An analytical framework to assess green transition jobs in South Africa
南アフリカにおけるグリーン移行雇用を評価する分析フレームワーク (AI 翻訳)
Katherine Davidson, Joanna Grotte, Arindam Jana, Ariane De Lannoy, Anda David, Murray Leibbrandt
🤖 gxceed AI 要約
日本語
本論文は、南アフリカのグリーン移行が労働市場に与える影響を評価するための分析フレームワークを提案する。ボトムアップ(グリーン職業)とトップダウン(褐色産業)のアプローチを組み合わせ、労働者の移行リスクと機会を可視化する。予備的分析では、汚染産業の労働者が移行可能なスキルを持つことや、男性の方がグリーン雇用に移行しやすい可能性が示唆された。このフレームワークは他国にも応用可能である。
English
This paper proposes a Green Transition Framework to assess labor market impacts of the green transition in South Africa. Combining bottom-up (green occupations) and top-down (brown industries) approaches, it visualizes workers' transition risks and opportunities. Preliminary applications suggest workers in polluting industries may have transferable skills and men may find it easier to transition. The framework is globally applicable.
Unofficial AI-generated summary based on the public title and abstract. Not an official translation.
📝 gxceed 編集解説 — Why this matters
日本のGX文脈において
南アフリカの事例だが、日本のGX政策(特に雇用対策や公正な移行)にも示唆を与える。日本でも石炭依存地域の雇用転換が課題であり、本フレームワークは政策立案の参考となる。
In the global GX context
This framework offers a replicable methodology for assessing green transition labor impacts, relevant to global Just Transition discussions. It provides evidence-based insights for policymakers designing targeted interventions, especially in coal-dependent economies.
👥 読者別の含意
🔬研究者:Provides a flexible analytical framework for studying green transition employment impacts, combining occupation and industry dimensions.
🏢実務担当者:Useful for corporate sustainability teams to assess workforce transition risks and identify reskilling opportunities.
🏛政策担当者:Offers a tool for designing targeted policies to mitigate unemployment risks during the green transition, with preliminary gender insights.
📄 Abstract(原文)
Climate change and the resultant catastrophic weather events across the globe underpin the need for a shift away from carbon-intensive modes of production. In South Africa, where electricity generation is heavily reliant on coal, this imperative is recognised, and various policies aim to support the implementation of a Just Energy Transition. The transition to a greener economy can have various impacts on the labour force, with a significant concern being an increase in unemployment. In this paper, a Green Transition Framework is proposed for profiling workers who are likely to be impacted by the energy transition, based on what work they do and in which industry they work. By combining a bottom-up approach that identifies green transition related occupations, with a top-down approach that identifies ‘brown’ industries, a matrix is developed that allows us to examine where on the nexus between ‘green transition occupations’, and brown industries, workers find themselves. Using South African labour force data, these dimensions are plotted to provide a picture of the type of worker who may be at risk of, or alternatively, may be better placed to withstand the potential effects of the green transition. This can ultimately assist in developing effective policies and interventions to mitigate the risks of the green transition. Key features of the Framework are its flexibility with respect to the definition of ‘green’ occupations and ‘brown’ industries; the integration of bottom-up and top-down methodologies; as well as the data utilised. Such a Framework can be broadly applied in global contexts other than South Africa. The Green Transition Framework integrates industry and occupation information, both of which need to be considered in the creation of targeted policies and intervention strategies concerning the green transition and the labour market. The bottom-up and top-down approaches that are introduced allow for nuanced analysis of green jobs in South Africa, which is essential for evidence-based policy. The Framework can be tailored to specific research contexts, and is flexible in the methodologies for estimating green employment and brown industries, making it a globally applicable analytical tool. Two preliminary applications of the framework suggest that workers in polluting industries may have transferable skills for the green economy and that men may find it easier to transition to green jobs. Such findings can assist in more nuanced policy development.
🔗 Provenance — このレコードを発見したソース
- openalex https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.31985641.v1first seen 2026-05-05 19:12:52
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