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Engagement with and between a plurality of progressive, non-neoclassical traditions is an important step in fostering a more capacious understanding of sustainability - both as a concept and as a political objective.
List of contents
Introduction Part I : Ecofeminism, Social Ecological Economics, Bioeconomics, Steady State 1. Toward Ecofeminist Radical Political Economy in Action: Strategies for Sustainable Societal Transformations
2. Challenging the Economic Mainstreaming of Sustainability and Social-Ecological Crises
3. Hermans Daly's Political Economy for Sustainability: The Steady-State and Other Policies for Ending Uneconomic Growth
4. The Bioeconomics of Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen: a new epistemological foundation for economic science
5. Bioeconomics and the approach to environmental sustainability. The ecological transition:a new "economic myth"?
Part II: Heterodox Macroeconomics and Sustainability 6. Principles of post-Keynesian Ecological Economics
7. Green Finance
8. A Kaleckian-Schumpeterian Synthesis to Secure Sustainability
9. Economic Policy and Sustainability in a Monetary Economy:
A Monetary Theory of Production Approach 10. The social role of central banking in promoting an equitable and sustainable society
11. Step by radical step: the macroeconomics of a degrowth transition
Part III : Circular Economy, Civil Economy and Other Heterodox Contributions 12. Shifting to circular economy principles that could counter environmental changes and reduce inequalities
13. Circular Economy and Philosophy of Economics
14. From linear to circular model ESG criteria, EU policies and the new paradigm of civil economy
15. Radical Ecology and Original Institutional Economics
About the author
is a "Senior researcher" ("Primo ricercatore") in economics at the Italian National Institute of Statistics (Istat), Rome, Italy.