Conference

WCSG Conference 2024 Governing Sustainability Transformations

Transformation of society and sustainability governance requires significant reordering: one that changes existing drivers and structures to drive change towards fundamentally novel systems. During the conference we focus on the central question, can sustainability transformation be governed? And if so by whom, what and how?

In our quest to answer this question we explore the four main themes detailed below.

Organised by Wageningen Centre of Sustainability Governance (WCSG)
Date

Wed 16 October 2024 until Fri 18 October 2024

Venue Leeuwenborch, building number 201
Hollandseweg 1
201
6706 KN Wageningen
+31 (0)317 48 36 39
Hotel-Restaurant De Wageningsche Berg, Wageningen, The Netherlands
Price description Conference Fee*: 275 euros

What is this conference about?

Can sustainability transformation be governed?

With multiple sustainability crises unfolding, from climate change to biodiversity loss, from increasing levels of pollution and threats to global public health to increased socio-environmental and intergenerational inequality, poverty and intersectional discrimination, from the digital divide, food and energy insecurity to forced migration and disruptive use of emerging technologies, there is a need for transforming society as well as the way in which sustainability is governed. Therefore, transformation of society and sustainability governance requires significant reordering: one that changes existing drivers and structures to drive change towards fundamentally novel systems.  

This is often framed as radical but global crises can only be reversed when the underlying root drivers of sustainability problem(s) rather than its proximate causes and symptomatic effects are addressed. sustainability transformation is characterized by complexity and raises questions about the possibility of its governance. Indeed, sustainability transformation goes beyond emergent and incremental change within existing interactions, practices and governance arrangements, which are rooted in history and reflect current power relations. Transformative change, therefore, should take place at both the individual level, and collectively as a society, i.e. in terms of beliefs, dominant practices and nature worldviews, values and norms.  

In addition, transformational change is seen as, multi-scalar, complex and inherently political as they involve actors, knowledges, interaction, institutions and power dynamics that shape both the triggers and capacities for governing sustainability change.

During the conference we focus on the central question, can sustainability transformation be governed? And if so by whom, what and how? In our quest to answer this question we explore four main themes:

Four Central Conference Themes

1. Defining transformative sustainability change

2. Actors and just transformations

3. Governance approaches in and for transformations

4. Evaluating sustainable transformations