Abstract
As a necessarily political act, the theorizing, debating and enacting of ecological economies offer pathways to radical socio-economic transformations that emphasize the ecological and prioritize justice. In response to a research agenda call for ecological economics, we propose and employ an ecofeminist frame to demonstrate how the logics of extractivist capitalism, which justify gender biased and anti-ecological power structures inherent in the growth paradigm, also directly inform the theoretical basis of ecological economics and its subsequent post-growth proposals. We offer pathways to reconcile these epistemological limitations through a synthesis of ecofeminist ethics and distributive justice imperatives, proposing leading questions to further the field.
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Ruder, S. L., & Sanniti, S. R. (2019). Transcending the learned ignorance of predatory ontologies: A research Agenda for an ecofeminist-informed ecological economics. Sustainability (Switzerland), 11(5). https://doi.org/10.3390/SU11051479
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