Přehled o publikaci
2023
The Barcelona School of Ecological Economics and Social Movements for Alternative Livelihoods
CATTANEO, ClaudioZákladní údaje
Originální název
The Barcelona School of Ecological Economics and Social Movements for Alternative Livelihoods
Autoři
CATTANEO, Claudio
Vydání
Cham, The Barcelona School of Ecological Economics and Political Ecology : A Companion in Honour of Joan Martinez-Alier, od s. 283-291, 9 s. Studies in Ecological Economics, volume 8, 2023
Nakladatel
Springer
Další údaje
Jazyk
angličtina
Typ výsledku
Kapitola resp. kapitoly v odborné knize
Stát vydavatele
Švýcarsko
Utajení
není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
Forma vydání
tištěná verze "print"
Odkazy
Organizace
Fakulta sociálních studií – Masarykova univerzita – Repozitář
ISBN
978-3-031-22568-0
Klíčová slova anglicky
Barcelona school of ecological economics; Joan Martinez-Alier; squatters movement; alternative livelihoods; squatters movement
Návaznosti
MUNI/A/1439/2022, interní kód Repo.
Změněno: 31. 3. 2023 04:07, RNDr. Daniel Jakubík
Anotace
V originále
One essential element of the Barcelona school of ecological economics is that it is purely trans-disciplinar. It is a school nestled in the political activism of its intellectuals that has gestated in dictatorial times, connected with the anti-Franco Catalan movement, in the several underground social movements, and remotely connected to the Spanish Republic and the anarchist experiment in Barcelona. These are events that Joan has so often remembered to all of us, and that can be well documented in the book of one of his doctoral students (Masjuan, 2002). For an understanding of Joan Martinez-Alier and the Barcelona school, one needs to know where they are grounded, that is, in the fertile "soil" of Iberian social movements for alternative livelihoods. The argument is that livelihoods are relevant for ecological economics, as the concept of a good life can prove. The latter is an Aristotelian oikonomic goal -remembered by Georgescu-Roegen's joie de vivre- with its connection to substantive economics as opposed to formal, neoclassical economics. The good life is a degrowth objective too, inspired by conviviality -as formulated by Ivan Illich- and by the pluriversal notion of "buen vivir", so well-known on the other side of el charco where Joan is just as much known and beloved.