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Filippa Säwe

Researcher at Lund University

Publications -  17
Citations -  339

Filippa Säwe is an academic researcher from Lund University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Sustainability & Social sustainability. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 17 publications receiving 235 citations.

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Ten essentials for action-oriented and second order energy transitions, transformations and climate change research

TL;DR: Ten essentials for guiding action-oriented transformation and energy research are presented, framed in relation to second-order science, to create highly adaptive, reflexive, collaborative and impact-oriented research able to enhance capacity to respond to the climate challenge.
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The challenge of internal stakeholder support for co-creational branding strategy

TL;DR: In this paper, an organizational ethnographic approach is used to analyze how key internal stakeholders in a municipality understand the co-creative strategy for branding urban renewal, looking at their understanding, alignment and support for the strategy.
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Absence and presence of social complexity in the marketization of sustainable tourism

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focus on the discursive and practical tension between ambitions for development and maintenance of socio-cultural values in sustainable tourism, and argue for the acknowledgement of social complexity in market theoretizations in order to transfer sustainable tourism from the agenda of business potential and traditional marketing to the domain of participatory politics.
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The role of frames in a co-creation process

TL;DR: In this article, the conditions for co-creation in a non-commercial context are analyzed and the consequences of the frames for the values that are co-created in the process.
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From Moral to Markets: The Rhetoric of Responsibility and Resource Management in European Union Fisheries Policy

TL;DR: In this paper, two Swedish seminars where fisheries stakeholders discuss the proposal for a reformed Common Fisheries Policy (CFP) are analyzed, showing how fish become defined as a specific kind of resource and how their status as a resource is framed as a moral issue Once morally charged the resource is subjected to valorization through economic modeling.