SCORAI friends: here's a sample video for my new film, to be produced with Herman Daly biographer Peter Victor. With any luck it should be finished in a year.
Econoclast Sampler on Vimeo
it's the story of Herman Daly's crusade for a steady state economy and the creation of the discipline of ecological economics. It's only six minutes long. let me know what you think.
all best,
John
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Today's Topics:
1. Re: Interested in your thoughts and examples - Transforming
economies as nature-centred? (Mark McCaffrey)
2. Re: Interested in your thoughts and examples - Transforming
economies as nature-centred? (Laszlo Pinter)
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Message: 1
Date: Thu, 13 Nov 2025 20:48:48 +0100
Subject: Re: [Balaton-disc] Interested in your thoughts and examples -
Transforming economies as nature-centred?
Message-ID:
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
Hi Justine: Thanks for raising this as it?s something I?ve also been
thinking about as ?nature-positive? language continues to percolate through
policy, finance, and now economic-transformation spaces.
I appreciated the UNEP colleague?s point that much of our work today is
still about preventing harm rather than enabling genuine regeneration. But
I tend to agree less with the idea that restoration must always precede
economic activity. To me, that framing still assumes that the economy is an
autonomous machine whose impacts must be counterbalanced, rather than a
subsystem nested within the larger living system.
If we take seriously the old systems insight ? which Dennis, Dana and so
many of you have articulated so clearly ? that we are in overshoot because
the economic system has been running on a set of reinforcing loops (growth,
extraction, throughput) decoupled from biophysical limits and the
imperatives of our own paradigms, then the question becomes less ?when do
we restore?? and more ?what kinds of economic relations regenerate by
design??
This is where I think both older political-economy critiques like Marx and
fresh communitarian/panarchic thinking converge. Economies are not neutral.
Their underlying relations?how value is defined, how surplus is
distributed, how communities govern the commons?ultimately determine
whether activity is extractive or regenerative. If those relations remain
unchanged, the bioeconomy (and every other ?green? initiative) will
inevitably be pulled back into the same linear logics of
extract?produce?consume?waste.
So I share your concern that many ?economic transformation? efforts still
feel like attempts to integrate nature into the existing economy, rather
than re-embedding economic life within ecological and social systems. An
economy aligned with reciprocal relationships, mutual aid, commons
governance, and cyclical flows ? restoration wouldn?t be a compensatory
step. It would be a continuous feature of how value is created and how we
think of ? all our relations ? .
I?d be curious to hear how others in this group are thinking about these
underlying system dynamics as the rhetoric of ? nature-positive economy ?
goes more mainstream.
Onward,
Mark S. McCaffrey
[image: Colorful Swirling Circles Vortex]
*the L O N G G A M E*
wrote:
My dear friends,
I was in a meeting yesterday with some UNEP colleagues who work in the
niche of Wildlife Economy and one person was explaining how they felt that
so many are trying to always push for "positive impact on nature" but that
actually much work on transitioning economies and their current impact is
about prevention of a negative outcome - i.e. reduce destruction.
Basically, they inferred that one has to do restoration first and then one
could do economic activities. I would tend to disagree in that if the
economy was shaped in the "right way", it would be nature positive, and
could even be restorative - it depends on how you create incentives and
where you place value.
I would be interested to hear your thoughts on this matter, especially
those working in economic transformation spaces. I fear that a lot of
"economic transformation" work has been about integrating the economy into
nature, versus integrating nature into the economy - which is why we are
having all these economic initiatives, e.g. bioeconomy is a perfect
example, being hijacked and pretty much ending up in the same extractive
economic framing as the BAU scenarios of neo-classical economics
(extract-produce-consume-waste - linear).
What do you think?
Warmth,
J
--
Justine Braby (PhD, PGDipLaw, PGCE, BSc)
>
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Message: 2
Date: Thu, 13 Nov 2025 21:25:02 +0000
Subject: Re: [Balaton-disc] Interested in your thoughts and examples -
Transforming economies as nature-centred?
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Hi Justine,
I have two views on this. On the one hand, there is nothing in these that would encourage or require restorative action if baseline conditions of nature are already degraded. There is in fact nothing that would even expect a diagnosis of the baseline conditions, and at a deeper level, what led to them. Like many similar ideas, it?s also very vague, with terms like ?significant? subject to interpretation. It?s easy to think of activities with small incremental impacts that may not cross the ?significant? threshold yet leading to the degradation of ecosystems over time. Of course, in theory one can also think of strongly restorative projects where a DNSH screen might help prevent the likelihood of negative tradeoffs, but that doesn?t sound like a sufficiently ambitious objective; certainly not ambitious enough for multisolving as Beth would rightly point out.
On this latter point though, some argued that at a tactical level, getting people and institutions on board is important as part of a transition. I have some sympathy for this, though one can be excused for skepticism, given the rise and demise of many similar ideas over the decades.
I?m also wondering if you thought about the impacts of the metrics of ?progress? that you also work on. I know we keep coming back to this, but can we really expect a nature-positive (and people-positive) economy based on current accounting systems where regeneration often still shows up only on the cost side of the ledger?
Warmest,
Laszlo
Date: Thursday, 2025. November 13. at 9:14
Subject: [Balaton-disc] Interested in your thoughts and examples - Transforming economies as nature-centred?
My dear friends,
I was in a meeting yesterday with some UNEP colleagues who work in the niche of Wildlife Economy and one person was explaining how they felt that so many are trying to always push for "positive impact on nature" but that actually much work on transitioning economies and their current impact is about prevention of a negative outcome - i.e. reduce destruction. Basically, they inferred that one has to do restoration first and then one could do economic activities. I would tend to disagree in that if the economy was shaped in the "right way", it would be nature positive, and could even be restorative - it depends on how you create incentives and where you place value.
I would be interested to hear your thoughts on this matter, especially those working in economic transformation spaces. I fear that a lot of "economic transformation" work has been about integrating the economy into nature, versus integrating nature into the economy - which is why we are having all these economic initiatives, e.g. bioeconomy is a perfect example, being hijacked and pretty much ending up in the same extractive economic framing as the BAU scenarios of neo-classical economics (extract-produce-consume-waste - linear).
What do you think?
Warmth,
J
--
Justine Braby (PhD, PGDipLaw, PGCE, BSc)
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