English Intern
Institut für Politikwissenschaft und Soziologie

Writers’ Workshop: Local Authorities on their Way to Climate Action

11.10.2024

Der Writers' Workshop am 24. und 25. Oktober 2024 beleuchtet die Rolle lokaler Behörden im Klimaschutz, insbesondere kleinerer Gemeinden in ländlichen Regionen. Organisiert von JProf. Dr. Ulrike Zeigermann (JMU) und Dr. Jonas Schoenefeld (IWU), zielt der Workshop darauf ab, spezifische Herausforderungen und Chancen für lokale Akteure zu untersuchen. Der Fokus liegt auf der Frage, wie lokale Verwaltungen und Nichtregierungsakteure innovative Strategien entwickeln, um den Klimawandel zu bekämpfen und Nachhaltigkeitsziele zu erreichen.

Writers’ Workshop 24 – 25 October 2024

Local Authorities on their Way to Climate Action

Workshop organizers: JProf. Dr. Ulrike Zeigermann (JMU) & Dr. Jonas Schoenefeld (IWU)

Workshop outline:  

While much extant scholarly work has focused on the sustainability efforts of higher governance levels, including international negotiations, nation states or big cities, this special issue focuses on local authorities, and especially smaller municipalities such as towns and villages, but also counties and districts in rural regions on their quest to sustainability. A significant proportion of the world population lives in such settings and they therefore comprise an important, but often overlooked, sphere of sustainability and climate action. The special issue aims to address this gap by bringing together novel perspectives from different disciplinary perspectives, geographical regions as well as action arenas to shed light on specific challenges, but also key opportunities, in moving forward.

In so doing, the special issue will cover commonalities, but also differences, in the struggle for sustainability in diverse local political, socio-economic, and environmental settings. Compared to other governance levels or big cities, smaller local authorities face well-known challenges including the impacts of climate change, questions of buildings and housing, mobility, health, or digitalization, in different ways. For example, compared to metropolitan areas, lower population density and a different demographic structure translates into specific needs and challenges, which limit the transferability of lessons and approaches that may have been developed in big cities or on higher governance levels. We aim to unpack and systematize such aspects that emerge with a view to local micro-politics and actors, demographic developments, finance, and resource issues, as well as capacities, to name just a few examples. Building on these new insights, the special issue will also explore the local solution space that emerges from specific opportunities in small local authorities. While strict generalization tends to be difficult in highly localized settings where context matters immensely, the special issue will identify common challenges and opportunities that permit learning about the realities of working towards sustainability and climate action in small local authorities. In so doing, the special issue will address the following questions, but is also open to submissions that go beyond them:

  • Who is involved in governing sustainability and climate change at the local level? What are the relationships between different actors?
  • What are the mechanisms that facilitate climate and sustainability processes and/or policy innovation in smaller and mid-sized municipalities?
  • What strategies and policies do local actors employ and how successful are they?
  • What are the (institutional/socio-economic/spatial) challenges local authorities and non-governmental actors are facing today?
  • How do local authorities overcome the challenges, and what is the solution space in which they operate?

Further information:

 

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