Title: An Ecosystem Approach to Ecological Economics
1An Ecosystem Approach to Ecological Economics
- Ashwani Vasishth
- vasishth_at_csun.edu
- http//www.csun.edu/vasishth
2Some Names to Keep In Mind
- Kenneth Boulding
- Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen
- Herman Daly
- Robert Costanza
3Setting the Frame
- Sustainability as Context
4Sustainable Development
- is a form of development that
- meets the needs of the present
- without curtailing the ability
- of the future to meet its own needs
- - a la the Brundtland Commission
5Sustainable Decision Making
6(No Transcript)
7Getting At An Ecological Economics
8Factors of Production
9Factors of Production
10Factors of Production
11Human Economy
Ecosphere
Human Economy
Nature
Environmental Economics
Ecological Economics
12An Ecological Economics
- Considers the world to be constituted by the
flows of matter, energy and information - Takes account of natural, social and monetary
capital - Considers temporal flows in terms of
intergenerational equity - Takes the ecosphere as the overarching context
within which the human economy operates
13From Empty World Economics
14to Full World Economics
15The Transition to An Ecological Economics
- ...is the transition from
- a cowboy economy to
- a spaceship economy
- - a la Kenneth Boulding
16Taking An Ecological View
- Understanding the Ecosystem Approach
17What does it mean to take an Ecosystem
Approach?And why would we bother?
18Descriptions Matter
- How we choose to make depictions of complex
systems affects what we can see of context and
consequence, and so affects outcomes - Complex systems are best conceptualized as being
arranged into nested levels of organization
19Elements of An Ecosystem Approach
- Processes
- Boundaries
- Scales
- Purpose
- Perspective
20Properties of An Ecosystem Approach
- Nested Assembly
- Scale-hierarchic Levels of Organization
- Rate-dependent Boundaries
- Purposive Descriptions
- Scale-dependent Structuring
- Functional Associations
21An ecosystem approach based on nested
scale-hierarchic process-function ecology
offers the most effective basis for making
robust descriptions under complexity
22Nested Systems
Bossel, H. 2001. Assessing Viability and
Sustainability A Systems-Based Approach for
Deriving Comprehensive Indicator Sets.
Conservation Ecology, 5(2) 12.
23Levels of Organization
Allen, Timothy F.H. Thomas W.l Hoekstra. 1992.
Toward A Unified Ecology. New York Columbia
University Press. p. 30
24Two Concepts of Significance
- The Ecosphere and its Carrying Capacity
25The Ecosphere
- is constituted by bio-geo-chemical processes
- across nested levels of organization
- organized into scale hierarchic structures
- that must be viewed from multiple purposive
perspectives - and that can only be described at multiple
spatial, temporal and organizational scales
26Carrying Capacity
- is the ability of a system to support a
particular intensity and magnitude of processes
and functions - IPAT
- Impact Population Affluence Technology
- where affluence is a proxy for level of
consumption and technology is a proxy for
capacity to do harm or cause pollution
27Ecologizing New Orleans
28For Example, New Orleans
29Or, New Orleans?
30Then, Ecological Economics is
- the study of the ecosphere, considered to be
constituted by the flows of matter, energy and
information, taking account of natural, social
and economic capital, occurring across multiple
levels of organization, seen at functionally
relevant temporal, spatial and organizational
scales, using multiple purposive perspectives,
all embedded within the context of planetary
carrying capacity
31Or, Differently
Nested Systems
The Ecosphere
32Ashwani Vasishth
- vasishth_at_csun.edu
- http//www.csun.edu/vasishth
- (818) 677-6137