Taking Natural Limits Seriously: Implications for Development Studies and the Environment

ABSTRACT This article explores how thinking about ecological limits, thresholds and boundaries has evolved in the last few decades, and explores the analytical and political possibilities that emerge if development studies scholars engage with these ideas. It makes the case for an engaged political...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inDevelopment and change Vol. 46; no. 4; pp. 762 - 776
Main Author Vira, Bhaskar
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Oxford Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.07.2015
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Summary:ABSTRACT This article explores how thinking about ecological limits, thresholds and boundaries has evolved in the last few decades, and explores the analytical and political possibilities that emerge if development studies scholars engage with these ideas. It makes the case for an engaged political economy approach, which focuses on understanding how finite resources at a variety of scales are shared between the competing claims of different groups in society. The article suggests that, while the science of planetary limits is important, the most significant societal challenges are not about how close we are to the limits, but involve finding mechanisms to reconcile the difficult trade‐offs that inevitably arise when we consider alternative human pathways in the present and the future. Choices are ubiquitous, even when there may be no immediate ecological tipping point, and a political economy perspective focuses on the ways in which humanity prioritizes different, often irreconcilable, objectives and interests in relation to the environment. The productive consequence of this thinking for development studies is the need for a renewed focus on the key issues that define prosperity and well‐being, as well as the political and moral economy within which human society governs itself, and its relationships with nature.
Bibliography:istex:9AD543D0684F3085DDF02295D921A567C1CBB665
ArticleID:DECH12175
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I am grateful to Murat Arsel for his advice and comments on drafts of this article. Some of the issues in this article were explored in the Doran Annual Lecture for Population, Resources and Development, delivered at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in March 2014, and I am grateful to the organizers and audience at the lecture for their insights and feedback.
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ISSN:0012-155X
1467-7660
DOI:10.1111/dech.12175