The Metabolic Pattern of Societies: Where Economists Fall Short

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Routledge, 12 oct 2011 - 496 páginas

It is increasingly evident that the conventional scientific approach to economic processes and related sustainability issues is seriously flawed. No economist predicted the current planetary crisis even though the world has now undergone five severe recessions primed by dramatic increases in the price of oil. This book presents the results of more than twenty years of work aimed at developing an alternative method of analysis of the economic process and related sustainability issues: it is possible to perform an integrated and comprehensive analysis of the sustainability of socio-economic systems using indicators and variables that have been so far ignored by conventional economists.

The book’s innovative approach aims to provide a better framework with which we can face the predicaments of sustainability issues. It begins by presenting practical examples of the shortcomings of conventional economic analysis and examines the systemic problems faced when trying to use quantitative analysis for governance. In providing a critical appraisal of current applications of economic narratives to the issue of sustainability, the book presents several innovative concepts required to generate a post-Newtonian approach to quantitative analysis in the Musiasem approach. An empirical section illustrates the results of an analysis of structural changes in world and EU countries. Finally, the book, using the insight gained in the theoretical and empirical analysis, exposes the dubious quality of many narratives currently used in the sustainability debate.

Overall, the performance of modern economies across different hierarchical levels of organization and across different disciplinary knowledge systems is fully analyzed and a more realistic measure of happiness and well-being is devised. The book should be of interest to researchers and students looking at the issue of sustainability within a variety of disciplines.

 

Índice

1 The red pill
1
the importance of multiscale and multilevel analysis
22
combining extensive and intensive variables
37
how to choose a relevant perception and a pertinent representation
62
5 A critical appraisal of conventional economic approaches to sustainability problems
104
6 Five theoretical pillars of MuSIASEM for a new quantitative analysis of sustainability
136
7 Building blocks of the MuSIASEM approach
175
bioeconomic pressure
216
10 Other applications of MuSIASEM
288
can we escape Soddys prophecy?
316
12 What went wrong and where do we go from here?
349
illustration of the MuSIASEM approach
365
Glossary
382
Notes
390
References
391
Index
406

9 An international comparison of the metabolic pattern of modern societies at the level of economic sectors
258

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Sobre el autor (2011)

Mario Giampietro is ICREA Research Professor at the Institute of Science and Technology for the Environment (ICTA) at Universitat Autonoma Barcelona, Spain.

Kozo Mayumi is a Professor at The University of Tokushima, Japan, and is the author of The Origin of Ecological Economics, also published by Routledge.

Alevgül Hadiye Sorman is a researcher working in the Research Group of Integrated Assessment at the Institute of Science and Technology for the Environment (ICTA) at Universitat Autonoma Barcelona, Spain.

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