Many roads to Rome: The emergence of pathways from patterns of change through exploratory modelling of sustainability transitions

Fjalar J. de Haan, Briony C. Rogers, Rebekah Ruth Brown, Ana Deletic

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer-review

39 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

This article presents an exploratory modelling approach that illustrates how overall transition pathways can emerge from a limited number of underlying change patterns. Pathways describe the temporal development of transitions, they are trajectories of change that carry societal systems such as health care, energy supply or water management into qualitatively different states. Under any given input scenario, a very large number of different pathways may result due to uncertainties such as those related to human agency. Though the pathways all differ in detail, clusters of pathways share enough qualitative similarities to allow identification of a small number of ideal types: many roads to Rome. The input scenario influences how often the various types of futures emerge, not what types emerge. The article explores this using a series of hypothetical cases and compares the results with ideal-typical pathways from the literature. A historical case is simulated for illustration.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)279-292
Number of pages14
JournalEnvironmental Modelling and Software
Volume85
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2016

Keywords

  • Transitions
  • Sustainability transitions
  • Pathways
  • Exploratory modelling
  • Clustering
  • Multi-Pattern Approach

Cite this