Frontiers in Ecological Economic Theory and ApplicationJon David Erickson, John M. Gowdy Edward Elgar, 2007 - 365 síður Research on the cutting edge of economics, ecology, and ethics is presented in this timely study. Building from a theoretical critique of the tradition of cost-benefit analysis, the contributors lay the foundation for a macroeconomics of environmental sustainability and distributive justice. Attention is then turned to three of the most critical areas of social and environmental applied research - biodiversity, climate change, and energy. The contributors redefine progress away from growth and toward development. To this end, the first section of the book tackles the dominant framework used in the US today to evaluate tradeoffs between economic growth and its inherent externalities. Succeeding chapters cover a wide variety of studies related to biodiversity health and energy. Each section is anchored with overviews by top scholars in these areas - including Herman Daly, Carl McDaniel, Stephen Schneider, and Nathan Hagens - and followed by detailed analyses reflecting the transdisciplinary approach of ecological economics. Students and scholars of ecological, environmental, and natural resource economics, sustainability sciences, and environmental studies will find this book of great interest. Non-profit and government agencies in search of methods and cases that merge the study of ecology and economics will also find the analyses of great practical value. |
From inside the book
Niðurstöður 1 - 3 af 8
... analysis , parsing knowledge into ever finer disciplines of inquiry . However , the frontiers of the 21st century are ... methodological pluralism , and multi - criteria policy assessment ( Gowdy and Erickson , 2005a ) . x Preface by Jon ...
... methodological paradoxes.2 It is one of the para- doxes of the history of thought that in the intergenerational context , NCE , while developing its theory of economic growth and , more pronounced , in its contributions to the economic ...
... methodological and normative individualism . This strange methodological inconsistency raises the suspicion that the retreat into Paretianism was not due to loyalty to methodological correctness , but was rather of a tactical nature ...
Efni
costbenefit analysis of past successes | 7 |
Reorienting macroeconomic theory towards | 36 |
dismantling | 53 |
Höfundarréttur | |
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