Industrial Ecology And Spaces of Innovation

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`This is an especially timely book. Carefully organized and well motivated, its power lies in the explicit effort to ask how industrial ecology and innovation studies do, can and should intersect.' - Reid Lifset, Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies and editor, Journal of Industrial Ecology

This book explores the disciplinary interfaces and practical implications of working across the two disciplines of industrial ecology (IE) and innovation studies (IS). Both disciplines have something to say about instigating environmental improvement and more sustainable futures. IE is predicated on the idea that social and economic systems mirror, or should be made to mirror, natural ecological systems. Proponents of IE devise models and techniques to trace material and energy resource flows as they move through social and economic systems. They propose policy and management improvements to increase the resource efficiency of such systems. By contrast, IS researchers work with the idea that innovation is a dynamic activity, vital to social and economic change and is shaped by a range of actors in industry, in government and in households.

The authors illustrate the conceptual and practical problems and opportunities of working across this bi-disciplinary interface, with case studies presented from each and from hybrid perspectives that draw on both. These include applied examples from IE such as an evaluation of industrial symbiosis in the UK and from working projects in industrialising countries. Cases that originate with IS cover the areas of food, construction and waste incineration. New directions for conceptual development and further research are also offered. Conceptual blindspots and research gaps are identified at the interface of the two disciplines.

Industrial Ecology and Spaces of Innovation will appeal to a wide and interdisciplinary audience including academics and researchers of environmental innovation, management and economics, industrial ecology and schools of environmental engineering. Business environmental practitioners, consultants and managers working with techniques such as life-cycle analysis, environmental impact assessment and collaborative industrial symbiosis initiatives will also find much to engage them within this book.

Author(s): Ken Green, Sally Randles
Edition: illustrated edition
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing
Year: 2006

Language: English
Pages: 340

Contents......Page 4
Figures......Page 7
Tables......Page 9
Contributors......Page 10
PART 1 Introduction......Page 13
1. At the interface of innovation studies and industrial ecology......Page 15
2. Industrial ecology: an introduction......Page 40
PART 2 Industrial ecology: techniques and cases......Page 55
3. Regional industrial ecology and resource productivity: new approaches to modelling and benchmarking......Page 57
4. Industrial symbiosis in the UK......Page 89
5. Industrial ecology: a new planning platform for developing countries......Page 118
PART 3 Innovation systems: perspectives on transformation and variety......Page 141
6. Transformations in food consumption and production systems: the case of the frozen pea......Page 143
7. Sustainable technologies and the construction industry: an international assessment of regulation, governance and •rm networks......Page 165
8. Waste incineration for energy: the experience of China......Page 187
PART 4 Consumption and intermediation......Page 213
9. Industrial consumption and innovation......Page 215
10. Consumption: the view from theories of practice......Page 232
11. Ecology of intermediation......Page 250
PART 5 Governance and values......Page 265
12. Enabling redesign for deep industrial ecology and personal values transformation: a social ecology perspective......Page 267
13. The social and political ecology of industrial ecology......Page 284
PART 6 Conclusion......Page 315
14. Industrial ecology and spaces of innovation: emerging themes......Page 317
Index......Page 327