The programme produced high-quality scientific outcomes, largely due to the formative position given to the social sciences and humanities. The transdisciplinary nature of the programme allowed for new avenues of research in the field of transformations in sustainability and therefore led to deepened understandings both locally and globally. Projects engaged deeply and meaningfully with the concept of transformations and made great advancements in its theoretical and conceptual debates. Below are some examples of the projects’ contributions.
Advancement of project sciences and other knowledge
- new techniques in satellite image analysis to capture complex small-scale production systems, mapping and representing over 200 types of local initiatives in over 900 locations in the Amazon (AGENTS)
- improved understanding of unexpected outcomes of land tenure registration in conflict affected settings (SecTenSusPeace)
- ingenious ways of engaging with stakeholders in community-led and bottom-up transboundary engagements across research, policy and practice thus amplifying the voices of marginalised communities (TAPESTRY)
Policy effects
- the concept of ‘Convivial Conservation’ (CON-VIVA) was adopted by the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency for the Swedish strategy for regional development cooperation in Sub-Saharan Africa, and contributed to informing EU funding priorities as well as EU policy-maker perspectives
- coaching and policy dialogues with national, local and international (UN, World Bank, African Development Bank) organisations (Gold Matters)
- Two PIs of the GoST project were appointed as lead experts of Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services assessment of transformative change
- Misty: interactions with UN processes. the project was instrumental in the process which led to, in 2021, the Government of Bangladesh adopting a ground-breaking proactive and comprehensive displacement management strategy
- Input for adaptations of the Tanzanian National Water Policy. Findings related to the case of Randullabad village, India, strengthened the existing groundwater management protocols there (T2GS)
Tools and methods
- methodological innovation contributing to institutional economics and urban geography, the Adaptive Pathways method for periurban contexts supporting stakeholders to visualise future scenarios and pathways towards ideal futures (H2O–T2S)
- creation of an open access Business Toolkit, which businesses can use to reflect on how they use their IP assets and give tools to increase their sustainability impact rather than just concentrate on protecting their competitive advantage (IPACST)
- development of participatory training modules, engaging different actors on issues such as development, territory, power relations, livelihood strategies and value chains (TRUEPATH)
- creation of a citizen-science mobile app and a Guide for School Teachers to support flood resilience and prevention activities. The Brazilian National Centre for Disaster Monitoring and Early Warning has institutionalised the application. The state of Acre has confirmed that it will use the maps produced to support disaster response planning in future (Waterproofing Data)