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Green political economy and the promise of the social economy

Green political economy and the promise of the social economy
Green political economy and the promise of the social economy
Green political economy is a relatively new area of study, arising as it has over the last two decades in response to increasing levels of global and local environmental degradation, and other social and economic consequences of a ‘neoliberal’ economic agenda (both within the academy and politics and policy making).

While much of green political economy thinking has beenfocused on developing critiques of this neoliberal agenda as an explicit ideological project (Barry, 1999a; Jacobs, 1999; Mulberg, 1992), usually as part of a broader ‘green political’ critique, this (necessary) critical focus has not been balanced by a positive and reconstructive programme. The aim of this chapter is primarily reconstructive, in that we concentrate on the positive and transformative potential of green political economy both in theory and in practice. The overarching objective of the chapter is to outline some of the key political, economic and normative features of green political economy, which makes this body of critical knowledge distinctive and politically radical in comparison to the orthodox economic models which currently dominate both the discipline of economics and economic policy making, including environmental policy making (Barry, 1999a).
1843764660
249-269
Edward Elgar Publishing
Barry, John
d75359b3-516e-45c3-af23-784ca99c8b1e
Smith, Graham
f490019c-fdee-473a-bf9b-62be5505a206
Dauvergne, Peter
Barry, John
d75359b3-516e-45c3-af23-784ca99c8b1e
Smith, Graham
f490019c-fdee-473a-bf9b-62be5505a206
Dauvergne, Peter

Barry, John and Smith, Graham (2005) Green political economy and the promise of the social economy. In, Dauvergne, Peter (ed.) Handbook of Global Environmental Politics. Cheltenham. Edward Elgar Publishing, pp. 249-269.

Record type: Book Section

Abstract

Green political economy is a relatively new area of study, arising as it has over the last two decades in response to increasing levels of global and local environmental degradation, and other social and economic consequences of a ‘neoliberal’ economic agenda (both within the academy and politics and policy making).

While much of green political economy thinking has beenfocused on developing critiques of this neoliberal agenda as an explicit ideological project (Barry, 1999a; Jacobs, 1999; Mulberg, 1992), usually as part of a broader ‘green political’ critique, this (necessary) critical focus has not been balanced by a positive and reconstructive programme. The aim of this chapter is primarily reconstructive, in that we concentrate on the positive and transformative potential of green political economy both in theory and in practice. The overarching objective of the chapter is to outline some of the key political, economic and normative features of green political economy, which makes this body of critical knowledge distinctive and politically radical in comparison to the orthodox economic models which currently dominate both the discipline of economics and economic policy making, including environmental policy making (Barry, 1999a).

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Published date: 2005

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 34529
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/34529
ISBN: 1843764660
PURE UUID: 3c9f3217-b50e-49bd-8c50-413c92d144ae

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Date deposited: 16 May 2006
Last modified: 15 Jan 2024 17:40

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Contributors

Author: John Barry
Author: Graham Smith
Editor: Peter Dauvergne

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