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Circularity in the Built Environment: A Goal or a Means?

Tom B. J. Coenen (), Klaasjan Visscher () and Leentje Volker ()
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Tom B. J. Coenen: Civil Engineering & Management, University of Twente
Klaasjan Visscher: University of Twente
Leentje Volker: Civil Engineering & Management, University of Twente

Chapter Chapter 18 in SDGs in Construction Economics and Organization, 2023, pp 253-267 from Springer

Abstract: Abstract To reach a circular built environment, the changes and solutions of such mission need to align with the challenges a Circular EconomyCircular economy (CE) aims to solve. Despite the rather uniform policies on the goals and challenges of circular construction, the understanding of CE among practitioners appears divergent. Using the concept of problem space and solution space in relation to missions, the various perceptions, interpretations and framingsFramings of the CE mission in the Dutch construction industryConstruction industries were studied by means of 20 semi-structured interviews. Results indicate that the perceptions of the underlying challenges vary from mere resource scarcity to wide societal reforms, including social equity and climate neutrality. Also, the relation with other concepts seems contested, particularly regarding sustainabilitySustainability. The problems CE aims to address and the solutions to reach such CE turned out to interact and even intertwine in the conceptualizations of CE. Mission achievement hence calls for convergence of both the problem and the solution space acknowledging the mission’s co-evolving nature. Given the resulting positioning of CE as both a means for underlying challenges and a goal in itself, we propose to understand CE as a mediation concept that couples directed solutions to a wide set of societal challenges. This implies that rather than aiming for a uniform definition, action should be aimed at dynamically guided solutions towards addressing the evolving societal challenges. Further research in other sectoral and geographical contexts is required to explore the validity and implications of CE as a mediation concept.

Keywords: Circular economy; Mission-oriented innovation policy; Sustainability transition; Framing; System perspective (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2023
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:spr:prbchp:978-3-031-25498-7_18

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DOI: 10.1007/978-3-031-25498-7_18

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