Beyond quick fixes

Why?

The climate crisis is not a simple problem with a single solution. It’s complex, deeply interconnected with other issues—social, economic, historical—and rooted in the everyday lives of people, places and the natural world. To meaningfully engage the public in climate action, we must be willing to face this complexity head-on.

This guide introduces two powerful ideas to support deeper, more inclusive engagement:

  • Entanglement – recognising the messy, interconnected nature of climate issues
  • Just Transition – ensuring the shift to a low-carbon future is fair and inclusive

These concepts are not abstract theory—they are practical lenses to help shape better climate engagement. If they feel unfamiliar or challenging, that’s okay. You can come back to them later in your process, when you’re ready to dig deeper.

The word entanglement reflects the idea that our lives are inseparably connected with the environment and with each other—even before we consciously think about it. Climate issues don’t exist in isolation. Neither do people.

Entanglement means recognising:

  • Climate change is bound up with social histories, economic systems, and power structures
  • We are already part of the problem and part of the solution
  • Our daily lives—from the buildings we live in to the food we eat—depend on climate systems

Considering entanglement means recognising that we are always part of the problems we’re trying to solve—in our communities and our environments—and that these problems are deeply connected to one another.

It’s not just about relationships between people, but also our relationships with the environment we live in, and the many everyday ways we’re connected to it. We often think of nature connection as something that happens when we go into nature, but in reality, we’re always already entangled.

From the geological materials our homes are built with, to the earth systems and engineering that bring water to our taps, to the climate-sensitive microbes in the soil that help grow our food—we are in constant relationship with the environment and its changing climate, every single day.

A just transition ensures that the shift to a low-carbon future is fair and inclusive, protecting workers, communities, and those most affected by change. It’s about recognising that the people most affected by climate change and environmental decline often have the least power to shape the solutions. 

As we respond to climate and environmental challenges, we face choices:

  • We can design policies that sustain or worsen existing inequalities, continuing to place the greatest burden on the most marginalised.
  • Or we can create solutions that not only achieve net zero but also tackle existing social inequalities.

A just transition means choosing the second path—ensuring that climate action benefits everyone, rather than deepening marginalisation and harm.

Councils and organisations taking action on climate don’t just work on climate—they shape housing, transport, education, health, and public services. These areas are deeply interconnected, both in policy and in people’s everyday lives.

The concept of entanglement reminds us that no issue stands alone. Climate action will always overlap with social, economic, and historical factors.

A just transition means making sure this shift to a low-carbon future is fair—especially for those most affected by change. It’s not just about reaching climate targets, but about improving lives and reducing inequality along the way.

Although departments and organisations may work separately, people experience these issues together. By coordinating engagement across different service areas—and pooling time, knowledge and resources—you could find you have the resources to design climate action that reflects the real complexity of people’s lives, and build solutions that are fair, joined-up, and more likely to succeed.

This collaboration has the potential to create better, real-world solutions that recognise and address the complexity of the challenges at hand.