Abstract
The second in the new series of reviews for Action Research Journal is inspired by, and aims to contribute to, this journal’s focus on transformations towards sustainability. How can we, as action researchers, connect our emancipatory, grassroots work with the big global transformations needed to bring forth a just, harmonious and thriving world? When so much needs to transform, where do we start? In 2022, the Club of Rome offered a possible response in a new report called Earth for All, also published as a book and supporting website. Framed as ‘a survival guide for humanity’, Earth for All calls for ‘five extraordinary policy turnarounds’: ending poverty; addressing gross inequality; empowering women; making our food system healthy for people and ecosystems; and transitioning to clean energy. It is ‘an aspirational, stubbornly optimistic guide to the future’ (p. 26). It argues that action on these five big issues could give us the momentum we need to transform the economy in support of sustainability. Action researchers can help to give this agenda momentum by bringing it into our conversations with citizens and facilitating spaces for dialogue and agonism.
Keywords
This is the second in a new series of reviews for Action Research Journal. Rob Warwick outlined the rationale for these in his opening review (Warwick, 2023). This particular review is inspired by, and aims to contribute to, this journal’s focus on transformations towards sustainability. How can we, as action researchers, connect our emancipatory, grassroots work with the big global transformations needed to bring forth a just, harmonious and thriving world? When so much needs to transform, where do we start? In 2022, the Club of Rome offered a possible response in a new report, also published as a book and supporting website. The review below is followed by commentary on the implications for action researchers.
The review
In 1972, Donella and Dennis Meadows and their co-authors Jørgen Randers and William Behrens released
Fifty years later, a new report to the Club of Rome, led by its current president Sandrine Dixson-Declève, takes a similar approach but goes much deeper into the nature of the transformations needed to achieve a sustainable future. Framed as 'a survival guide for humanity',
Why the focus on these five turnarounds? The authors do not claim that these are the only issues that we need to work on. Rather, they argue that focused, large-scale investment in these five areas is the minimum required to create sufficient economic momentum to break us out of the destructive pathway first modelled in
This focus on creating economic momentum is important, and something that sets
The Commission is made up of 41 of the most innovative economic thinkers of our time, committed to exploration of new economic ideas, from wellbeing economics and doughnut economics, to green growth and degrowth.
The book is supported by a series of 15 ‘Deep Dive Papers’ that further explore the necessary transformation of our economic system, on topics such as just transition, energy transformation and regenerative agriculture. Readers of this journal may particularly enjoy Otto Scharmer’s Deep Dive Paper (Scharmer, 2022), where he sketches out a new ecosystem economics paradigm with a primary goal of regenerating living systems and delivering wellbeing for all. Scharmer points to the need for societal learning infrastructures to democratise transformation literacy, advocating for practices that are very consistent with action research for transformations.
Much of the book’s length is taken up with detailed articulation of system change policies that we could implement right now to get started on the five policy turnarounds. They include • Cancellation of the debt of low-income countries; increased taxation of the rich, • Citizens Funds to distribute dividends from use of common resources, • Better education access for girls and women, • Dietary transformation so land stays productive and people stay healthy, • Rapid phasing out of fossil fuels.
Most of these ideas are not new and face powerful resistance. Nevertheless, the articulation of which of the many policy options are most crucial to get us started on economic transformation is a valuable contribution in a complex world.
Something that didn’t work so well for me in the book was its attempt to make its scenario descriptions more engaging by introducing relatable characters - four girls born on the same day in 2020. While this is potentially an excellent idea to make the book more relatable for a wider audience, the book ends up underusing this device and drifting back into scenario descriptions that are heavy on policy and technology descriptions.
In addition, when the report is making its way through the many policy solutions that are its primary focus, the role of human agency in realising its vision of the future can be a bit lost. It’s not always clear what we readers can do to help. For example, when describing the necessary economic transformation, the report states: To make this happen, two players wake up: The government takes a stronger role to encourage the shift, and citizens start viewing themselves as a public whose future is worth investing in (p.155).
How exactly does this waking up happen? What can we action researchers do to facilitate it?
Implications for action research
Responding to the questions above is, of course, the reason that a review of
At a larger scale, this is a call for action research for transformations to do its part to create momentum behind these five extraordinary policy turnarounds. Many of us are already working on these issues; in 2019 this journal called for such focus among action researchers (Bradbury et al., 2019). If we are serious about achieving the transformation we need to regenerate the planet and deliver social justice for its people, perhaps more of us need to consider refocusing our action research to tackle these five challenges.
Footnotes
Declaration of conflicting interests
The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
Funding
The author(s) received no financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
