2019
DOI: 10.3390/su11041023
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Deliberation and the Promise of a Deeply Democratic Sustainability Transition

Abstract: Ecological economics arose as a normative transdiscipline aiming to generate knowledge and tools to help transition the economy toward a scale which is sustainable within the bounds of the earth system. Yet it remains unclear in practice how to legitimize its explicitly normative agenda. One potential means for legitimation can be found in deliberative social and political theory. We review how deliberative theory has informed ecological economics, pointing to three uses: first, to support valuation of non-mar… Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…Spash [129,130] and others [131,132] have called for an ontological foundation to be established, with healthy debates over deep and shallow ecological economics. We agree with assertions that the field must be more firmly based on the understanding of the biophysical [133][134][135] and social [136,137] embeddedness of human economic activity.…”
Section: Concluding Remarks and Next Stepssupporting
confidence: 80%
“…Spash [129,130] and others [131,132] have called for an ontological foundation to be established, with healthy debates over deep and shallow ecological economics. We agree with assertions that the field must be more firmly based on the understanding of the biophysical [133][134][135] and social [136,137] embeddedness of human economic activity.…”
Section: Concluding Remarks and Next Stepssupporting
confidence: 80%
“…The second scenario would point to the existence of particular characteristics of the environmental conflict leading to long standing differences that would not tend to vanish. For example, these would point to conflict as a reality most often present in environmental debates [3,27,28]. The creation in 1994 of the State Environmental Advisory Council in Spain was one instance clearly motivated by the desire of the public authorities to reduce the conflict and, thus, put an end to the blocking of some important environmental plans [27].…”
Section: The Specifics Of Environmental Participatory Governancementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Modernity challenged the pre-modern, where legitimacy was secured through appeals to an external source of validity such as religion or unquestioned cultural traditions passed on from generation to generation (Habermas, 1990). In modernity, legitimacy and validity are secured through the application of reason, a capacity deemed inherent to all humans, as well as democratic deliberation (Wironen et al, 2019). Modernity thus breaks with particular traditions that some view as oppressive and stifling, embracing instead a universalistic discourse.…”
Section: From Ecological Economic Theory To Praxis In the Anthropocenementioning
confidence: 99%
“…An alternative for ecological economics is to build on critically modern social and political theory, preserving some of the important social and political advances of the Enlightenment while attempting to correct for the oppressive tendencies and growth fetishism incompatible with a finite, culturally diverse planet (Wironen et al, 2019). A triumph of the Enlightenment was the establishment of concepts such as universal rights and values.…”
Section: Competing Visions For Transitioning To An Ecological Economymentioning
confidence: 99%
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