#1888
Mentioned in 13 episodes

Doughnut economics

Seven Ways to Think Like a 21st-Century Economist
Book • 2017
In *Doughnut Economics*, Kate Raworth presents a new economic model that combines the concept of planetary boundaries with social boundaries.

The 'doughnut' framework aims to ensure that no one falls short on life's essentials while preventing the overshoot of Earth's life-supporting systems.

Raworth argues for a shift from growth-at-any-costs mentality to an economy that prioritizes human and planetary well-being, drawing on diverse schools of thought including ecological, behavioral, feminist, and institutional economics.

The book offers seven key ways to reframe economic thinking for the 21st century, emphasizing the need for economies that are regenerative and distributive by design.

Mentioned by

Mentioned in 13 episodes

Mentioned as an economist who incorporates lessons from 'The Limits to Growth' into her model.
80 snips
S7 E9: At the Tipping Point
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Dorian Lynskey
as the author of the book about Doughnut Economics.
47 snips
Growth – GDP is the Magic Number
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Kate Raworth
as a book describing the social and planetary boundaries needed for human prosperity.
40 snips
Roman Krznaric, Kate Raworth: What Doughnut Economics Can Learn From History
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Kara Pecknold
when talking about making a city a donut city and looking at planetary boundaries.
30 snips
#122 - Regenerative Business: What Does It Mean? - with Kara Pecknold
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Liam Byrne
in the context of integrating ecological considerations into his policy recommendations.
23 snips
How to Fix the Inequality of Wealth, with Liam Byrne
Mentioned by Stephen Dubner while discussing population decline and sustainable economics.
20 snips
Capitalism, Private Equity, and the Seven Deadly Sins — with Stephen Dubner
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Jessica Lackey
as a book that changed her perspective on growth.
19 snips
The Case For Curation before Creation
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Kamal Ahmed
as the author of the internationally best-selling book 'Doughnut Economics: Seven Ways to Think Like a 21st-Century Economist'.
17 snips
Can We Live Well Without Economic Growth? - Part 1
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Hannah Smith
as a key resource in understanding sustainability during her Green Web Foundation fellowship.
13 snips
Episode 1: How I learned what sustainability is
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Melanie Rieback
when discussing flat growth and biomimicry.
Post Growth Entrepreneurship with Melanie Rieback
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Manda Scott
in relation to the Nobel Prize and its biases.
Miraculous Carbon: Celebrating the Book of Life, Death and Potential with author Paul Hawken
Mentioned by Stephen Dubner as a book that has found an audience among reformers, and is being implemented by the city of Amsterdam.
429. Is Economic Growth the Wrong Goal?
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David Bramwell
as a visual metaphor for a sustainable economy.
Less is More
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Sarah Wilson
in relation to the discussion on Doughnut Economics.
PARAG KHANNA: Where should we move to as climate collapses?
Genoemd door
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Della Duncan
in de context van Doughnut Economics.
How are you measuring your life? – Della Duncan

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