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Pathways to Sustainable Welfare
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18 March 2025

Available open access digitally under CC-BY-NC-ND licence.
Pathways to Sustainable Welfare critically examines how cities can address the dual challenges of climate change and sustainability while ensuring the welfare of their populations.
Focused on three Swedish cities, it explores the integration of environmental and welfare concerns in local policies, urban movements and public opinions. Based on theories of inertia, emergence and transformation, it identifies factors driving or obstructing sustainable welfare advancements.
This book is a crucial resource for scholars interested in sustainable transformation, urban governance and social policy. It offers frameworks and empirical evidence relevant to academics, policy makers and practitioners seeking to understand and engage in urban sustainable welfare development.
“In the face of calamitous climate collapse, the case for eco-social policy – the simultaneous pursuit of environmental and social goals – is now well understood. This book contributes to understanding how to achieve that, by revealing the potential of cities to pioneer radical policies drawing on research in Sweden’s largest cities. It clearly depicts both hope and despair in undertaking such a momentous transformation.” Ian Gough, London School of Economics and Political Science
Kajsa Emilsson is Researcher and Senior Lecturer in the School of Social Work at Lund University. She studies public attitudes, political participation, and the role of economic elites in sustainable welfare.
Martin Fritz is head of the junior research group 'Mentalities in Flux (flumen)' at Friedrich Schiller University Jena. His research includes eco-social attitudes, sustainable welfare and socio-structural analyses.
Roger Hildingsson is Senior Researcher in Political Science at Lund University. He studies environmental politics, sustainability governance and climate change including studies of industrial decarbonisation, urban sustainability and climate futures.
Håkan Johansson is Professor of Social Work at Lund University. His research addresses urban social and environmental movements and civil society organisations, including the study of civil society elites.
Jamil Khan is Associate Professor of Environmental and Energy Systems Studies at Lund University. His research includes urban climate governance, climate policy analysis and eco-social integration.
Max Koch is Professor of Social Policy and Sustainability in the School of Social Work at Lund University. His research addresses the social and environmental implications of capitalist development. He has published widely on sustainable welfare and degrowth.
1. Introduction
2. Theories of stability and change
3. Local government and eco-social integration
4. Civil society framings of sustainable welfare
5. Public attitudes and dispositions of sustainable welfare
6. Conclusion