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  1. Non-Market Coordination: Towards an Ecological Response to Austrian Economics.Dan Greenwood - 2008 - Environmental Values 17 (4):521-541.
    Although the ecological tradition tends to favour a substantive role for non-market institutions in securing objectives such as environmental sustainability, Green theorists have paid relatively little attention to the important challenge posed to such proposals by the pro-market arguments of Austrian economics. The methods of ecological economics, such as multiple criteria evaluation, offer important potential for responding to the Austrian thesis that democratic, non-market institutions face a coordination problem in the face of complexity. However, the development of an adequate ecological (...)
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  • Sharing the Earth: Sustainability and the Currency of Inter-Generational Environmental Justice.Allen Habib - 2013 - Environmental Values 22 (6):751-764.
    Philosophers often understand environmental sustainability as a duty of distributive justice between the generations of the earth. Since every generation is equally entitled to the bounty of the natural environment (the thinking goes) every generation should have a fair share of that bounty. But since generations precede each other in time, it is the duty of earlier generations to ensure that later generations receive their fair share. Acting sustainably is the way of meeting this duty, since sustainable practices are those (...)
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