Economics for Rebels
En podcast av Dr. Köves Alexandra
71 Avsnitt
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Today’s society is built on sand - Aurora Torres
Publicerades: 2023-01-16 -
From an empty world to a full world – A tribute to Herman Daly’s work with Dan O’Neill
Publicerades: 2022-12-29 -
What ecological economists need to know about the financial sector - Katie Kedward
Publicerades: 2022-12-19 -
Decolonising knowledge production - Brototi Roy
Publicerades: 2022-11-17 -
The Progress Illusion - Jon Erickson
Publicerades: 2022-11-02 -
There are no Professorships on a dead planet: discussing the role of academics and universities in tackling climate change - Charlie Gardner
Publicerades: 2022-10-16 -
Debate on green anarchism vs. eco-socialism
Publicerades: 2022-10-02 -
Debt and inequality in postgrowth economies: lessons from history - Tilman Hartley
Publicerades: 2022-09-18 -
Communicating Ecological Economics: There's a hidden ecological economist in all of us - Alexandra Köves
Publicerades: 2022-09-05 -
Transforming batshit jobs: Just transition in aviation - Halliki Kreinin and Tahir Latif
Publicerades: 2022-06-07 -
The road ahead: Strategies for socio-economic transformation - Ekaterina Chertkovskaya
Publicerades: 2022-05-11 -
Radical change: just how radical? - Andreas Malm
Publicerades: 2022-04-28 -
'Development': Just a term for upholding power structures? - Bengi Akbulut
Publicerades: 2022-04-02 -
Real valuism: A world beyond money - Anitra Nelson
Publicerades: 2022-03-06 -
Less is more for more: Degrowth, sustainability and equality - Jason Hickel
Publicerades: 2022-02-21 -
Working-time reduction: For us or for the planet? - Stefanie Gerold
Publicerades: 2022-02-08 -
Rich and famous vouching for change? – On the role of climate elites and philanthropists - Edouard Morena
Publicerades: 2022-01-24 -
The social shortfall and ecological overshoot of nations - Andrew Fanning
Publicerades: 2021-11-22 -
Sustainable hedonism - Orsolya Lelkes
Publicerades: 2021-11-15 -
Ultrasociality: human cooperation at its extreme - Lisi Krall
Publicerades: 2021-10-26
The world is on fire. We have to radically and rapidly transform every aspect of society to stay within 1.5 degrees of global warming. How is this possible? And how do we do this in a way that is fair? Ecological economists integrating ecological and critical social perspectives have long been working on ideas to bring about just sustainability transformations. This podcast aims at communicating these ideas in order to open them to critical discussion, from global problems to people’s everyday lives.
