Part I Ecological Economics: Alternative Perspectives
1 The Life Required. Political Economy in the Long Emergency
David W. Orr
2 How Economics Can Become Compatible with Democracy
Peter Söderbaum
3 Gaps in Mainstream Economics: Energy, Growth, and Sustainability
Robert U. Ayres
4 A Further Critique of Growth Economics
Herman Daly
5 Multidimensional Assessment of Sustainability: Harmony vs. the Turning Point
Stanislav Shmelev
6 System of Accounts for Global Entropy-Production (SAGE-P): The Accounting in the Topological Domain Space (TDS) of the Econosphere, Sociosphere, and the Ecosphere
Anthony Friend
Part II Ecological Economics of Physical Balance: Resources, Climate Change, and Renewable Energy
7 The Green Economy in Europe: In Search for a Successful Transition
Stefan Speck and Roberto Zoboli
8 Measuring Natural Resource Use from the Micro to the Macro Level
Stefan Giljum, Stephan Lutter, and Martin Bruckner
9 Regenerative Cities
Herbert Girardet
10 Multidimensional Sustainability Assessment for Megacities
Stanislav Shmelev
11 The Economics of Avoiding Dangerous Climate Change
Terry Barker
12 A Precauctionary Strategy to Avoid Dangerous Climate Change is Affordable: 12 Reasons
Jeroen C.J.M. van den Bergh
13 Renewable Energy in the UK: A Slow Transition
David Elliott
Part III Ecological Economics of Social Change
14 Social Metabolism and Ecological Distribution Conflicts in India and Latin America
Joan Martinez-Alier, Leah Temper, Mariana Walter, and Federico Demaria
15 Human Values and Sustainable Development
Irina Shmeleva
16 Building a Sustainable and Desirable Economy-in-Society-in-Nature
Robert Costanza, Gar Alperovitz, Herman Daly, Joshua Farley, Carol Franco, Tim Jackson, Ida Kubiszewski, Juliet Schor, and Peter Victor
In 2008-9 Dr Shmelev was a Senior Researcher at the Environmental Change Institute, University of Oxford. His previous appointments included Visiting Professorships at the University of Geneva (Switzerland), University Paris Dauphine (France), University of Versailles Saint Quentin-en-Yvelines (France), Kazakh National University (Kazakhstan) and National University of Colombia (Colombia). In 2004-2007 he was a Visiting Research Fellow at the Open University (UK). Dr Shmelev has given invited lectures and seminars in Austria, Brazil, Canada, Czech Republic, France, Germany, Hungary, Hong Kong, India, Kazakhstan, Luxembourg, Malaysia, the Netherlands, Norway, Russia, Spain, Switzerland, UK and the USA. Dr Shmelev has collaborated with such international organisations as UNEP, IUCN, UNDP, OECD and numerous universities. In 2013 the Handelsblatt Newspaper featured Dr Stanislav Shmelev as one of top four most promising new economists in the world. He is now Director at Environment Europe Ltd, a think-tank based in Oxford.
State of the art in sustainability thinking, inspired by interdisciplinary ideas of ecological economics. This book is focusing on sustainability pathways, new economic theory, democracy and institutions, multidimensional assessment of sustainability, macroeconomic modelling and policies, climate change and renewable energy, resource flows and circular economy, regenerative cities, environmental conflicts and values. It will be helpful for MSc and PhD students in Economics, Management, Environmental Change, Ecological Economics, Development Economics, Sustainability and practitioners in business, international and nongovernmental organizations. Rich, diverse and thought provoking collection of top level contributions, it will help to facilitate the transition towards sustainability and educational reform.
A fabulous composition of papers by the authors who really count! Ernst von Weizsäcker, The Club of Rome
The authors present a refreshing perspective on the possibilities of human progress in harmony with nature, without the need for economic growth to secure long term human welfare and wise use of nature's services. Extremely relevant. Peter May, Past President, International Society for Ecological Economics and Professor, UFRRJ, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
The book goes well beyond the Green Economy, offering arguments and blueprints for a complete makeover of the current economic system. With multi- and interdisciplinary contributions ranging from moderately to fundamentally critical of current economics, it raises fundamental questions of value and power, draws on a wide range of theories, opens the eyes for the historical processes that brought about the current crises and demonstrates the value of ecological, but also classical economic thinking to their solution. If better politics require better theories, this is a must read for academics and decision makers in the time of climate crisis. Joachim Spangenberg, Sustainable Europe Research Institute, SERI Germany e.V.