Economics for Rebels

A podcast by Dr. Köves Alexandra

62 Episodes

  1. Value pluralism - Seb O'Connor

    Published: 11/21/2024
  2. Can central banks change the sustainability game? - Uuriintuya Batsaikhan

    Published: 11/6/2024
  3. Ecological economics and Indigenous stewardship - Jocelyne Sze

    Published: 10/22/2024
  4. Behavioural science for ecological economists – Kristian Steensen Nielsen

    Published: 10/3/2024
  5. Degrowth – Ecological Economics – Post-development: Brothers or acquaintances? - Brototi Roy, Joshua Farley and Giorgos Kallis

    Published: 8/16/2024
  6. The ecological economics of the international monetary system

    Published: 7/9/2024
  7. The media's critical role in radical change - Nick Romeo

    Published: 6/2/2024
  8. Doughnut economics special: Part 2 - Doing the Doughnut in the real world

    Published: 5/13/2024
  9. Doughnut economics special: Part 1 – Kate Raworth

    Published: 4/29/2024
  10. Can we feed the world through sustainable means? - Pablo Tittonell

    Published: 4/7/2024
  11. Holding Big Oil responsible through climate litigation

    Published: 3/25/2024
  12. Addicted to Growth - Robert Costanza

    Published: 3/11/2024
  13. Employment and work in a postgrowth world - Ben Gallant

    Published: 2/26/2024
  14. Fooling ourselves while burning our trees? - Mary Booth

    Published: 2/14/2024
  15. Where can science and policy making meet? - Eszter Kelemen

    Published: 1/11/2024
  16. Biosphere defenders - Claudia Ituarte-Lima

    Published: 12/20/2023
  17. Trading irresponsibility: turning environmental policies into gambling casinos - Frederic Hache

    Published: 12/5/2023
  18. Should countries pay for their climate debt?

    Published: 11/15/2023
  19. Why will technology not save our souls? – Timothée Parrique

    Published: 10/30/2023
  20. How governments can develop the capabilities to solve the 21st century’s sustainability challenges - Rosie Collington

    Published: 10/17/2023

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The world is on fire. We have to radically and rapidly transform every aspect of society to stay within 1.5 degrees of global warming. How is this possible? And how do we do this in a way that is fair? Ecological economists integrating ecological and critical social perspectives have long been working on ideas to bring about just sustainability transformations. This podcast aims at communicating these ideas in order to open them to critical discussion, from global problems to people’s everyday lives.