Technologies in Decline: Socio-Technical Approaches to Discontinuation and Destabilisation

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The central questions of this book are how technologies decline, how societies deal with technologies in decline, and how governance may be explicitly oriented towards parting with ‘undesirable’ technology.

Surprisingly, these questions are fairly novel. Thus far, the dominant interest in historical, economic, sociological and political studies of technology has been to understand how novelty emerges, how innovation can open up new opportunities and how such processes may be supported. This innovation bias reflects how in the last centuries modern societies have embraced technology as a vehicle of progress. It is timely, however, to broaden the social study of technology and society: next to considering the rise of technologies, their fall should be addressed, too. Dealing with technologies in decline is an important challenge or our times, as socio-technical systems are increasingly part of the problems of climate change, biodiversity loss, social inequalities and geo-political tensions. This volume presents empirical studies of technologies in decline, as well as conceptual clarifications and theoretical deepening. Technologies in Decline presents an emerging research agenda for the study of technological decline, emphasising the need for a plurality of perspectives.

Given that destabilisation and discontinuation are seen as a way to accelerate sustainability transitions, this book will be of interest to academics, students and policy makers researching and working in the areas of sustainability science and policy, economic geography, innovation studies, and science and technology studies.

Author(s): Zahar Koretsky, Peter Stegmaier, Bruno Turnheim, Harro van Lente
Publisher: Routledge/Earthscan
Year: 2022

Language: English
Pages: 294
City: London

Cover
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
List of illustrations
Notes on contributors
Preface
Acknowledgements
1. Introduction: The relevance of technologies in decline
PART I: Conceptual explorations
2. Dynamics of technological decline as socio-material unravelling
3. Destabilisation, decline and phase-out in transitions research
4. Conceptual aspects of discontinuation governance: An exploration
PART II: Empirical explorations
5. Discourses around decline: Comparing the debates on coal phase-out in the UK, Germany and Finland
6. Mapping the territorial adaptation of technological trajectories: The phase-out of the internal combustion engine
7. The role of alternative technologies in the enactment of (dis)continuities
8. Caring for decline: The case of 16mm film artworks of Tacita Dean
PART III: Governance explorations
9. Implementing exnovation?: Ambitions and governance complexity in the case of the Brussels Low Emission Zone
10. Phase-out as a policy approach to address sustainability challenges: A systematic revie
11. The end of the world’s leaded petrol era: Reflections on the final four decades of a century-long campaign
12. Conclusions and continuations: Horizons for studying technologies in decline
Index