Roots, Riots, and Radical Change—A Road Less Travelled for Ecological Economics

In this paper, we put forward a new research agenda for ecological economics, based on three realisations. We then show how these can be connected through research and used to generate insights with the potential for application in broader, systemic change. The first realisation is that the core amb...

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Main Authors: Elke Pirgmaier, Julia K. Steinberger
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-04-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/11/7/2001
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spelling doaj-6cd87eb18fa14d458d5f9bfc96d09ad32020-11-24T22:10:57ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502019-04-01117200110.3390/su11072001su11072001Roots, Riots, and Radical Change—A Road Less Travelled for Ecological EconomicsElke Pirgmaier0Julia K. Steinberger1School of Earth and Environment, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, UKSchool of Earth and Environment, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, UKIn this paper, we put forward a new research agenda for ecological economics, based on three realisations. We then show how these can be connected through research and used to generate insights with the potential for application in broader, systemic change. The first realisation is that the core ambition of ecological economics, that of addressing the scale of human environmental resource use and associated impacts, often remains an aspirational goal, rather than being applied within research. In understanding intertwined environmental and social challenges, systemic approaches (including system dynamics) should be revitalised to address the full scope of what is possible or desirable. The second realisation is that the focus on biophysical and economic quantification and methods has been at the expense of a comprehensive social understanding of environmental impacts and barriers to change—including the role of power, social class, geographical location, historical change, and achieving human well-being. For instance, by fetishising growth as the core problem, attention is diverted away from underlying social drivers—monetary gains as profits, rent, or interest fuelled by capitalist competition and, ultimately, unequal power relations. The third realisation is that ecological economics situates itself with respect to mainstream (neoclassical) economics, but simultaneously adopts some of its mandate and blind spots, even in its more progressive camps. Pragmatic attempts to adopt mainstream concepts and tools often comfort, rather than challenge, the reproduction of the very power relations that stand in the way of sustainability transitions. We consider these three realisations as impediments for developing ecological economics as an emancipatory critical research paradigm and political project. We will not focus on or detail the failings of ecological economics, but state what we believe they are and reformulate them as research priorities. By describing and bringing these three elements together, we are able to outline an ambitious research agenda for ecological economics, one capable of catalysing real social change.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/11/7/2001capitalvaluewell-beingplanetary boundariessystems perspectivesdegrowthMarxian Political Economysystems of provisionneoclassical economics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Elke Pirgmaier
Julia K. Steinberger
spellingShingle Elke Pirgmaier
Julia K. Steinberger
Roots, Riots, and Radical Change—A Road Less Travelled for Ecological Economics
Sustainability
capital
value
well-being
planetary boundaries
systems perspectives
degrowth
Marxian Political Economy
systems of provision
neoclassical economics
author_facet Elke Pirgmaier
Julia K. Steinberger
author_sort Elke Pirgmaier
title Roots, Riots, and Radical Change—A Road Less Travelled for Ecological Economics
title_short Roots, Riots, and Radical Change—A Road Less Travelled for Ecological Economics
title_full Roots, Riots, and Radical Change—A Road Less Travelled for Ecological Economics
title_fullStr Roots, Riots, and Radical Change—A Road Less Travelled for Ecological Economics
title_full_unstemmed Roots, Riots, and Radical Change—A Road Less Travelled for Ecological Economics
title_sort roots, riots, and radical change—a road less travelled for ecological economics
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2019-04-01
description In this paper, we put forward a new research agenda for ecological economics, based on three realisations. We then show how these can be connected through research and used to generate insights with the potential for application in broader, systemic change. The first realisation is that the core ambition of ecological economics, that of addressing the scale of human environmental resource use and associated impacts, often remains an aspirational goal, rather than being applied within research. In understanding intertwined environmental and social challenges, systemic approaches (including system dynamics) should be revitalised to address the full scope of what is possible or desirable. The second realisation is that the focus on biophysical and economic quantification and methods has been at the expense of a comprehensive social understanding of environmental impacts and barriers to change—including the role of power, social class, geographical location, historical change, and achieving human well-being. For instance, by fetishising growth as the core problem, attention is diverted away from underlying social drivers—monetary gains as profits, rent, or interest fuelled by capitalist competition and, ultimately, unequal power relations. The third realisation is that ecological economics situates itself with respect to mainstream (neoclassical) economics, but simultaneously adopts some of its mandate and blind spots, even in its more progressive camps. Pragmatic attempts to adopt mainstream concepts and tools often comfort, rather than challenge, the reproduction of the very power relations that stand in the way of sustainability transitions. We consider these three realisations as impediments for developing ecological economics as an emancipatory critical research paradigm and political project. We will not focus on or detail the failings of ecological economics, but state what we believe they are and reformulate them as research priorities. By describing and bringing these three elements together, we are able to outline an ambitious research agenda for ecological economics, one capable of catalysing real social change.
topic capital
value
well-being
planetary boundaries
systems perspectives
degrowth
Marxian Political Economy
systems of provision
neoclassical economics
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/11/7/2001
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