Cite as:
Seyfang G, Haxeltine A, 2012, "Growing grassroots innovations: exploring the role of
community-based initiatives in governing sustainable
energy transitions" Environment and Planning C: Government and Policy 30(3) 381 – 400
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Growing grassroots innovations: exploring the role of
community-based initiatives in governing sustainable
energy transitions
Gill Seyfang, Alex Haxeltine
Abstract. The challenges of sustainable development (and climate change and peak oil, in
particular) demand system-wide transformations in sociotechnical systems of provision.
An academic literature around coevolutionary innovation for sustainability has recently
emerged as an attempt to understand the dynamics and directions of such sociotechnical
transformations, which are termed 'sustainability transitions'. This literature has previously
focused on market-based technological innovations. Here we apply it to a new context of
civil-society-based social innovation and examine the role of community-based initiatives
in a transition to a low-carbon sustainable economy in the UK. We present new empirical
research from a study of the UK's Transition Towns movement (a 'grassroots innovation')
and assess its attempts to grow and influence wider societal sociotechnical systems. By applying strategic niche management theory to this civil society context, we deliver
theoretically informed practical recommendations for this movement to diffuse beyond its
niche: to foster deeper engagement with resourceful regime actors; to manage expectations
more realistically by delivering tangible opportunities for action and participation; and
to embrace a community-based, action-oriented model of social change (in preference to
a cognitive theory of behaviour change). Furthermore, our study indicates areas where
theory can be refined to better explain the growth and broader impacts of grassroots
innovations —namely, through a fuller appreciation of the importance of internal niche
processes, by understanding the important role of identity and group formation, and by
resolving how social practices change in grassroots innovations.
Keywords: sustainability transitions, grassroots innovations, community energy, civil
society, social innovation, niches
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