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Carbon capability revisited: Theoretical developments and empirical evidence

Sam Hampton, Lorraine Whitmarsh

2024Global Environmental Change14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The urgent need to address climate change requires widespread behavioural changes and structural reforms. However, the adoption of low-carbon practices is limited by individual, social and structural constraints. Carbon capability (CC) is an interdisciplinary, integrative framework which bridges the gap between individual-level behaviours and systemic change. This article develops a new theoretical framework for CC, with insights from the capability approach, social practice theory, and recent work in environmental psychology. Drawing on a nationally representative survey from the UK, CC is evaluated across six key domains of practice: energy, transport, food, shopping, influence, and citizenship. Our revised theory emphasises the diverse forms that CC can take, highlighting the multiple roles that individuals (and other actors) can play in driving climate action, as consumers, influencers, organisational members, and citizens. Results show that the UK population is becoming more carbon capable over time, with increasing knowledge about climate change and some adoption of low-carbon practices. However, transformative change is still lacking. The study highlights the importance of reorienting systems of provision to enable low-carbon practices and set capability ceilings to limit excessive consumption.

Topics & Concepts

Transformative learningClimate changeInfluencer marketingCapability approachSet (abstract data type)Action (physics)Work (physics)PopulationBusinessPublic relationsPolitical scienceKnowledge managementSociologyMarketingEngineeringComputer scienceEcologyDemographyRelationship marketingLawProgramming languagePhysicsBiologyMechanical engineeringQuantum mechanicsPedagogyMarketing managementEnvironmental Education and SustainabilitySocial Acceptance of Renewable EnergyClimate Change Communication and Perception
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