"Just" ecopreneurs: re-conceptualising green transitions and entrepreneurship

被引:17
|
作者
Affolderbach, Julia [1 ]
Krueger, Rob [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Hull, Dept Geog Environm & Earth Sci, Cottingham Rd, Kingston Upon Hull HU6 7RX, N Humberside, England
[2] Worcester Polytech Inst, Social Sci & Policy Studies, Worcester, MA USA
关键词
Just entrepreneurship; ecopreneur; environmental justice; innovation; urban sustainability; SOCIOTECHNICAL TRANSITIONS; SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT; ECONOMY; CARBON; GOVERNANCE; GROWTH;
D O I
10.1080/13549839.2016.1210591
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Economic, environmental, and social limits of the current capitalist mode of production have led to a rethinking and reconceptualisation of economic processes and models including the role of businesses in sustainable development. While green economies and more specifically green entrepreneurs have been identified as agents of change that can challenge the mainstream and seek to induce environmental, social, and ethical transformation of society, much research has stayed within existing models of thinking predominantly rooted in technocratic approaches (e.g. ecological modernisation and more recently transition studies). This paper seeks to offer an alternative understanding of green entrepreneurship that breaks open these discussions using an environmental justice frame that focuses on the role of extra-economic discourses in shaping the social relations of economic systems. By drawing on an exemplary case study of "just" entrepreneurship from Boston, Massachusetts, USA, the paper seeks to start a conversation around the ideas of green entrepreneurship and environmental justice as vehicles to deliver potentially broader system changes and explores both conceptual and practical aspects of green development. As such, it offers (1) evidence of a just green economy that can be realised within existing capitalist structures as well as (2) a different conceptual entry point to understanding green entrepreneurship.
引用
收藏
页码:410 / 423
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] RE-CONCEPTUALISING VALUE IN THE ENGINEERING DESIGN PROCESS: THE VALUE CYCLE MAP
    Siyam, Ghadir I.
    Wynn, David C.
    Clarkson, P. John
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 18TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ENGINEERING DESIGN (ICED 11): IMPACTING SOCIETY THROUGH ENGINEERING DESIGN, VOL 1: DESIGN PROCESSES, 2011, 1 : 475 - 486
  • [42] Re-conceptualising the religious habitus: Reflexivity and embodied subjectivity in global modernity
    Mellor, Philip
    Shilling, Chris
    CULTURE AND RELIGION, 2014, 15 (03) : 275 - 297
  • [43] Re-conceptualising rural resources as countryside capital: The case of rural tourism
    Garrod, B
    Wornell, R
    Youell, R
    JOURNAL OF RURAL STUDIES, 2006, 22 (01) : 117 - 128
  • [44] 'Dare to be silent': Re-conceptualising silence as a positive pedagogical approach in schools
    Su, Feng
    Wood, Margaret
    Tribe, Robert
    RESEARCH IN EDUCATION, 2023, 116 (01) : 29 - 42
  • [45] Re-conceptualising teacher well-being: drivers, measurements, and outcomes
    Chen, Junjun
    Lee, John Chi-kin
    TEACHERS AND TEACHING, 2024, 30 (06) : 717 - 723
  • [46] Hope and grief in the anthropocene: re-conceptualising human-nature relations
    Ojala, Maria
    LOCAL ENVIRONMENT, 2017, 22 (08) : 1035 - 1037
  • [47] Re-conceptualising welfare-to-work for people with multiple problems and needs
    Dean, H
    JOURNAL OF SOCIAL POLICY, 2003, 32 : 441 - 459
  • [48] STEPPING UP TO THE CLIMATE CHANGE: OPPORTUNITIES IN RE-CONCEPTUALISING DEVELOPMENT FUTURES
    Boyd, Emily
    Juhola, Sirkku
    JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT, 2009, 21 (06) : 792 - 804
  • [49] Re-conceptualising talent management and development within the context of the low paid
    Devins, David
    Gold, Jeff
    HUMAN RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT INTERNATIONAL, 2014, 17 (05) : 514 - 528
  • [50] Re-conceptualising agency in migrant children from Central America and Mexico
    Thompson, Amy
    Torres, Rebecca Maria
    Swanson, Kate
    Blue, Sarah A.
    Hernandez Hernandez, Oscar Misael
    JOURNAL OF ETHNIC AND MIGRATION STUDIES, 2019, 45 (02) : 235 - 252