Research Institute for Sustainability Helmholtz Centre Potsdam

Moral rifts in the coal phase-out—how mayors shape distributive and recognition-based dimensions of a just transition in Lusatia

Transitions towards low-carbon societies trigger renegotiations of justice concerns in regions that have to abandon unsustainable, fossil-based production patterns. In these transition regions, tensions may appear between inner- and supra-regional justice claims on the one hand, and recognition-based and distributional justice concerns on the other. Intermediary actors such as municipal politicians have to navigate these spatial and moral tensions. Based on qualitative data generated in the German lignite-mining region of Lusatia, ‘moral rifts’ are reconstructed that shape local perceptions of justice. These rifts help elucidate how reconciliation in this region proves to be difficult despite considerable redistributive efforts. Unless patterns of misrecognition are adequately addressed, prospects for a successful transformation of the region remain limited.

Publication Year

2021

Publication Type

Citation

Gürtler, K., & Herberg, J. (2023). Moral rifts in the coal phase-out—how mayors shape distributive and recognition-based dimensions of a just transition in Lusatia. Journal of Environmental Policy and Planning, 25(2), 194-209. doi:10.1080/1523908X.2021.1992267.

DOI

10.1080/1523908X.2021.1992267

Staff Involved

Share via email

Copied to clipboard

Print