The KLI
Entry 270 of 433

News Details

2021-10-20
Do Economic Words Harm Sustainability? Some Lessons from Conceptual History
Register in advance for this meeting:
After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.

 

Topic description / abstract
Since its publication in February 2021, the Dasgupta review, titled “The Economics of Biodiversity,” has had a strong impact. The report invites us to consider nature as an “asset,” or a form of “capital,” whose value should be measured using controversial indicators and methodologies. The contributions of this capitalized nature to human societies would have then to be referred to as “ecosystem services”—the Dasgupta review devotes a full chapter to them. The literature on “natural capital” and “ecosystem services” has developed since the 1990s, but the concept of “nature’s services” is actually much older: we can find traces of it at least in the work of Alexander von Humboldt at the turn of the 19th century. One episode deserves special attention: the intertwining of economic and ecological expertise between the 1880s and the 1920s in the United States. At that time, some economists, ecologists, biologists and professionals of all kinds worked on the “services of nature,” particularly in forestry and agriculture. The concept of “natural capital” was also coined at that moment. The purpose of this presentation will be, therefore, to review that episode and to draw some lessons on the role of economic words in our understanding of environmental challenges. Economic imperialism, disciplinary hybridization, the role of biology and ecology in economics… these topics will be discussed to show how conceptual history can help answer the question: do economic words harm sustainability?

 

Biographical note
Antoine Missemer is a CNRS researcher currently working at CIRED - Centre international de recherche sur l'environnement et le développement (Paris, France). He holds a PhD in economics from the University of Lausanne. His interdisciplinary work focuses primarily on the history of environmental, energy, and natural resource economics, i.e. on how the economic discipline and economists have approached energy and ecological transition in the past. He is the author of several books (in French) and articles (in French and English) crossing the history of ideas and sustainability issues. His is currently working, with Marco P. Vianna Franco (KLI), on a history of the relationship between economics and the science of ecology, to be published by Routledge.