
Contents
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Introduction Introduction
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Seven approaches to research in ecological economics Seven approaches to research in ecological economics
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New environmental pragmatism New environmental pragmatism
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New resource economics New resource economics
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Social ecological economics Social ecological economics
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Intermediate and crossover positions Intermediate and crossover positions
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New resource economics and new environmental pragmatism New resource economics and new environmental pragmatism
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New resource economics and social ecological economics New resource economics and social ecological economics
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Social ecological economics and new environmental pragmatism Social ecological economics and new environmental pragmatism
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The fallacies and contradictions of a unifying ‘big tent’ The fallacies and contradictions of a unifying ‘big tent’
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Ecological economics should aspire to being a ‘big tent’ Ecological economics should aspire to being a ‘big tent’
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Redefining the ‘big tent’ to justify its existence Redefining the ‘big tent’ to justify its existence
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The nonexistence of a paradigmatic ‘big tent’ The nonexistence of a paradigmatic ‘big tent’
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Conclusions Conclusions
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Notes Notes
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8 Clarifying division and seeking unity
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Published:February 2024
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Abstract
If growth in scale is success, then ecological economics appears to have been successful. Three main positions on research are described as constituting ecological economics: new environmental pragmatism, new resource economics and social ecological economics. Four crossover positions, between the three main ones, capture a fuller picture of argumentation about direction and meaning and are explored. The chapter then considers the implications of these seven categories for unity and division within ecological economics. Social ecological economics takes a research position that is distinct from the existing economic orthodoxy, but is also critical of the pragmatic willingness to adopt whatever is assumed to achieve a given end. Several authors have advocated the idea of a potential union between ecological economics and neoclassical resource and environmental economics.
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