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Book Description

We attempt to sensitize the business practitioner and the public-policy planner, as well as students of business management and the social sciences, to the concept of sustainable development in an easily comprehensible manner. This book analyzes sustainable development from the perspective of economics. Environmental and social challenges are shaping policies and consumer preferences to facilitate sustainable development. This concept has become an integral part of global business strategy. However, these trends are not always backed up by an adequate understanding of the complexities of the concept, and their implications for decision-making. It is important to appreciate the economic logic underlying both the necessity and the difficulty of moving to a world that can be sustained over time. The inter-relationship between the activities of human societies and nature lies at the core of sustainable development. Understanding this inter-relationship goes beyond the domain of conventional economics, into more interfaced terrains of ecological economics and environmental science.

Table of Contents

  1. Cover
  2. Half-title Page
  3. Title Page
  4. Copyright
  5. Contents
  6. Chapter 1 The Meaning of Economic Development
  7. Chapter 2 Economic Activity and Nature
  8. Chapter 3 Viewing the Future
  9. Chapter 4 Inequality and Policy Choices for Sustainable Development
  10. Chapter 5 Weak versus Strong Sustainability
  11. Chapter 6 Measures and Indicators of Sustainability
  12. Chapter 7 Market Failures and Public Policy Interventions
  13. Chapter 8 Corporate Strategies
  14. Chapter 9 Climate Change as a Special Problem of Sustainable Development
  15. Chapter 10 Sustainability and the International Political Economy
  16. Chapter 11 Ethics and Sustainable Development
  17. Chapter 12 Toward Sustainable Development: Reform or Radical Change?
  18. References
  19. About the Authors
  20. Index
  21. Backcover
18.119.104.238