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Community Organizations IOS Fair Transitions
IOS Fair Transitions
IOS Fair Transitions
University or Research Institution

Location

Netherlands
Working languages
inglês

Over 50 scholars from a wide variety of disciplines have joined IOS Fair Transitions, a platform of the Institutions for Open Societies (IOS) at Utrecht University. 

The aim of the platform is to radically rethink sustainable development and envision institutions for the future that safeguard not just ecological boundaries, but also boundaries of fair and just development – on equal and symmetrical terms. By facilitating an interdisciplinary dialogue among various faculties within Utrecht University, and with actors in society, the platform explores the question:

How do institutions need to change in order to guarantee safe, inclusive and climate-resilient landscapes and social-ecological environments across the globe?

The basic assumption that underlies the platform is that environmental problems such as climate change are human or institutional problems, characterized by, or rather, constitutive of deeply unfair and unjust government arrangements. We believe that existing governmental and market institutions must change and collaborate with informal bottom-up institutions in new ways in order to achieve fairness and social justice while facing complex global challenges, such as climate change-related transformations that lead to shifts in people’s mobility, relationship between human and non-human species and access, use and control of natural resources.

 

Key activities:

As part of our activities, we organize lecture series, an annual conference in collaboration with the Netherlands Land Academy (LANDac) and an annual Summer School.

 

 

Members:

Resources

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Land governance and the politics of fair transitions: Deepening the search for social justice

Conference Papers & Reports
Setembro, 2024
Global

The starting point for the Conference and Summit was the recognition that ongoing transitions in the name of climate change and clean energy are deeply unfair in multiple ways. Climate policies and so-called green investments place huge burdens on people and spaces in the Global South as well as on areas inhabited by marginalized populations in countries of the Global North. Their rights are put under pressure, safeguards are lacking or not enforced, and the room to defend their lands, forests, pastures, and territories is constrained.