Scientific journal paper
The prefigurative politics of enactable sustainability transformations in the present
Siddharth Sareen (Siddharth Sareen); Sirkku Juhola (Sirkku Juhola); Adrianna Czarnecka (Adrianna Czarnecka); Aleksandra Kekkonen (Kekkonen, A.); Aleksandra Martinovska Stojcheska (Aleksandra Martinovska Stojcheska); Ana Slavec (Ana Slavec); Anita Uchanska-Bieniusiewicz (Anita Uchanska-Bieniusiewicz); Chris Rønningstad (Chris Rønningstad); Claudiu Martin (Claudiu Martin); Gintarė Tamašauskaitė-Janickė (Gintarė Tamašauskaitė-Janickė); Helena Belchior Rocha (Belchior-Rocha, H.); Jan Kunnas (Jan Kunnas); Maria Luísa Vasconcelos (Maria Luísa Vasconcelos); Maraja Riechers (Maraja Riechers); Martin H. G. Prechtl (Martin H. G. Prechtl); Monika Piotrkowska (Monika Piotrkowska); Nigar Alkan (Nigar Alkan); Nimet Kalkan (Nimet Kalkan); Nurinisa Esenbuga (Nurinisa Esenbuga); Rocío Pineda-Martos (Rocío Pineda-Martos); Sandra Bernardo (Sandra Bernardo); Sarah Milliken (Sarah Milliken); Şehnaz Okkiran (Şehnaz Okkiran); Sevinç Gelmez Burakgazi (Sevinç Gelmez Burakgazi); Timo von Wirth (von Wirth); Tuba Aydın Güngör (Tuba Aydın Güngör); Veronika Kiss (Veronika Kiss); et al.
Journal Title
Norsk Geografisk Tidsskrift - Norwegian Journal of Geography
Year (definitive publication)
2026
Language
English
Country
United Kingdom
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Abstract
The concept of “prefigurative politics” invites geographers to envision transformative change through a shift in practices stemming from a micro level. This article examines and substantiates how this idea is mobilised in relation to current sustainability transformations. A large interdisciplinary group of geographers and transition scholars present topic clusters of prefigurative enablers that instigate and catalyse the enactment of transformative policymaking towards sustainable futures. Drawing on dozens of rich and diverse examples to illustrate cases of transformation, we provide a conceptual perspective to advance the theoretical discussion about triggers and processes of transformative change amongst geographers. We argue for three principles for examining the prefigurative politics of present transformation: (a) multi-scalarity, to consider prefigurative politics across personal-systemic spheres; (b) boundary transgression, to span interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary as well as inward- and outward-looking prefigurative politics; and (c) temporalities, to address institutionalisation and change processes that play out along short and long timelines. Approaching present transformations through a prefigurative politics lens helps identify scope for action that aligns with transformative change. We argue for wider deployment of these principles, to synthesise scholarship, channel micro-level prefigurative political efforts into systemic transformative change, and guide future research and policymaking towards sustainability transformations.
Acknowledgements
This work was supported by Research Council of Norway: [Grant Number 349994 ENERGY4ALL]; Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation: [NORHED-II Capacity-building for SJSET]; COST Association: [Grant Number CA22156 TransformERS supported by COST
Keywords
prefigurative politics,transformation,sutainability
  • Other Social Sciences - Social Sciences

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