Prosperity without growth - The transition to a sustainable economy

Page 119

Helm, Dieter 2008b. Climate-change policy: why has so little been achieved? Oxford Review of Economic Policy 24(20): 211–238. Hirsch, Fred 1977. Social Limits to Growth. Revised edition (1995), London and New York: Routledge. HMT 2008. Facing Global Challenges: supporting people through difficult times. Pre-Budget Report 2008. London: HM Treasury. Hobson, K., 2006. Competing discourses of sustainable consumption: does the rationalisation of lifestyles make sense? In Jackson 2006a, 305– 327. Huneke, M 2005. The Face of the Un-consumer: an empirical examination of the practice of voluntary simplicity in the United States. Psychology and Marketing 22(7), 527-550. IEA 2008. World Energy Outlook 2008. Paris: International Energy Agency. IFS 2009. The IFS Green Budget January 2009. London: Institute for Fiscal Studies. IMF 2008. World Economic Outlook 2008. Washington DC: International Monetary Fund. Inglehart, Ronald and Klingemann, H-D 2000. Genes, culture and happiness. Boston: MIT Press. IPCC 2007. Climate change 2007: Mitigation. Contribution of Working group III to the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ITPOES 2008. The Oil Crunch: securing the UK’s energy future. First report of the Industry Taskforce on Peak Oil and Energy Security. London: ITPOES. Jackson, Tim 2008a. Where is the wellbeing dividend? Nature, Structure and Consumption Inequalities. Local Environment 13(8): 703-723. Jackson, Tim 2008b. The Challenge of Sustainable Lifestyles. Chapter 4 in State of the World 2008 – Innovations for a Sustainable Economy. Washington DC: WorldWatch Institute.

Sustainable Development Commission

Jackson, Tim (ed) 2006a. Earthscan Reader in Sustainable Consumption. London: Earthscan. Jackson, Tim 2006b. Consuming Paradise? Towards a social and cultural psychology of sustainable consumption. Chapter 25 in Jackson (ed) 2006a. Jackson, Tim 2005a. Motivating Sustainable Consumption – a review of evidence on consumer behaviour and behavioural change. London: Sustainable Development Research Network. Jackson, Tim 2005b. Live better by consuming less? Is there a double dividend in sustainable consumption. Journal of Industrial Ecology 9(1-2), 19-36. Jackson, Tim and Victor Anderson 2009. Redefining Prosperity – essays in pursuit of a sustainable economy. London: Earthscan/SDC, forthcoming. Jackson, Tim 1996. Material Concerns: pollution, profit and quality of life. London: Routledge. Jackson, Tim and Michael Jacobs 1991. Carbon Taxes and the Assumptions of Environmental Economics. In Barker, T (ed) Green Futures for Economic Growth. Cambridge: Cambridge Econometrics, 49-68. Jackson, Tim, Wander Jager and Sigrid Stagl 2004. Beyond Insatiability – needs theory and sustainable consumption, in L Reisch and I Røpke (eds) Consumption – perspectives from ecological economics. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar. Jackson, Tim and Nic Marks 1999. Consumption, Sustainable Welfare and Human Needs - with reference to UK expenditure patterns 1954-1994, Ecological Economics 28(3), 421-442. Jackson, T and N McBride 2005. Measuring Progress? A review of adjusted measures of economic welfare in Europe. Report for the European Environment Agency. Guildford: University of Surrey. Jackson, Tim and Miriam Pepper 2009. Consumerism as theodicy: an exploration of secular and religious meaning functions in consumer society. In Thomas, Lynn Consumerism: religious and secular perspectives. London: Palgrave.

Prosperity without Growth?

117


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.