1992
DOI: 10.1016/0921-8009(92)90024-m
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Allocation, distribution, and scale: towards an economics that is efficient, just, and sustainable

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Cited by 457 publications
(256 citation statements)
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“…An economic concept that more or less aligns with this is reflected in the concept of the "ecological economy". This alternative to dominant neoclassical economic thinking applies a logic that takes as its basis a "constructed" ecological scale which subsequently, via social debate, determines the contours of a fair sharing-out and which finally leaves it to the market to determine whether to realize an efficient allocation [43].…”
Section: Cultures Structures Interaction Entrepreneurship Transformationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An economic concept that more or less aligns with this is reflected in the concept of the "ecological economy". This alternative to dominant neoclassical economic thinking applies a logic that takes as its basis a "constructed" ecological scale which subsequently, via social debate, determines the contours of a fair sharing-out and which finally leaves it to the market to determine whether to realize an efficient allocation [43].…”
Section: Cultures Structures Interaction Entrepreneurship Transformationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…EIA for hydroelectric plants pointed out that in the studies these factors are practically always evaluated in synthetic and discursive terms; often most of the space is assigned to the economic component and even this is analyzed in an elementary financial fashion, far from a perspective of true environmental economy (Stern and Dietz, 1993;Daly, 1992). Cumulative impact assessment, another issue of great importance (Canter and Canty, 1993), was present in only two cases (7%).…”
Section: Impact Assessment and Project Appraisal March 2000mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…2. The progressive shift of the concepts about the relationship between environment (and nature) and economics is well illustrated by the passage from classical economics to neoclassical environmental economics (NEE) and to ecological economics (ECO); see, among the wide literature: Kneese (1966);Pezzey (1992); Rees (1990);Daly (1992). 3.…”
Section: Among Applicative Examples Of a Direct Inclusion In The Localmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…From an ecological economics perspective three conditions are considered necessary for sustainable economic activity, there are: appropriate scale, efficient allocation and just distribution of resources in a socio-economic system (Daly, 1992). Appropriate scale refers to the physical volume of products; allocation to the division of the resource flow among different and competing uses and distribution to the division of the resource flow among different beneficiaries (Daly, 1992).…”
Section: Conceptual Frameworkmentioning
confidence: 99%