"Environmental Values and Adaptive Management"
In this paper, Bryan G. Norton and Anne C. Steinemann offer a new valuation approach which embodies the core principles of adaptive management, which is experimental, multi-scalar, and place-based.
In this paper, Bryan G. Norton and Anne C. Steinemann offer a new valuation approach which embodies the core principles of adaptive management, which is experimental, multi-scalar, and place-based.
Jonathan Aldred tests aspects of the claim that ocussing
cost-benefit analysis (CBA) is limited in scope, as some things cannot be meaningfully priced. He focuses on problems of incomparability and incommensurability, and compares CBA to rough equality.
James Lenman discusses cost-benefit analysis techniques.
In this paper, Maria Akerman focusses on the power/knowledge implications of the use of the concept, and I follow the career of the concept of natural capital in ecological economic publications between the years 1988 and 2000.
This essay explores three case studies that illustrate the exemplary use of economic analysis in environmental decision-making.
This analysis raises questions about the extent to which ecological economics has been able to influence real-world decisions and policy.
In this paper Michael S. Carolan looks at Michel Foucault and Fernand Braudel’s conception of how economy enters into nature.
This essay aims to reconstruct Herman Daly and John Cobb’s criticism of growth from the person-in-community approach.
This paper discusses the economic and philosophical inadequacies that have characterized the Project Tiger scheme in India.
In his article, Edmundo Claro argues that in-kind compensation is more acceptable than monetary payments or no compensation because people tend to understand siting conflicts more as matters of justice rather than as matters of freedom or care.