ABSTRACT

The ideas of neoliberalism perpetuate a disembedded and dichotomised view of economy-ecology relations. The renewed interest in climate change and sustainability attests to the lack of progress achieved by the ‘sustainable development’ regime and to the need for more appropriate frameworks for guiding social organisation toward ecological sustainability. This book is born of the need for a critique of current approaches to environmental policy and governance and the search for alternative sustainability frameworks.

Utilising a conceptual approach based on the Polanyian concept of ‘embeddedness’, this book argues that the links between economic theory, neo-liberalism, and the current regime of sustainable development, have rendered ‘sustainability’ a discursive frame in the service of economic rather than ecological goals. In rejecting the integrity of ‘environmental neo-liberalism’, Paton argues there are some clear points of divergence between liberalism and neo-liberalism. She subsequently examines separately the impact on liberalism of efforts to integrate environmental concerns in order to determine if therein lies the potential for an effective reformist politics of ‘ecological sustainability’.

chapter 1|12 pages

Introduction

part |2 pages

PART I Theorising embeddedness for sustainability

part |2 pages

PART II Policy and governance for sustainability

chapter 4|22 pages

Changing discourses of sustainability

chapter 5|20 pages

Towards environmental neo- liberalism

part |2 pages

PART III Greening liberal theory for sustainability

chapter 6|18 pages

The substantive roots of liberalism

chapter 7|23 pages

Economic liberalism

chapter 8|19 pages

Political liberalism

chapter 9|21 pages

Social liberalism