ISEE2016 – Transforming the Economy: Sustaining Food, Water, Energy and Justice

As the Science of Sustainability, Ecological Economics must advance the transformation of the economy to support rather than debilitate the processes that sustain our living planet. Most fundamental to such an economy is its support of basic live support systems like food, water and energy, and its support of social justice and a quality life for all.

The 2016 Conference of the International Society for Ecological Economics (ISEE) will focus on these critical themes, and will facilitate dialogue between practitioners and researchers to advance such an economic transformation. The transformation agenda must include tangible solutions that support an economy that is in sync with the biological and physical systems of our planet, and that builds capacity for human well-being and justice.  Particular attention will be given to urban communities that are home to almost 60 percent of the world’s population and that are characterized by cultural diversity and social disparity.

Early Bird Registration closes April 25 !

Conference Dates: June 26-29, 2016
Full session abstract due date: Oct. 15, 2015
Full session acceptance notification: Nov. 20, 2015
Paper and speed session abstract due date: Nov. 30, 2015
Paper and speed session acceptance notification: Feb. 1, 2016
Early-bird registration period closes: March 28, 2016

Conference page: www.isee2016.com

The conference will be hosted by the College of Agriculture, Urban Sustainability and Environmental Sciences (CAUSES) of the University of the District of Columbia, which is the only public university in Washington DC and the only urban landgrant university in the U.S. The conference theme is well-aligned with the mission of CAUSES. Conference topics include:

Sustaining Food and Water

  • urban agriculture and food justice
  • sustainable food systems
  • food and water security
  • water quality and water management

Sustaining Sources and Sinks

  • energy efficiency and sufficiency
  • energy and climate
  • sustaining natural and social capacity
  • innovation, technology and planetary systems

Urban Sustainability and other Regional Approaches

  • urban sustainability
  • bioregions and economic development
  • regional sustainability solutions
  • global/local sustainability

Transforming Economic Growth and Redefining Economic Measures

  • physical/ biological economics and the steady state
  • degrowth and transformative growth strategies
  • ecological macroeconomics
  • alternatives to GDP and improved measures of sustainability

Social Stability and Economic Behavior

  • economic justice and equity
  • economic/ecological migration and dislocation
  • behavioral economics
  • indigenomics

Public Policy for Local and Global and Sustainability

  • institutions and governance
  • valuation and measures
  • norms, rules and prices
  • politics and economics

Ecological Economics education and communication

  • education and preparation
  • inter, trans, cross, and multi-disciplinarity
  • complexity, uncertainty and effective communication