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Glossary›Ecological Economics

Glossary

Ecological Economics

An interdisciplinary field that studies the relationship between ecosystems and economic systems, rejecting infinite growth paradigms in favor of sustainable scale and equitable distribution within planetary boundaries.

What is Ecological Economics?

Ecological economics is a transdisciplinary field that examines economic activity as a subsystem of Earth’s finite biophysical systems. Unlike neoclassical economics, which treats the environment as an externality, ecological economics positions the economy within—not above—ecological limits. The field integrates insights from ecology, thermodynamics, ethics, and social sciences to address questions of sustainable scale, just distribution, and efficient allocation of resources. Core principles include recognition of biophysical limits, acknowledgment of irreversible ecological damage, emphasis on intergenerational equity, and critique of GDP growth as a proxy for human wellbeing.

Origins & Lineage

The term “ecological economics” gained formal recognition with the founding of the International Society for Ecological Economics (ISEE) in 1988 and the launch of its journal Ecological Economics in 1989. However, intellectual roots extend much earlier. Kenneth Boulding’s 1966 essay “The Economics of the Coming Spaceship Earth” articulated the concept of Earth as a closed system. Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen’s 1971 work The Entropy Law and the Economic Process applied thermodynamic principles to economic analysis, arguing that economic activity inevitably increases entropy and depletes low-entropy resources. Herman Daly, a student of Georgescu-Roegen, developed the concept of “steady-state economics” in his 1977 book Steady-State Economics, proposing that economic throughput must stabilize within ecological carrying capacity.

Other foundational figures include economist E.F. Schumacher (Small Is Beautiful, 1973), who challenged growth orthodoxy, and ecologist Howard T. Odum, who pioneered energy systems analysis. The 1972 Club of Rome report The Limits to Growth provided influential modeling of resource depletion scenarios. Robert Costanza, a founding president of ISEE, advanced ecosystem service valuation methodologies. Joan Martinez-Alier connected ecological economics with environmental justice movements, particularly in the Global South.

How It’s Practiced

Ecological economics manifests in research, policy advocacy, and grassroots organizing. Practitioners conduct biophysical accounting (material flow analysis, energy return on investment calculations), ecosystem service valuation, and integrated modeling of socio-ecological systems. Policy applications include carbon pricing mechanisms, natural capital accounting, payment for ecosystem services schemes, and circular economy frameworks.

In academic settings, ecological economists challenge conventional cost-benefit analysis by incorporating non-monetary values, employing multi-criteria evaluation, and centering distributive justice. Fieldwork often involves participatory action research with communities affected by resource extraction or environmental degradation. The discipline employs “strong sustainability” criteria—insisting that natural capital cannot be infinitely substituted by manufactured capital—in contrast to neoclassical “weak sustainability” assumptions.

Practical tools include ecological footprint analysis, developed by Mathis Wackernagel and William Rees, which measures human demand on ecosystems relative to regenerative capacity. Life cycle assessment tracks environmental impacts across product chains. The Genuine Progress Indicator (GPI) and other alternative metrics attempt to measure economic welfare beyond GDP.

Ecological Economics Today

Contemporary ecological economics engages with climate change, biodiversity collapse, and global inequality. The field informs degrowth movements, which argue that wealthy nations must reduce material throughput while maintaining quality of life. Kate Raworth’s “Doughnut Economics” (2017) popularized ecological economics concepts through a framework balancing social foundations with ecological ceilings.

Academic programs exist at institutions including the University of Vermont, York University, and Autonomous University of Barcelona. The annual ISEE conference convenes researchers and activists. Ecological economics principles inform policy at organizations like the European Environment Agency and inspire social movements including Transition Towns, Buen Vivir advocacy in Latin America, and climate justice campaigns.

Popular educators include Juliet Schor (sustainable consumption), Tim Jackson (Prosperity Without Growth), and Giorgos Kallis (degrowth theory). Online courses, podcasts like The Upstream Podcast, and platforms such as Resilience.org make concepts accessible to general audiences.

Common Misconceptions

Ecological economics is not simply “green economics” or “environmental economics.” Environmental economics remains a subdiscipline of neoclassical economics, attempting to internalize environmental costs through market mechanisms while maintaining growth paradigms. Ecological economics fundamentally questions whether infinite economic growth is compatible with finite planetary systems.

It is not anti-technology or primitivist. Most ecological economists support technological innovation directed toward efficiency, renewable energy, and circularity—but reject technological optimism that assumes innovation will indefinitely overcome biophysical limits.

The field does not claim ecosystems have intrinsic monetary value. Ecosystem service valuation is a pragmatic tool to make ecological degradation visible within policy frameworks, not a statement that nature’s worth can be reduced to prices.

Ecological economics is not solely an academic exercise. It emerges from and informs social movements, indigenous land defense, and cooperative economic models.

How to Begin

Herman Daly and Joshua Farley’s textbook Ecological Economics: Principles and Applications (2nd edition, 2011) provides comprehensive grounding. For accessible introductions, read Kate Raworth’s Doughnut Economics or Tim Jackson’s Prosperity Without Growth. The ISEE website offers open-access resources, including the journal Ecological Economics.

Engage with local Transition Town initiatives, community-supported agriculture, or time banking systems that embody ecological economic principles. Online courses through platforms like the Center for the Advancement of the Steady State Economy (CASSE) offer structured learning. Follow contemporary debates in publications like Degrowth.info or the Post Growth Institute blog.

For those exploring connections to consciousness and spirituality, examine Buddhist economics (E.F. Schumacher), deep ecology (Arne Naess), or indigenous economics frameworks that integrate reciprocity, kinship with non-human beings, and ceremonial relationships with land.

Related terms

deep ecologysystems thinkingpermaculturebioregionalismgift economybuddhist economics
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