TY - JOUR
T1 - How business challenges climate transformation
T2 - an exploration of just transition and industry associations in Australia
AU - Goods, Caleb
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - As the consequences of a warming world intensify and actions to mitigate climate change remain persistently slow, demands for a more radical political economic transition focused on climate and justice have grown. 'Just transition' is one such counter-hegemony that has gained wide appeal within the field and practice of international political economy. Through document analysis and interviews with industry associations in Australia, this article seeks to demonstrate the pliability of just transition, a plasticity that allows incumbent business interests to 'remake' what is just within a just transition. Underpinning this analysis is a novel theoretical framework based on 'justification of worth', which shows that fossil capital seeks to outmaneuver calls for just transition by discursively re-aligning justice with the 'common good' of fossil capital hegemony. The article therefore assists scholars of international political economy to understand the discursive strategies through which powerful incumbent actors endeavor to maintain fossil capital hegemony in response to justice focused counter-hegemonies.
AB - As the consequences of a warming world intensify and actions to mitigate climate change remain persistently slow, demands for a more radical political economic transition focused on climate and justice have grown. 'Just transition' is one such counter-hegemony that has gained wide appeal within the field and practice of international political economy. Through document analysis and interviews with industry associations in Australia, this article seeks to demonstrate the pliability of just transition, a plasticity that allows incumbent business interests to 'remake' what is just within a just transition. Underpinning this analysis is a novel theoretical framework based on 'justification of worth', which shows that fossil capital seeks to outmaneuver calls for just transition by discursively re-aligning justice with the 'common good' of fossil capital hegemony. The article therefore assists scholars of international political economy to understand the discursive strategies through which powerful incumbent actors endeavor to maintain fossil capital hegemony in response to justice focused counter-hegemonies.
KW - Climate change
KW - political economy
KW - industry associations
KW - just transition
KW - justification of worth
KW - business strategy
KW - POLITICAL-ECONOMY
KW - TRADE-UNIONS
KW - STRATEGY
KW - STATE
KW - POWER
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85111643924&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/09692290.2021.1956994
DO - 10.1080/09692290.2021.1956994
M3 - Article
SN - 0969-2290
VL - 29
SP - 2112
EP - 2134
JO - Review of International Political Economy
JF - Review of International Political Economy
IS - 6
ER -