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Scientific paper • 2014
By: Veronika Kiss
Abstract: The Resource Cap Coalition - Advocating for policy tools, which set limits to unsustainable consumption and production Special Session: Respecting planetary boundaries while enhancing the well-being of all Today we face growing global competition over resources and price increase, which hits the poorest the most mainly in impoverished countries, but also in the rich. Policy efforts ad...
Scientific paper • 2014
By: Veronika Kiss
Abstract: Non-renewable energy entitlement scheme for Europe – a policy tool to fit our consumption within planetary limits Special Session: REDUCTIONS: Reducing Environmental Degradation & Unsustainable Consumption Trends & Impacts On Nature & Society The non-renewable energy entitlement scheme is a means to achieve an absolute reduction of nonrenewable energy use at EU level with ...
Scientific paper • 2014
By: Alok Sen
Abstract: Environmental governance is the most daunting task faced by most of developing countries today specially where poverty is widespread and natural resources abundant. Poor people there depend heavily on the environmental resources for their livelihood and the resultant degradation in turn depletes the food stock for the poor thus further aggravates poverty. The growth oriented developme...
Scientific paper • 2014
By: Oksana Udovyk, Erika Öhlund
Abstract: The number of newly synthesized chemicals is continuously increasing, and many of these are now affecting ecosystems as well as human health. The overall objective of chemical risk assessments and management is to assess and contain the risks associated with the introduction of these chemicals. Evidence shows, however, that chemical assessments fail to live up to this objective. Asses...
Scientific paper • 2014
By: Michael Herrmann
From the introduction: This paper provides a clear framework of sustainable development, which helps to navigate through the increasingly muddled discussion, and to identify policy priorities for sustainable development pathways. The paper reiterates the call for more inclusive and greener economic growth and to this end argues for two distinct types of decoupling: Efforts to decouple economic ...
Scientific paper • 2014
By: Romina Amicolo
Abstract: The garbage crisis in Campania, a region of the Southern Italy, is an example of human – made enviromental degradation, which determined a sudden drop in the health condition of local inhabitants, with a considerable increase in the number of deaths caused by cancer, respiratory illnesses, and also genetic malformations. Since the mid-1990s the Italian government declared the state of...
Scientific paper • 2014
By: Edina Vadovics
Sustainability; Contraction and Convergence
Scientific paper • 2014
By: Hugo Hanbury
Degrowth, environment, consumerism, transition, world food system
Scientific paper • 2014
By: Cagri Eryilmaz
Abstract: The aim of this paper to analyze political proposal of social ecology that Murray Bookchin and Janet Biehl’s studies are reviewed. Social Ecology, developed by Murray Bookchin provides a coherent and radical critique of environmentalism as a discourse of capitalism. The solution of ecological crisis cannot be granted by environmental actions, projects and campaigns, green production &...
Scientific paper • 2014
By: Felix Ekardt
Abstract: This article broaches the legal treatment of the non-substitutable nutrient phosphorus, which is indispensable for life. We not only address the case of a highly important resource problem that has hitherto received little attention in the political discourse, but also focus on the excessive and wasteful entry of phosphorus in the environment. It is the sum of multiple minor actions o...
Scientific paper • 2014
organized modernity – environmentalism – self government – heteronomy
Scientific paper • 2014
By: Moritz A. Drupp
Limited substitutability, ecosystem services, subsistence, dual discounting, sustainable development, project evaluation
Scientific paper • 2014
By: Mladen Domazet, Danijela Dolenec, Branko Ančić, Marija Brajdić-Vuković
Abstract: We analyse comparative findings for 18 European ‘old’ and ‘new’ democracies, based on ISSP survey data from 2011. Indices originally constructed for this analysis reveal comparative insights into the potential within different societies for supporting policies and practices conducive to a sustainability switch. The authors initially confirm the so-called ‘prosperity thesis’ (Franzen a...
Scientific paper • 2014
By: Bram Büscher
Abstract: A growing body of literature is exploring the intertwined histories and current dynamics of global capitalism and global conservation. One of the major arguments in this literature is that the development of global conservation is directly related to the development of global capitalism, and thus to capitalism’s sine-qua-non, economic growth. This paper reviews these intertwined histo...
Scientific paper • 2014
By: Christine Biermann, Becky Mansfield
Abstract: This paper considers resurgent, or regrowing, forests, asking: What dynamics drive forest re-growth? How do economic changes articulate with ecological processes, and to what ends? Drawing on research in Appalachian Ohio, we add to critiques of forest transition theory, which states that after decades if not centuries of forest loss, countries begin to experience increases in forest c...
Scientific paper • 2014
By: Stefano Bartolini, Francesco Sarracino, Laurent Theis
Abstract: While the various streams of environmentalism agree in claiming that the current patterns of economic activity are unsustainable for natural resources, they disagree in answering the following question: who is the responsible? Two different answers have been provided: the people or the socio-economic system. The first answer claims that people are inter-temporally greedy. Unsustainabl...
Scientific paper • 2014
By: Romina Amicolo
Abstract: The garbage crisis in Campania, a region of the Southern Italy, is an example of enviromental transformation. It's a human – made enviromental degradation, which determined a sudden drop in the health condition of local inhabitants, with a considerable increase in the number of deaths caused by cancer, respiratory illnesses, and also genetic malformations. Since the mid-1990s the Ital...
Scientific paper • 2014
By: Jeroen C.J.M. van den Bergh
climate change, degrowth, GDP paradox, green growth, growth debate, macro indicators
Interview • 2013
By: Ugo Bardi
Mehr als 40 Jahre nach dem Bericht „Die Grenzen des Wachstums“ stellte der Club of Rome nun seinen neuen Bericht vor: „Der geplünderte Planet“. Autor Ugo Bardi erläutert im Kontext-TV-Interview, welche Folgen der Raubbau an der Erde hat und warum es in den kommenden Jahrzehnten zu Ressourcen-Knappheiten kommen wird. Neben Öl könnte es auch bei Uran und Kupfer bald zu Engpässen kommen. Noch grav...
• 2013
By: Niko Paech, Manfred Linz, Christoph Lütge, Christian Baatz, Laura Spengler, Mathias Binswanger, Lieske Voget-Kleschin, Lars-Arvid Brischke, Andrej Cacilo, Arne Steffen, Oliver Stengel, André Reichel, Harald Heinrichs, Konrad Ott, Uwe Schneidewind, Angelika Zahrnt, Rüdiger Haum, Daniela Gottschlich, Christine Katz, Wilfried Kühling
Zeitschrift "politische ökologie" 135 - 2013 Immer mehr Menschen befreien sich vom materiellen Ballast und ignorieren das Wachstumsdogma: In Reparaturcafés, Genossenschaften, Verleihläden und Tauschbörsen leben sie vor, warum ein genügsames und an den wahren Bedürfnissen orientiertes Leben glücklicher macht und die natürlichen Ressourcen schont. Noch ist die Kultur des »Weniger ist mehr« abe...