Adewale Adesanya
Chelsea Schelly
Christie M. Poitra
Douglas Bessette
Elise Matz
Kristin L. Arola
Laura Schmitt Olabisi
Marie Schaefer
Marika Seigel

This 2021 paper, published in Sustainability as part of a special issue organized by two MICARES project team members, reviews previous scholarship on socio-technological systems transitions, highlights the gaps left by these perspectives, and reviews how the MICARES framework offers a novel perspective for meaningful community engagement and incorporation of Indigenous and experiential knowledges for improved decision making regarding transitions in energy systems.

Abstract

Moving toward a sustainable global society requires substantial change in both social and technological systems. This sustainability is dependent not only on addressing the environmental impacts of current social and technological systems, but also on addressing the social, economic and political harms that continue to be perpetuated through systematic forms of oppression and the exclusion of Black, Indigenous, and people of color (BIPOC) communities. To adequately identify and address these harms, we argue that scientists, practitioners, and communities need a transdisciplinary framework that integrates multiple types of knowledge, in particular, Indigenous and experiential knowledge. Indigenous knowledge systems embrace relationality and reciprocity rather than extraction and oppression, and experiential knowledge grounds transition priorities in lived experiences rather than expert assessments. Here, we demonstrate how an Indigenous, experiential, and community-based participatory framework for understanding and advancing socio-technological system transitions can facilitate the co-design and co-development of community-owned energy systems.

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