The New Environmental Economics
Sustainability and Justice
1. Auflage November 2019
230 Seiten, Softcover
Lehrbuch
Kurzbeschreibung
Too often, economics disassociates humans from nature, the economy from the biosphere that contains it, and sustainability from fairness. When economists do engage with environmental issues, they typically reduce their analysis to a science of efficiency that leaves aside issues of distributional analysis and justice.
The aim of this lucid textbook is to provide a framework that prioritizes human well-being within the limits of the biosphere, and to rethink economic analysis and policy in the light of not just efficiency but equity. Leading economist Éloi Laurent systematically ties together sustainability and justice issues in covering a wide range of topics, from biodiversity and ecosystems, energy and climate change, environmental health and environmental justice, to new indicators of well-being and sustainability beyond GDP and growth, social-ecological transition, and sustainable urban systems.
This book equips readers with ideas and tools from various disciplines alongside economics, such as history, political science, and philosophy, and invites them to apply those insights in order to understand and eventually tackle pressing twenty-first-century challenges. It will be an invaluable resource for students of environmental economics and policy, and sustainable development.
Too often, economics disassociates humans from nature, the economy from the biosphere that contains it, and sustainability from fairness. When economists do engage with environmental issues, they typically reduce their analysis to a science of efficiency that leaves aside issues of distributional analysis and justice.
The aim of this lucid textbook is to provide a framework that prioritizes human well-being within the limits of the biosphere, and to rethink economic analysis and policy in the light of not just efficiency but equity. Leading economist Éloi Laurent systematically ties together sustainability and justice issues in covering a wide range of topics, from biodiversity and ecosystems, energy and climate change, environmental health and environmental justice, to new indicators of well-being and sustainability beyond GDP and growth, social-ecological transition, and sustainable urban systems.
This book equips readers with ideas and tools from various disciplines alongside economics, such as history, political science, and philosophy, and invites them to apply those insights in order to understand and eventually tackle pressing twenty-first-century challenges. It will be an invaluable resource for students of environmental economics and policy, and sustainable development.
Part 1. Ideas and tools
Chapter 1. What the classics know about our world, what 20th century economics forgot
Chapter 2. Humans within the biosphere: the paradox of domination and dependence
Chapter 3. Governing the commons fairly
Chapter 4. Spheres of environmental justice
Chapter 5. Natural resources, externalities and sustainability: a critical toolbox
Part 2. 21st century social-ecological challenges
Chapter 6. Biodiversity and ecosystems under growing and unequal pressure
Chapter 7. Beyond EXPOWA (Extraction, pollution and waste)
Chapter 8. Energy, Climate and Justice
Chapter 9. Well-being and our environment: from trade-offs to synergies
Chapter 10. Social-ecology: connecting the inequality and ecological crises
Chapter 11. The social-ecological transition in context: capitalism, democracy, globalization and digitalization
Chapter 12. Urban sustainability and polycentric transition
Conclusion: Open economics
James K. Boyce, University of Massachusetts Amherst
"All economics is - or should be - environmental economics. Éloi Laurent eloquently reminds us that, as the science of allocating scarce resources, economics has questions of environmental science and social justice at its heart. This book sets out what is needed for economic policy to deliver sustainability in its broadest sense. The challenge could not be more urgent."
Diane Coyle, University of Cambridge