Principles of Sustainable Economy: An Anthropologist's Perspective
Contemporary economies must undergo a transformation to sustainability if we are to avoid a descent into ecological and socio-political crises of ever escalating severity. In order to achieve such a major reform, principles consistent with sustainable ecosystems and social systems need to be identif...
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Published in | Cadmus (Trieste, Italy) Vol. 3; no. 2; pp. 131 - 149 |
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Main Author | |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Trieste
The Risk Institute
01.06.2017
Risk Institute, Trieste- Geneva |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Contemporary economies must undergo a transformation to sustainability if we are to avoid a descent into ecological and socio-political crises of ever escalating severity. In order to achieve such a major reform, principles consistent with sustainable ecosystems and social systems need to be identified and applied systematically. What are these principles in their most fundamental form, how can they become widely accepted, and how can they be applied? To answer these three questions, this article draws on the cumulative insights of anthropology, a bridging science dedicated to the holistic study of humanity across the entire span of our evolutionary development (physical anthropology) and across the full breadth of its cross-cultural diversity (cultural anthropology).· This broad and longitudinal anthropological understanding of human societies will be compared with what we now understand about the characteristics of ecosystem, primarily to show that they are fundamentally similar. An alternative cultural outlook and political procedure is then proposed that-if adopted- would deliver a shared global vision for a socially and ecologically sustainable future and lay firm pathways toward that future in the now. |
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ISSN: | 2038-5242 2038-5250 |