense
We focus on social practices, as opposed to structures or individuals, to study sustainability transformations and environmental governance. We consider practices as the basis of social life, which means understanding human action in dynamic socio-material contexts as interconnected embodied routines.
We further practice-based approaches which can inform efforts focused on designing social interventions towards sustainability in ways that can support already existing, and sometimes latent, sustainable practices in everyday life. We do this by embedding energy, food, water and mobility practices in a wider systems perspective. By doing so, we explore how social relations and norms of environmental change affect everyday practices,, and how future imaginaries of new practices can design such changes in the present.
Questions we ask
How can the routinised nature of practices explain the lock-in effects of socio-technical systems transformations, and what are ways to overcomes such lock-ins to improve sustainability?
What are the socially differentiated implications of policies aimed at steering sustainability transformations in food, water, energy and mobility domains within and across societies and time periods?