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13 pages, 533 KB  
Review
Towards a Vision of Sustainable Health: Definitions, Related Concepts and Key Dimensions
by Samira Amil, Julie-Alexandra Moulin and Éric Gagnon
Sustainability 2026, 18(7), 3586; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18073586 - 6 Apr 2026
Viewed by 344
Abstract
Contemporary societies are facing converging crises, including environmental degradation, worsening social inequalities, aging populations, and increasingly costly healthcare systems, prompting sustainable health to be proposed as an integrative conceptual perspective for rethinking health, its determinants, and collective action. This narrative review aims to [...] Read more.
Contemporary societies are facing converging crises, including environmental degradation, worsening social inequalities, aging populations, and increasingly costly healthcare systems, prompting sustainable health to be proposed as an integrative conceptual perspective for rethinking health, its determinants, and collective action. This narrative review aims to trace the historical evolution of the concept, clarify the vision it offers for public health, and identify its implications for research, policy, and intervention. A literature search (May 2025) was conducted in PubMed, Google Scholar, and Google, with no restrictions on language, time period, or document type. Of 40 relevant documents, 21 were selected for in-depth analysis by two independent reviewers, with duplicate data extraction. The results show that sustainable health broadens the World Health Organisation (WHO) definition of health by incorporating sustainability, intergenerational justice, ecological limits, and social equity. Close to, but distinct from Planetary Health, One Health, and EcoHealth, sustainable health is based on ecological, social and ethical, economic, behavioral, intergenerational, and systemic/intersectoral dimensions. Sustainable health thus emerges as a systemic and transdisciplinary conceptual approach for transforming health systems, living environments, and public policy, requiring further conceptual clarification, robust interdisciplinary research programs, and intersectoral initiatives involving communities. Full article
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22 pages, 294 KB  
Article
What Makes Ecological Responsibility Endure? Sustainability Grammars Under Planetary Limits
by Michael Carolan
Sustainability 2026, 18(6), 3091; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18063091 - 21 Mar 2026
Viewed by 316
Abstract
In climate adaptation plans, national sustainability strategies, and agency-level resilience frameworks, planetary limits are routinely acknowledged, yet proposed responses continue to center on expansion, replication, and scalability. This paper argues that this tension is not merely political or technical but grammatical. It reflects [...] Read more.
In climate adaptation plans, national sustainability strategies, and agency-level resilience frameworks, planetary limits are routinely acknowledged, yet proposed responses continue to center on expansion, replication, and scalability. This paper argues that this tension is not merely political or technical but grammatical. It reflects the dominance of the grammar of scale—a patterned way of organizing, evaluating, and legitimizing sustainability action through expansion, metrics, piloting, and exit. While indispensable in many contexts, scale increasingly struggles to secure durable ecological responsibility amid irreversibility, uneven exposure, and intergenerational harm. The paper advances a framework of plural sustainability grammars to diagnose this mismatch. In addition to scale, it identifies six alternative grammars—attachment, settlement, sufficiency, inheritance, exposure, and refusal—that already circulate, often implicitly, within sustainability discourse. Each grammar foregrounds dimensions of responsibility that scalability tends to background, including permanence, restraint, cumulative consequence, and ethical limits. The paper traces these grammars through climate adaptation planning frameworks across governance levels, showing how plural grammars are prominent in problem framing and diagnosis but are progressively narrowed as plans move toward implementation, monitoring, and accountability, where scale becomes dominant. The paper concludes by reflecting on the implications of this grammatical narrowing for practitioners, policymakers, and scholars concerned with adaptation, justice, and the governance of sustainability under planetary limits. Full article
26 pages, 3887 KB  
Article
Designing Tomorrow’s Food Systems Through Integrative Ethical Water Governance
by Dilek Olcay and Serap Ulusam Seçkiner
Sustainability 2026, 18(4), 1761; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18041761 - 9 Feb 2026
Viewed by 652
Abstract
Integrative Ethical Water Governance (IEWG) offers a structured pathway to enhance the resilience and sustainability of food systems under intensifying water scarcity, climate change, and rising demand. This article develops and applies a scoring-based comparative framework to evaluate how four governance contexts—Türkiye’s Southeastern [...] Read more.
Integrative Ethical Water Governance (IEWG) offers a structured pathway to enhance the resilience and sustainability of food systems under intensifying water scarcity, climate change, and rising demand. This article develops and applies a scoring-based comparative framework to evaluate how four governance contexts—Türkiye’s Southeastern Anatolia Project (GAP), China’s Yangtze River Basin management, India’s watershed development programs, and California’s groundwater sustainability initiatives—perform across dual IEWG dimensions: ethical principles (rights-based approaches, justice, intergenerational equity, ecological integrity) and governance frameworks (stakeholder participation, environmental focus, equity approach, institutional integration, economic mechanisms). The analysis assigns explicit scores to each dimension, revealing distinct patterns of ethical integration, strengths and gaps in governance design, and context-specific trade-offs between agricultural production and ecosystem protection. Results show that higher aggregate IEWG scores are associated with more robust participatory structures, clearer allocation of responsibilities across scales, and better alignment of economic instruments with stewardship objectives. The study’s scoring-based comparative method provides a transparent, replicable tool for diagnosing governance performance and identifying priority areas for institutional innovation, offering a novel evaluative lens for future research and policy on ethical water–food governance. Full article
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28 pages, 658 KB  
Article
Intergenerational Equity in International Climate Law as a Legal Criterion for the Interpretation of State Climate Obligations According to the ICJ
by Eliana Díaz-Cruces, Camilo Zamora-Ledezma and Simone Belli
Laws 2026, 15(1), 10; https://doi.org/10.3390/laws15010010 - 9 Feb 2026
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1684
Abstract
This article examines in detail Advisory Opinion No. 32, issued by the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in July 2025. The analysis examines how the decision of the International Court of Justice establishes the principle of intergenerational equity as an interpretative criterion for [...] Read more.
This article examines in detail Advisory Opinion No. 32, issued by the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in July 2025. The analysis examines how the decision of the International Court of Justice establishes the principle of intergenerational equity as an interpretative criterion for climate obligations, consolidating specific duties of prevention, due diligence, cooperation, mitigation, and adaptation to the consequences of climate change that directly affect present and future generations. This Opinion also designates the 1.5 °C threshold as a central legal benchmark for assessing States’ due diligence in climate mitigation and adaptation and extends state obligations to the regulation of private actors, characterizing climate protection as an erga omnes duty based on human rights and customary international law. Through a doctrinal and institutional legal method, supported by systematic documentary analysis of treaties, case law and soft-law instruments, this study situates the ICJ’s reasoning within the broader evolution of intergenerational equity and explores its implications for state responsibility and climate litigation. It also analyzes the potential of the Advisory Opinion to foster new institutional mechanisms, such as ombudsmen, fiduciary management mechanisms, and intergenerational impact assessments, to represent future generations in climate governance. The main conclusion is that the Advisory Opinion inaugurates a new stage in global climate governance, in which intergenerational equity ceases to be a purely aspirational vision and instead operates as a binding interpretative standard guiding the interpretation and review of existing climate obligations, rather than serving as an autonomous source of new duties. However, its transformative effect will depend primarily on the political will and institutional capacity of states to implement effective mechanisms. Full article
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21 pages, 297 KB  
Article
Applying Heffron’s Energy Justice Framework to National Energy Transitions: A Study of Intergenerational and Intragenerational Equity
by Wulan Fitriana, Hendry Timotiyas Paradongan, Novia Hafnidah, Nanang Hariyanto, Ardianto Budi Rahmawan and Yasmin Dyah Rahmadita
Sustainability 2026, 18(2), 840; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18020840 - 14 Jan 2026
Viewed by 715
Abstract
The energy transition stands as the central focus of Indonesia’s national energy policy, as outlined in the National Energy General Plan (RUEN). This study aims to analyze the extent to which RUEN has accommodated the principle of Heffron’s Energy Justice Framework, both from [...] Read more.
The energy transition stands as the central focus of Indonesia’s national energy policy, as outlined in the National Energy General Plan (RUEN). This study aims to analyze the extent to which RUEN has accommodated the principle of Heffron’s Energy Justice Framework, both from the perspective of intergenerational and intragenerational justice. Using qualitative policy analysis, the paper assesses distributive, procedural, and recognition justice within RUEN and identifies structural gaps in implementation. The study highlights that although the RUEN has established measures to support the energy transition, significant barriers remain to ensuring a fair and sustainable distribution of energy, particularly unequal energy access, limited stakeholder participation, and a slow reduction in fossil fuel dependence. The results of this study are expected to yield more inclusive and equitable policy recommendations to support the energy transition, while also enhancing RUEN’s effectiveness in achieving energy resilience, sustainability, and justice in Indonesia. Full article
24 pages, 9488 KB  
Article
Community Summits as Catalysts for Healing: Addressing Eco-Anxiety and Fostering Collective Resilience in Environmental Justice Movements
by Chinmayi Bethanabatla, Dani Wilson, Miranda Aman and Tina Ndoh
Soc. Sci. 2026, 15(1), 40; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci15010040 - 12 Jan 2026
Viewed by 606
Abstract
The ideals of community and collective action are key tenets of the environmental justice (EJ) movement. Yet the pervasive grind culture that underpins capitalist societies makes it challenging to embrace these core values. EJ convenings are organized by a variety of entities, including [...] Read more.
The ideals of community and collective action are key tenets of the environmental justice (EJ) movement. Yet the pervasive grind culture that underpins capitalist societies makes it challenging to embrace these core values. EJ convenings are organized by a variety of entities, including grassroots organizations, government agencies, environmental non-governmental agencies, and academic institutions, and often reflect the tone of the organizing entity. This work explores the impact of a community and academic partnered EJ summit in addressing ecological grief (eco-grief) and ecological anxiety (eco-anxiety), supporting collective action, and attending to healing justice. We interviewed thirteen participants who attended the 2024 Pittsburgh Environmental Justice Summit using semi-structured, open-ended questions. Drawing on insights from lived experiences with the environment and environmental harms, we sought to understand how participants perceived EJ, health, and healing, as well as the role of summits and community efforts in shaping these perspectives. Emotional impacts like eco-grief, eco-anxiety, and intergenerational trauma were other common themes established through the interviews. Despite negative emotions being more commonly expressed than positive emotions, hope emerged as the most widely expressed theme. The summit was viewed as a space for reflection, support, establishing new contacts, and promoting growth and resilience. The results underscore the importance of integrating emotional and psychological aspects into EJ frameworks as well as the value of community-based approaches that combine EJ and healing practices to foster resilience, promote equitable health outcomes, and cultivate hope through collective action and support. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Public Health and Social Change)
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19 pages, 1139 KB  
Article
Against the “Hard Squares”: How La Verneda Reclaimed Green Space and Identity
by Elisabeth Torras-Gómez, Carla Jarque, Aitor Alzaga, Esther Oliver, Laura Ruiz-Eugenio, Marta Soler-Gallart, Lidia Puigvert, Adriana Aubert, Rosa Valls-Carol, Ramon Flecha, Ane López de Aguileta, Karol Melgarejo and Alba Crespo-López
Urban Sci. 2026, 10(1), 18; https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci10010018 - 1 Jan 2026
Viewed by 1395
Abstract
The scientific literature has explored the relationship between environmental justice and inequalities in the distribution and access to green spaces. This article analyses the neighbourhood of La Verneda (Barcelona) as one of the most successful cases of ecological urban transformation in Spain. Based [...] Read more.
The scientific literature has explored the relationship between environmental justice and inequalities in the distribution and access to green spaces. This article analyses the neighbourhood of La Verneda (Barcelona) as one of the most successful cases of ecological urban transformation in Spain. Based on a Communicative Methodology approach that includes five in-depth dialogic interviews with residents and documentation from local institutions, the analysis identifies four core mechanisms driving the transformation: dialogic capacity building (through an adult education school), grassroots coalition-building (VERN and local associations), intergenerational design choices (spaces intentionally designed for mixed-age use), and symbolic place-claims (defense of the name La Verneda). These mechanisms contributed to measurable environmental and social outcomes reported by residents and illustrate how bottom-up processes can reconfigure urban planning trajectories. These findings contribute relevant lessons for contemporary ecological transitions in other urban peripheries. Full article
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32 pages, 3783 KB  
Review
One Health Approaches to Ethical, Secure, and Sustainable Food Systems and Ecosystems: Plant-Based Diets and Livestock in the African Context
by Elahesadat Hosseini, Zenebe Tadesse Tsegay, Slim Smaoui, Walid Elfalleh, Maria Antoniadou, Theodoros Varzakas and Martin Caraher
Foods 2026, 15(1), 85; https://doi.org/10.3390/foods15010085 - 26 Dec 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1388
Abstract
The contribution of members of the agri-food system to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals is a key element in the global transition to sustainable development. The use of sustainable management systems supports the development of an integrated approach with a spirit of continuous [...] Read more.
The contribution of members of the agri-food system to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals is a key element in the global transition to sustainable development. The use of sustainable management systems supports the development of an integrated approach with a spirit of continuous improvement. Such organization is based on risk-management tools that are applied to multiple stakeholders, e.g., those responsible for product quality, occupational health and safety, and environmental impact, thus enabling better global performance. In this review, the term “ethical food systems” is used in our discussion of the concrete methods that can be used to endorse fairness and concern across the food chain. This comprises safeguarding equitable access to nutritious foods, defending animal welfare, assisting ecologically accountable production, and addressing social and labor justice within supply chains. Ethical factors also include transparency, cultural respect, and intergenerational responsibility. Consequently, the objective of this review is to address how these ethical values can be implemented within a One Health framework, predominantly by assimilating plant-based diets, developing governance tools, and resolving nutritional insecurity. Within the One Health framework, decoding ethical principles into practice necessitates a set of concrete interventions: (i) raising awareness of animal rights; (ii) distributing nutritional and environmental knowledge; (iii) endorsing plant-based food research, commercialization, and consumption; (iv) development of social inclusion and positive recognition of vegan/vegetarian identity. At the same time, it should be noted that this perspective represents only one side of the coin, as many populations continue to consume meat and rely on animal proteins for their nutritional value; thus, the role and benefits of meat and other animal-derived foods must also be recognized and discussed. This operational definition provides a foundation for asking how ethical perspectives can be applied. A case study from Africa shows the implementation of a sustainable and healthy future through the One Health approach. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Food Security and Healthy Nutrition)
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17 pages, 232 KB  
Article
Inherited Futures: Generation Z and Their Parents on the Future and Sustainability
by Joseph Kantenbacher and Sonja Braucht
Sustainability 2025, 17(24), 11149; https://doi.org/10.3390/su172411149 - 12 Dec 2025
Viewed by 1099
Abstract
People’s conceptions of the future influence their willingness to engage in sustainability-oriented actions today. A sense of moral responsibility toward both past and future generations may also be linked to greater interest in sustainability. This study explores how members of Generation Z (Gen [...] Read more.
People’s conceptions of the future influence their willingness to engage in sustainability-oriented actions today. A sense of moral responsibility toward both past and future generations may also be linked to greater interest in sustainability. This study explores how members of Generation Z (Gen Z) and their parents conceptualize the future, including their views on intergenerational justice and sustainability. Using semi-structured interviews with 11 Gen Z–parent pairs, we examined how ideas about the future are formed, transmitted, and expressed. Thematic analysis revealed that Gen Z participants most frequently framed the future in terms of economics, technology, and social dynamics, with environmental concerns mentioned occasionally but not as a dominant theme. Compared to their parents, Gen Z expressed distinct priorities—including creating opportunities for future generations—and used different language to describe future possibilities. We develop the concept of the lexicon of futures thinking—the specific terms, metaphors, and conceptual categories used to articulate visions of the future—as a tool for understanding and engaging youth perspectives. These findings offer insights into how educators and advocates can more effectively connect with Gen Z on sustainability issues by aligning with their values and linguistic framing. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Motivating Pro-Environmental Behavior in Youth Populations)
35 pages, 432 KB  
Review
Indigenous Consumer Racial Profiling in Canada: A Neglected Human Rights Issue
by Lorne Preston Foster and Lesley Allan Jacobs
Genealogy 2025, 9(4), 136; https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy9040136 - 1 Dec 2025
Viewed by 2180
Abstract
This paper examines the pervasive yet underrecognized phenomenon of consumer racial profiling (CRP) against Indigenous peoples in Canada. Drawing on sociolegal analysis, public health research, and empirical data, the authors demonstrate how CRP—manifested in routine acts of surveillance, exclusion, and humiliation in retail [...] Read more.
This paper examines the pervasive yet underrecognized phenomenon of consumer racial profiling (CRP) against Indigenous peoples in Canada. Drawing on sociolegal analysis, public health research, and empirical data, the authors demonstrate how CRP—manifested in routine acts of surveillance, exclusion, and humiliation in retail and service spaces—functions as a contemporary expression of colonialism and systemic racism. The work identifies both individual and collective harms, including racial trauma, internalized inferiority, and civic alienation, while framing CRP as a neglected but critical human rights issue. The authors argue that CRP exacerbates intergenerational trauma and undermines reconciliation efforts, calling for Indigenous-specific remedies such as healing ceremonies, cultural safety training, and systemic data collection reforms. By situating CRP within broader patterns of legal consciousness, systemic discrimination, and access to justice, this report is a much-needed foundational resource for advancing anti-racist practices in commercial settings and fulfilling Canada’s private-sector obligations under the Truth and Reconciliation Commission and the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP). Full article
37 pages, 364 KB  
Entry
Future Literacy and Cultural Heritage Education: Integrating Anticipatory Competencies for Adaptive Cultural Sustainability
by Paolo Fusco
Encyclopedia 2025, 5(4), 178; https://doi.org/10.3390/encyclopedia5040178 - 23 Oct 2025
Viewed by 2763
Definition
Futures Literacy, as defined and promoted by UNESCO, is the capability to imagine, question, and use the future as a resource for better understanding the present and acting with intention. When applied to Cultural Heritage Education, it reframes heritage from a static object [...] Read more.
Futures Literacy, as defined and promoted by UNESCO, is the capability to imagine, question, and use the future as a resource for better understanding the present and acting with intention. When applied to Cultural Heritage Education, it reframes heritage from a static object of preservation into a dynamic anticipatory system that evolves through dialogue between past, present, and future. This integrative approach enables learners and communities to strengthen what can be called cultural adaptive capacity, understood as the ability to ensure continuity of identity and traditions, to promote responsive innovation in the face of change, and to transmit heritage knowledge across generations. This entry situates Futures Literacy within a wider theoretical framework that includes complexity theory, anticipatory systems, and sustainability education. It emphasizes that heritage education must increasingly address uncertainty, diversity of perspectives, and interconnected challenges such as globalization, climate change, and cultural transformations. UNESCO Futures Literacy Laboratories conducted in different regions of the world, as well as ICCROM’s foresight initiatives, provide concrete examples of how anticipatory competences can be fostered in varied cultural contexts, demonstrating both universal patterns and context-specific adaptations. By embedding Futures Literacy into heritage education, cultural heritage becomes a living resource for nurturing resilience, global citizenship, and creativity. It allows communities not only to preserve their legacy but also to reimagine it as a driver of innovation and inclusion. Ultimately, this perspective highlights the potential of education to enhance cultural sustainability, foster intergenerational solidarity, and cultivate temporal justice, preparing societies to face the uncertainties of the future with confidence and responsibility. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Arts & Humanities)
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20 pages, 281 KB  
Review
The Youngest Minds in a Warming World: A Review of Climate Change and Child and Adolescent Mental Health
by Georgios Giannakopoulos
Psychiatry Int. 2025, 6(4), 119; https://doi.org/10.3390/psychiatryint6040119 - 2 Oct 2025
Viewed by 4189
Abstract
Climate change poses a growing threat to the mental health of children and adolescents. This narrative review synthesizes global, interdisciplinary research on the psychological impacts of climate disruption during critical developmental stages, with attention to marginalized populations. We explore three key pathways of [...] Read more.
Climate change poses a growing threat to the mental health of children and adolescents. This narrative review synthesizes global, interdisciplinary research on the psychological impacts of climate disruption during critical developmental stages, with attention to marginalized populations. We explore three key pathways of harm: direct exposure to environmental disasters, chronic disruption of ecological and social systems, and existential distress such as eco-anxiety. Drawing on eco-social theory and developmental psychopathology, the review highlights how these impacts are shaped by age, geography, identity, and systemic inequities. It identifies both risk and protective factors, emphasizing the importance of caregiving relationships, cultural practices, education, and youth climate engagement. While activism can foster resilience and purpose, it may also incur emotional burdens that require clinical and policy attention. We argue that child and adolescent mental health must be recognized as central to climate justice and adaptation, and we offer urgent recommendations for integrated action across sectors. Full article
20 pages, 1534 KB  
Article
Changing Attitudes Towards Retirement and Ageing Through Flipped Classroom and Collaborative Learning: A Social Psychological Study with Psychology and Social Work Students
by María Natividad Elvira-Zorzo and Maria Teresa Vega Rodríguez
Soc. Sci. 2025, 14(9), 562; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14090562 - 19 Sep 2025
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 1536
Abstract
The phenomenon of population ageing indicates an overall improvement in health and quality of life. However, it also presents significant social challenges, particularly with regard to age discrimination and the negative stereotypes and attitudes towards older people known as ageism. Various studies have [...] Read more.
The phenomenon of population ageing indicates an overall improvement in health and quality of life. However, it also presents significant social challenges, particularly with regard to age discrimination and the negative stereotypes and attitudes towards older people known as ageism. Various studies have shown that these prejudices have a negative impact on the social integration and well-being of this group. This quasi-experimental pre-test–post-test study, which involved a non-equivalent comparison group, was carried out at the University of Salamanca with psychology and social work students. This study aimed to reduce negative stereotypes about old age and unfavourable attitudes towards retirement by implementing a three-phase educational programme. The programme incorporated flipped classroom methodology and intergenerational collaborative projects. Participants were divided into two groups: an intervention group responsible for designing intergenerational projects and a comparison group which did not participate in the intervention. The Negative Stereotypes towards Old Age Questionnaire (CENVE) and the Attitudes towards Retirement Scale (ARS) were administered before and after the programme. The results showed a significant decrease in negative stereotypes in the intervention group, with no changes observed in the comparison group. The impact varied according to academic discipline. Integrating active and intergenerational methodologies into educational contexts is proposed as a means of mitigating ageism, promoting inclusion, and fostering social justice. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Family Studies)
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25 pages, 1612 KB  
Article
Energy Democracy, Environmental Justice, and the Governance Gap in the Context of Forest-Based Energy Conflicts: The Case of Akbelen Forest
by Hilal Erkuş, Yavuz Selim Alkan and Gülşah Tırış
Land 2025, 14(9), 1794; https://doi.org/10.3390/land14091794 - 3 Sep 2025
Viewed by 1447
Abstract
This study explores the interplay between environmental justice and energy democracy in the context of forest-based energy conflicts in Türkiye, focusing on the case of the Akbelen Forest. It draws on qualitative data from community-based actions and legal documents to examine how local [...] Read more.
This study explores the interplay between environmental justice and energy democracy in the context of forest-based energy conflicts in Türkiye, focusing on the case of the Akbelen Forest. It draws on qualitative data from community-based actions and legal documents to examine how local communities engage in collective action against extractivist energy policies that threaten their ecological and social environments. The findings reveal a complex web of multilayered injustices, including procedural, distributional, and recognitional dimensions, experienced by the affected populations. In this regard, the Akbelen case demonstrates how these different dimensions intersect and constitute a framework of “multiple justice”. The central argument of this study, developed primarily through our visualised network graph, is that the Akbelen case demonstrates the limitations of current environmental governance frameworks in accommodating community-based ecological values and rights. This analysis demonstrates how energy democracy can function as both a normative and strategic instrument for rethinking participatory planning and forest governance. The present paper contributes to ongoing debates in the fields of political ecology and environmental governance by situating grassroots mobilisation within a broader discussion of just energy transitions. The study also emphasises the necessity of inclusive, multi-actor governance models that prioritise democratic participation, ecological integrity, and intergenerational equity. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Land Socio-Economic and Political Issues)
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15 pages, 240 KB  
Article
Proclaiming Our Roots: Afro-Indigenous Identity, Resistance, and the Making of a Movement
by Ann Marie Beals, Ciann L. Wilson and Rachel Persaud
Religions 2025, 16(7), 828; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16070828 - 24 Jun 2025
Viewed by 1982
Abstract
Proclaiming Our Roots (POR) began as an academic community-based research initiative documenting Afro-Indigenous identities and lived experiences through digital oral storytelling. Since its inception, Proclaiming Our Roots has grown into a grassroots social movement focused on self-determination, cultural reclamation, and resistance to colonial [...] Read more.
Proclaiming Our Roots (POR) began as an academic community-based research initiative documenting Afro-Indigenous identities and lived experiences through digital oral storytelling. Since its inception, Proclaiming Our Roots has grown into a grassroots social movement focused on self-determination, cultural reclamation, and resistance to colonial erasure. This paper explores Proclaiming Our Root’s evolution, from a research project to a grassroots social movement, analyzing how storytelling, relational accountability, and Indigenous, Black, and Afro-Indigenous governance have shaped its development. Drawing on Indigenous methodologies and grounded in Afro-Indigenous worldviews, we examine how POR mobilizes digital storytelling, community gatherings, and intergenerational dialog to give voice to Afro-Indigenous identity, build collective consciousness, and challenge dominant narratives that erase or marginalize Black, Indigenous, and Afro-Indigenous presence. Through a sharing circle involving Proclaiming Our Roots community members, advisory council members, and the research team, in this paper we identify key themes that reflect the movement’s transformative impact: Identity and Belonging, Storytelling as Decolonial Praxis, Healing, Spirituality and Collective Consciousness, and Resistance and Social Movement Building. We discuss how these themes illustrate Proclaiming Our Roots’ dual role as a site of knowledge production and political action, navigating tensions between institutional affiliation and community autonomy. By prioritizing Afro-Indigenous epistemologies and centering lived experience, POR demonstrates how academic research can be a foundation for long-term, relational, and community-led movement-building. In this paper, we want to contribute to broader discussions around the sustainability of grassroots movements, the role of storytelling in social change for Indigenous and Black Peoples, and the possibilities of decolonial knowledge production as epistemic justice. We offer a model for how academic research-initiated projects can remain accountable to the communities with whom we work, while actively participating in liberatory re-imaginings. Full article
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