Innovation and knowledge-based growth for low carbon transitions in the built environment: challenges and open research questions
Innovation and knowledge-based growth for low carbon transitions in the built environment: challenges and open research questions
Humanity faces global challenges in climate change mitigation, water sustainability, and other areas. In order to address these challenges, radical innovation is needed to accelerate multiple “sustainability transitions” and create dynamism. Transitions research has focused on small niches and scales where empirical analysis can be done effectively. Niches and bottom-up initiatives for low carbon transitions in the built environment can help adjust policies and reconcile grand visions (top-down perspective) with ground implementation experiences (bottom-up perspective). Multiple factors can contribute to the creation of effective policies, and digitalisation and AI/ML applications, in the context of increasing automation, can be an opportunity to create new prosperity in a knowledge-based growth perspective, considering, however, the underlying critical assumptions, limitations and threats. Ten research questions deemed relevant for low carbon transitions from a bottom-up perspective have been proposed to generate multiple hypotheses for field testing.
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Manfren, Massimiliano
f2b8c02d-cb78-411d-aed1-c4d056365392
Manfren, Massimiliano
f2b8c02d-cb78-411d-aed1-c4d056365392
Manfren, Massimiliano
(2023)
Innovation and knowledge-based growth for low carbon transitions in the built environment: challenges and open research questions.
Rivista TEMA, 9 (1), .
(doi:10.30682/tema0901c).
Abstract
Humanity faces global challenges in climate change mitigation, water sustainability, and other areas. In order to address these challenges, radical innovation is needed to accelerate multiple “sustainability transitions” and create dynamism. Transitions research has focused on small niches and scales where empirical analysis can be done effectively. Niches and bottom-up initiatives for low carbon transitions in the built environment can help adjust policies and reconcile grand visions (top-down perspective) with ground implementation experiences (bottom-up perspective). Multiple factors can contribute to the creation of effective policies, and digitalisation and AI/ML applications, in the context of increasing automation, can be an opportunity to create new prosperity in a knowledge-based growth perspective, considering, however, the underlying critical assumptions, limitations and threats. Ten research questions deemed relevant for low carbon transitions from a bottom-up perspective have been proposed to generate multiple hypotheses for field testing.
Text
d-2-288-TEMA-Vol9-No1-2023_10.30682tema0901c_MANFREN
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e-pub ahead of print date: 5 June 2023
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Local EPrints ID: 480205
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/480205
ISSN: 2421-4574
PURE UUID: 5db8949b-53bc-4d8f-8f16-38bdd4ce2740
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Date deposited: 01 Aug 2023 17:04
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:46
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