Melissa Leach keynote at Pathways to Sustainability in a Changing China conference.

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Pathways to Sustainability: Meeting the challenges Melissa Leach International conference on ‘Pathways to Sustainability in a Changing China’ Beijing Normal University 20 April 2015

Transcript of Melissa Leach keynote at Pathways to Sustainability in a Changing China conference.

Page 1: Melissa Leach keynote at Pathways to Sustainability in a Changing China conference.

Pathways to Sustainability:

Meeting the challenges

Melissa Leach

International conference on ‘Pathways to Sustainability in a Changing China’

Beijing Normal University

20 April 2015

Page 2: Melissa Leach keynote at Pathways to Sustainability in a Changing China conference.

Sustainability challenges

in dynamic contexts

• Environmental change, rapid and complex dynamics,

impending threats and thresholds

• Technological change – opportunities, threats

• Social, economic and political change and instabilities;

shifting geographies of power and privilege, emergent

social hierarchies

• Poverty, inequity, (in)justice

• Scientific, policy and public concern – and politicisation

Page 4: Melissa Leach keynote at Pathways to Sustainability in a Changing China conference.

The STEPS Centre’s ‘pathways approach’ Pathways approach - a guide to thinking and action

Building pathways to sustainability, integrating:

• Ecological integrity

• Human wellbeing

• Social justice

Page 5: Melissa Leach keynote at Pathways to Sustainability in a Changing China conference.

Working across disciplines and sectors

• Development studies, Science and Technology Studies • Social sciences (anthropology, sociology, political science, economics) and natural sciences (medicine, ecology, climate science, hydrology, engineering, others…) • Food and Agriculture, Health and Disease, Water and

Sanitation, Energy and Climate

Page 6: Melissa Leach keynote at Pathways to Sustainability in a Changing China conference.

Pathways and the politics of knowledge under-determined realities

Page 7: Melissa Leach keynote at Pathways to Sustainability in a Changing China conference.

‘scope’

‘system’ ‘focus’

picture of the world –

stylised representation

of a system

‘cause’

Pathways and the politics of knowledge

‘effect’

under-determined realities

System: social,

ecological and

technological

elements

interacting in

dynamic ways

Page 8: Melissa Leach keynote at Pathways to Sustainability in a Changing China conference.

environment ‘scope’

‘system’ ‘focus’

picture of the world reflexive framing

Pathways and the politics of knowledge

‘effect’

under-determined realities

‘cause’ local people

Page 9: Melissa Leach keynote at Pathways to Sustainability in a Changing China conference.

environment

‘system’

under-determined realities diverse pictures plural frames

Pathways and the politics of knowledge

‘effect’

‘cause’

local people

‘scope’

‘focus’

Page 10: Melissa Leach keynote at Pathways to Sustainability in a Changing China conference.

plural frames

‘system’

‘cause’

‘effect’

under-determined realities

local people

Pathways and the Politics of Knowledge diverse pictures

‘scope’

‘focus’

Page 11: Melissa Leach keynote at Pathways to Sustainability in a Changing China conference.

Narratives

Framings often become part of narratives – underlying storylines

• Produced by people and institutions

• Beginning – a system, framed

• Middle – a set of envisaged actions

• Construction of publics – who will act, who will change their behaviour, respond

• Towards particular futures (desired, averting what is feared, possibilities, values, goals?) and ends – catastrophe averted, outcome achieved, ‘sustainability’ enhanced

Page 12: Melissa Leach keynote at Pathways to Sustainability in a Changing China conference.

environment

plural frames

Pathways and the Politics of Knowledge

‘system’

under-determined realities

local people

time

‘effect’

‘cause’

diverse pictures

‘scope’

‘focus’ ‘pathway’

Page 13: Melissa Leach keynote at Pathways to Sustainability in a Changing China conference.

Pathways and power

• Some narratives justify and become interlocked with powerful pathways – particular directions in which systems change over time

• Alternative narratives, hidden narratives, exclusions….

• Power relations and governance shape which pathways come to dominate, and which remain marginalised or excluded

• Challenge dominant pathways, open up appreciation of alternatives

Page 14: Melissa Leach keynote at Pathways to Sustainability in a Changing China conference.

Agriculture in East Africa

‘Growing food deficits require

massive boosts to agricultural productivity – modern plant breeding and genetic engineering can deliver solutions which need to be rolled out at scale’

‘Food insecurities are shaped by local ecological, social and institutional contexts, requiring socio-technical solutions centred on farmer knowledge and local

innovations’

Page 15: Melissa Leach keynote at Pathways to Sustainability in a Changing China conference.

Climate change, drought and maize in Kenya

• Understanding and challenging ‘lock in’ to the dominant pathway – breeding and commercialization of drought-tolerant maize, geared to ‘resilience in the seed’, towards farm and national food security goals

• Opening up to alternative pathways – especially for ‘low potential’ areas (e.g. Sakai), geared to resilience of farming livelihoods

Page 16: Melissa Leach keynote at Pathways to Sustainability in a Changing China conference.

Multiple pathways – in and out of maize

• Local maize varieties predominate and are highly valued

• Important but under-recognised role of seed selectors

• In future – some farmers want drought tolerant maize varieties

• But many farmers are trying to move out of maize and into other crops – dryland staples and horticultural crops

Page 17: Melissa Leach keynote at Pathways to Sustainability in a Changing China conference.

Social innovation • Innovations and new

technologies - critical roles in meeting sustainability challenges

• Problems of mainstream approaches to innovation

• Do inclusive and grassroots innovation approaches offer better prospects, especially for people marginalised by mainstream growth?

• What are the opportunities and challenges for ‘niche’ innovations to inform more powerful pathways to sustainability and justice?

Page 18: Melissa Leach keynote at Pathways to Sustainability in a Changing China conference.

• Historical and comparative research

shows different encounters with policy in India and Latin America

• In some cases a politics of instrumentality sees the grassroots innovation movement inserted into formal policy programmes, often reducing empowerment aspects

• In others, broad mobilisation through the grassroots innovation movement can act as a force to open up formal innovation systems to support more diverse and empowering activities

Grassroots Innovation movements

Page 19: Melissa Leach keynote at Pathways to Sustainability in a Changing China conference.

Tackling epidemics

‘Outbreaks are threatening humanity.

They need to be controlled through effective surveillance and large-scale roll out of singular technological solutions’

‘Underlying causes need to be tackled,

requiring a rethink of surveillance and diverse social, cultural ecological and technological responses’

Page 20: Melissa Leach keynote at Pathways to Sustainability in a Changing China conference.

The Ebola crisis in West Africa

Pathways of structural violence

•The crisis (rapid spread of disease, resistance to outbreak control efforts) reflects longer-term pathways of political-economic change and ‘development’ • Causal dynamics include failures of global health governance and health systems; conflict; ecology; mining; urbanisation; gender inequalities; poor community engagement

Page 21: Melissa Leach keynote at Pathways to Sustainability in a Changing China conference.

Community logics, institutions and learning

• Role of local social and cultural practices in Ebola transmission – caring for the sick, funerals

• Understanding cultural logics and local institutions (gender, chieftaincy, initiation societies)

• Importance of community learning, adaptation and innovation – key to turning the epidemic around

• Building resilient, community-embedded health systems

Page 22: Melissa Leach keynote at Pathways to Sustainability in a Changing China conference.

Integrating understanding with action

Opening up, building new pathways

• Methodologies and methods for appreciating alternative pathways

• Fostering and supporting deliberative fora – bringing different actors and perspectives together

• Influencing policy processes and effecting policy change

• Supporting and informing mobilisation processes

• Building networks and alliances

Page 24: Melissa Leach keynote at Pathways to Sustainability in a Changing China conference.

Pathways to Sustainability Global Consortium

Page 25: Melissa Leach keynote at Pathways to Sustainability in a Changing China conference.

China’s key role

• Scale

• Diversity

• Growing international role

• Rapid change in all domains – agriculture, urbanisation, energy, health….

• Valuable experience of managing change at national and sub-national levels

• Opportunities for mutual learning around pathways to sustainability

• Links with IDS-based Centre for Rising Powers and Global Development, and growing importance of China-UK partnership in international development

Page 26: Melissa Leach keynote at Pathways to Sustainability in a Changing China conference.

Conference aims

• Sharing research, ideas, examples around innovation and pathways to sustainability

• Informal networking – laying the grounds for stronger, broader collaboration

• Planning for the future

Enjoy the debate!