“…In order to reduce trade-offs between social and environmental goals, policies should target changes in higher-order need satisfiers, such as social structures and practices, and reimagine forms of need satisfaction within environmental constraints (Mattioli, 2016). Redesigning consumption practices (Ivanova et al , 2020), public spaces and social structures through voluntary simplicity (Jackson, 2005; Vita et al , 2020) and sharing (Ivanova & Büchs, 2020) may reconcile lower carbon emissions and higher well-being. Collective solutions and investment in social infrastructure (see universal basic services; Coote et al , 2019) hold potential to deliver the social services necessary for human well-being in coherence with the principles of equity, efficiency, solidarity and sustainability (Coote et al , 2019).…”