Litcius/Paper detail

Changing Our Ways

Peter Newell, Freddie Daley, Michelle Twena

2022Cambridge University Press eBooks21 citationsDOI

Abstract

In this Element, the authors develop an account of the role of behaviour change that is more political and social by bringing questions of power and social justice to the heart of their enquiry in order to appreciate how questions of responsibility and agency are unevenly distributed within and between societies. The result is a more holistic understanding of behaviour, as just one node within an ecosystem of transformation that bridges the individual and systemic. Their account is more attentive to questions of governance and the processes of collective steering necessary to facilitate large scale change across a diversity of actors, sectors and regions than the dominant emphasis on individuals and households. It is also more historical in its approach, looking critically at the relevance of historical parallels regarding large-scale behaviour change and what might be learned and applied to the contemporary context action.

Topics & Concepts

ParallelsRelevance (law)Agency (philosophy)PoliticsContext (archaeology)Corporate governanceDiversity (politics)Collective actionScale (ratio)Action (physics)Element (criminal law)SociologyPower (physics)Economic JusticeSocial changeEpistemologyPolitical scienceEnvironmental ethicsSocial scienceLawGeographyEngineeringManagementEconomicsCartographyPhilosophyQuantum mechanicsPhysicsMechanical engineeringArchaeologyEnvironmental Education and SustainabilitySustainability and Climate Change GovernanceOrganic Food and Agriculture