Institute of Development Studies (IDS)
Bio
Author Biography
John Gaventa is a Professorial Fellow at the Institute of Development Studies (IDS) and a member of its Power and
Popular Politics Cluster. He has written extensively on issues of power, citizen action, inequality, and most recently, just transitions. He is co-author with Gabe Schwartzman of Power and Just Transitions: Struggles for a Post-Coal Future in an Appalachian Valley (2026 forthcoming, University of Illinois Press).
Institute of Development Studies (IDS)
Bio
Author Biography
Rosie McGee is a Senior Fellow at the Institute of Development Studies (IDS) and is a member of its Power and Popular Politics Cluster and teaches on the MA Power, Participation and Social Change. Over her 27-year career, she has focused on power relations, participatory governance, and citizen participation and engagement, playing leading roles in research, evidence-building, and facilitating learning in major development aid and research programmes. Trained in interdisciplinary development studies, her methodological approach is rooted in political sociology and anthropology, including using power analysis, and participatory and action research for social change in diverse geographic and social contexts.
Institute of Development Studies (IDS)
Bio
Author Biography
Alex Shankland is a Fellow at the Institute of Development Studies (IDS) and has worked for more than two decades on Indigenous Peoples, civil society, accountability, and political representation, particularly in relation to health, land rights, and climate change in Brazil and Mozambique. He was Principal Investigator of the British Academy project ‘Making Space for Just Transitions in Africa’s Oil and Gas Producing Regions’, and his current research includes work on the politics of energy transition in Mozambique, the impact of critical minerals extraction, large‑scale renewable energy generation on traditional territories in Brazil, and the representation of local communities in climate change policy processes.
Volume 56
Number 2
Published: November 12, 2025
A critical issue of our time is how the world can transition from a development model based on the extraction and use of fossil fuels to one based on cleaner sources of energy, and how it does so in a just and inclusive way.
Central to this issue of the IDS Bulletin is the recognition that to be just, any transition must include consideration of the voices, knowledges, and realities of communities most affected. By bringing together authors from both the global South and the global North, covering a wide range of communities affected by different dimensions of the energy transition, we find long histories of action and resistance developed around encounters with earlier transitions.
The articles in this IDS Bulletin highlight cases of advocacy being used to strengthen community voices to make the processes of consultation more inclusive and empowering of marginalised perspectives. In doing so they also address a less well documented citizen-led pathway that focuses on bottom-up forms of action through grass-roots innovation and social movements. Given the multiple historical forms of injustice which surround energy production, struggles for just transition must ultimately involve multiple forms of justice – be they distributive, recognitional, procedural, restorative, or reparative.