Objetivo
Contemporary societies are underpinned by industrial modernity: a set of commonly shared ideas, institutions and practices related to the natural environment and technoscience. Having historically unleashed massive leaps in productivity, economic growth and societal welfare, many traits of industrial modernity have now become maladapted to the current socio-ecological polycrisis. As a result science and technology promise to solve the grand challenges of climate change, resource depletion and loss of biodiversity with one hand, only to keep intensifying them with another. There is thus a fundamental need to rethink industrial modernity.
Attempts to detect signs of this fundamental shift currently remain fragmented within and between disciplines like sustainability science, innovation studies, or history of technology. RiDe will use a new Deep Transitions framework from the sustainability transitions field to provide an overarching synthesis on the acceleration, crisis and transformative prospects of industrial societies from 1900 to the present. It focuses on 3 questions: 1) what are the major historical continuities and emerging ruptures in industrial modernity? 2) what are the mechanisms through which technoscience keeps blocking transformative environmental practices? 3) in which countries is major transformative change most likely to occur?
RiDe will 1) use a mixed method research design, combining text mining, databases, stylized narrative explanation, and process-tracing, which; 2) enables it to discover new empirical patterns in the evolution of industrial modernity, and; 3) develop a composite index for identifying countries currently least hindered by the historical legacy of industrial modernity. The results will be synthesized into the first macro-level middle-range process theory in transitions studies, offering a new comprehensive, historically-informed and empirically-backed interpretation of industrial modernization for sustainability science.
Ámbito científico (EuroSciVoc)
CORDIS clasifica los proyectos con EuroSciVoc, una taxonomía plurilingüe de ámbitos científicos, mediante un proceso semiautomático basado en técnicas de procesamiento del lenguaje natural.
CORDIS clasifica los proyectos con EuroSciVoc, una taxonomía plurilingüe de ámbitos científicos, mediante un proceso semiautomático basado en técnicas de procesamiento del lenguaje natural.
- ciencias naturalesinformática y ciencias de la informaciónbase de datos
- humanidadeshistoria y arqueologíahistoria
- ciencias socialeseconomía y empresaciencia económicaeconomía de la producciónproductividad
- ciencias socialessociologíaantropologíaestudios de ciencia y tecnología
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Palabras clave
Programa(s)
- HORIZON.1.1 - European Research Council (ERC) Main Programme
Régimen de financiación
HORIZON-ERC - HORIZON ERC GrantsInstitución de acogida
51005 Tartu
Estonia