ABSTRACT

Featuring a stellar international cast list of leading and cutting-edge scholars, The Routledge Handbook of the Political Economy of the Environment presents the state of the art of the discipline that considers ecological issues and crises from a political economy perspective. This collective volume sheds new light on the effect of economic and power inequality on environmental dynamics and, conversely, on the economic and social impact of environmental dynamics.

The chapters gathered in this handbook make four original contributions to the field of political economy of the environment. First, they revisit essential concepts and methods of environmental economics in the light of their political economy. Second, they introduce readers to recent theoretical and empirical advances in key issues of political economy of the environment with a special focus on the relationship between inequality and environmental degradation, a nexus that has dramatically come into focus with the COVID crisis. Third, the authors of this handbook open the field to its critical global and regional dimensions: global issues, such as the environmental justice movement and inequality and climate change as well as regional issues such as agriculture systems, air pollution, natural resources appropriation and urban sustainability. Fourth and finally, the work shows how novel analysis can translate into new forms of public policy that require institutional reform and new policy tools. Ecosystems preservation, international climate negotiations and climate mitigation policies all have a strong distributional dimension that chapters point to. Pressing environmental policy such as carbon pricing and low-carbon and energy transitions entail numerous social issues that also need to be accounted for with new analytical and technological tools.

This handbook will be an invaluable reference, research and teaching tool for anyone interested in political economy approaches to environmental issues and ecological crises.

chapter 1|12 pages

Introduction

Political economy of the environment in the century of ecological crises

chapter 2|13 pages

Political economy of the environment

A look back and ahead

part |135 pages

Global and regional political economy of the environment

chapter 8|21 pages

Natural disasters, poverty and inequality

New metrics for fairer policies

chapter 9|17 pages

Contracts and dispossession

Agribusiness venture agreements in the Philippines

chapter 11|12 pages

From Western Pennsylvania to the world

Environmental injustice and the ethane-to-plastics global production network

chapter 12|13 pages

Latin America caught between inequality and natural capital degradation

A view from macro and micro data

chapter 14|13 pages

Designing urban sustainability

Environmental justice in EU-funded projects

part 2|158 pages

From analysis to modelling and policy

chapter 17|15 pages

Carbon pricing and climate justice

part |66 pages

Modelling and policy

chapter 20|17 pages

Informing the political economy of energy and climate transitions

Modelling tools, pathways design frameworks and analytical challenges

chapter 22|16 pages

Building on the right to know

Data interlinkage and information intermediation for environmental and corporate regulation

chapter 23|8 pages

Conclusion

New frontiers in the political economy of the environment