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Ecological Economics 1999: Vol 29 Table of Contents PDF

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ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS cAeali) 8 IER Ecological Economics 29 (1999) 495—497 Contents of Ecological Economics, Vol. 29 Vol. 29 No. 1 APRIL 1999 Letters to the Editor [Environmental sustainability in agriculture: diet matters, Ecol. Econ. 23, 189-200.] News and Views On Georgescu-Roegen’s contribution to ecological economics P.A. Lawn (Australia) Uncertainty and sustainability R. Hueting and L. Reijnders (Netherlands) Commentary Special Section: ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS FORUM: Why sustainability analyses must include biophysical assessments M. Wackernagel (Mexico) Should sustainability analyses include biophysical assessments? R.A. Herendeen (USA) Biophysical assessments: who cares? J.D. Yount (USA) Consuming the earth: the biophysics of sustainability W.E. Rees (Canada) How to make progress toward integrating biophysical and economic assessments G.-M. Lange (USA) Why biophysical assessments will bring distribution issues to the top of the agenda F. Luks and M. Stewen (Germany) The business of sustainability L. Onisto (Mexico) Prices are not worth much 1. Ropke (Denmark) Monetary analysis: turning a blind eye on sustainability W.E. Rees and M. Wackernagel (Canada, Mexico) Dematerialization, MIPS and Factor 10 Physical sustainability indicators as a social device F. Hinterberger and F. Schmidt-Bleek (Germany, France) Why human societies need sustainability analyses based on biophysical assessments L. Lewan (Sweden) Tenth Anniversary Invited Paper Spatial sustainability, trade and indicators: an evaluation of the ‘ecological footprint’ J.C.J.M. van den Bergh and H. Verbruggen (Netherlands) Analysis Applying the concept of natural capital criticality to regional resource management D.V. MacDonald, N. Hanley and |. Moffatt (UK) 496 Contents of Ecological Economics, Vol. 29 Is enironmental degradation an inevitable consequence of economic growth: tunneling through the environmen- tal Kuznets curve ERS i Eeee ee ee ee eee eee re eee ee 89 Estimating costs of protecting global ecosystem diversity J. Lewandrowski, R.F. Darwin, M. Tsigas and A. Raneses (USA)... ....... 000000 cee eee eee eee 111 Power distribution, the environment, and public health: A state-level analysis pe A ee SS ee ee ee ee eee 127 Sustainable economic structures R. Dellink, M. Bennis and H. Verbruggen (Netherlands) .....0..0.0. .eee. ee .ee .eee .ee e.e e ee 141 Green accounting for a sustainable economy: Policy use and analysis of environmental accounts in the Philippines I na al i Oe i ee EO ae lg ola eee’ be alee hee ee baa I a a a a a a ge cea NO i eee ge bed et Vol. 29 No. 2 MAY 1999 Editorial The ecology of ecosystem services: introduction to the special issue I ee ee ee ee ee eee ee er ee ee ee Commentary Linking Nature’s services to ecosystems: some general ecological concepts al Sa CM aoe ig aa ae eed 6S a Mee eo ek SORE Ow ee @ owe be 9 60% 68 bee 183 Rediscovering place and accounting space: how to re-embed the human economy C. Borgstrom Hansson and M. Wackernagel (Sweden, Mexico, USA) ....0.... 0.00 .cee. ee.e e ee Analysis Ecological goods and services of coral reef ecosystems a a ee Ce Serie eke eee SR ee A we eee bes es 215 The ecological basis for economic value of seafood production supported by mangrove ecosystems a RE Rare ae alg co- . m ig Bap eer p Siete ia Ook 68 de brb th e Kcee 235 Ecosystem services generated by fish populations a re os Sule. oie Mune wm oe Nees We eA On eee aoe 253 Impact of production intensity on the ability of the agricultural landscape to generate ecosystem services: an example from Sweden rr rr Oe 2, Cer CR a bb 6% 6 son 4 0 0 See 0 OOS ee eee eee e we 269 Ecosystem services in urban areas a al a a aS Woe Wee Ak WCW oO. Oo Oe ae 293 Ecotourism: a means to safeguard biodiversity and ecosystem functions? re hoa. Ye ke Se ke kn ee Se dkG 6 Rw R Oe ae eee oe Oe 303 Vol. 29 No. 3 JUNE 1999 News and Views All of Keynes horses ... : the need for end-goal driven assessment of ecosystem services a a ae he Oe ee ne Bia era ia odin eg!C ele ee 8 321 Commentary Some remarks on the ‘System of Integrated Environmental and Economic Accounting’ of the United Nations NR Ree e a ee ee 329 Tenth Anniversary Invited Paper Toward consilience between biology and economics: the contribution of Ecological Economics J.M. Gowdy and A. Ferreri Carbonell (USA, The Netherlands)... ....... 0.00000 cee ee eee ee ee Contents of Ecological Economics, Vol. 29 Methods Balancing conservation and economic gain: a dynamic programming approach P.F. Doherty, Jr., E.A. Marschall and T.C. Grubb, Jr. (USA) What environmental pressures are a region’s industries responsible for? A method of analysis with descriptive indices and input-output models P. Eder and M. Narodoslawsky (Spain, Austria) Analysis National natural capital accounting with the ecological footprint concept M. Wackernagel, L. Onisto, P. Bello, A. Callejas Linares, |. Susana Lopez Falfan, J. Méndez Garcia, A. Isabel Suarez Guerrero and M. Guadalupe Suarez Guerrero (Mexico) On biodiversity access, intellectual property rights, and conservation M.G. Bhat (USA) Ecological restructuring for sustainable development: evidence from the Australian economy T. Picton and P.L. Daniels (Australia) Modeling the effects of agricultural production. An integrated economic and environmental analysis using farm account statistics and GIS E. Skop and J.S. Schou (Denmark) Carrying capacity in agriculture: global and regional issues J.M. Harris and S. Kennedy (USA) Uncertainty, risk aversion, and the game theoretic foundations of the safe minimum standard: a reassessment D. Palmini (USA) The second law, the fourth law, recycling and limits to growth R.U. Ayres (France) Book Reviews Author Index, Vol. 29 Keyword Index, Vol. 29 Contents of Ecological Economics, Vol. 29

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