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Foreword
About the editors
List of contributors
Stefano Pascucci, Allen Alexander, Fiona Charnley, Jessica Fishburn The circular economy: landscape, dimensions and definitions
Circular economy as an inspiring narrative stimulating reconceptualisation
Circular economy as a new organisational field
Circular economy as a field of creative and innovative strategies
An overview of this book: our journey in the circular economy debate
A final remark when looking into the future: ambiguities and tensions ahead!
Part I: Introducing transformation
Allen Alexander Introduction
1 Walter Stahel on envisioning circular systems, lifecycles and products
2 Ken Webster on framing potential circular economies
3 Kate Raworth on creating regenerative and distributive economies by design
4 Frances Wall on virgin resources, scarcity and circularity
5 Hugo Spowers on transforming established industrial trajectories with a circular business strategy
6 Andy Rees OBE on waste, reuse, recycling and the power of positive governance
7 Ladeja Godina Kosir on transformation of people and the power of networks
Part II: The state of transition
Stefano Pascucci Introduction
Merryn Haines-Gadd, Conny Bakker, Fiona Charnley 8 Circular design in practice: eight levers for change
Introduction, review and approach
Results
Discussion and conclusion
Saskia van den Muijsenberg 9 Biomimicry and the Circular Economy
Introduction
Circular Economy: schools of thought
Daniel Guzzo, Janaina Mascarenhas, Allen Alexander 10 The transformational power of Circular Innovation
Introduction
Adopting a systems approach for circular innovation
Setting the options for circular innovation
Building an open circular innovation ecosystem
Setting the circular innovation journey
Doing it systematically through a circular innovation framework
Paavo Ritala, Nancy M. P. Bocken, Jan Konietzko 11 Three lenses on circular business model innovation
Introduction
Defining circular business model innovation
Three lenses to circular business model innovation
Discussion and conclusions
Aglaia Fischer, Diane Zandee, Marleen Janssen Groesbeek 12 Finance and accounting in the circular economy
Introduction
Circular business models, accounting and finance
Application of concepts to an illustrative case
Key accounting and finance challenges for CBMs
Finance and accounting for CBMs as the new default
Mitigating climate risk and raw material risk
Rethink depreciation and appreciate residual value
Longevity and increased control over assets as key risk mitigants
Conclusions
David Monciardini, Eléonore Maitre-Ekern, Carl Dalhammar, Rosalind Malcolm 13 Circular Economy regulation: an emerging research agenda
Introduction
Origins and limitations of the current model of regulation
The emergence of a law of the Circular Economy in Europe
Existing policy debates: re-designing CE regulation
A research agenda to address unanswered CE regulatory questions
Conclusion
Steffen Böhm, Chia-Hao Ho, Helen Holmes, Constantine Manolchev, Malte Rödl, Wouter Spekkink 14 Circular society activism: prefigurative communities in everyday Circular Economy action
Introduction
CE’s social dimension
Circular society as activism
Examples of everyday, prefigurative CE activism
Discussion
Conclusion
Esther Goodwin Brown, Marijana Novak, Constantine Manolchev, Sharon Gil, Esteban Munoz 15 Circular economy jobs: risks and opportunities in the labour market
Introduction
Bringing the social impacts of the CE to the surface
Mapping the number and range of circular jobs across territories
Dealing with data
Applications of the methodology
Challenges and opportunities: avoiding trade-offs
Appendix
Fenna Blomsma, Geraldine Brennan 16 Resources, waste and a systemic approach to Circular Economy
Introduction
Why a systems perspective is crucial to circularity
‘Resources,’ or resource states
‘Waste,’ or the Big 5 structural wastes
‘Circular configurations’: mapping the ‘why,’ ‘what’ and ‘who’ of CE
Marta Ferri, Alison Stowell, Gail Whiteman 17 Plastic futures: mobilising circular economy contexts to address the plastic crisis
Introduction
Single-use plastics and the circular economy
Methods and analysis
International Alliance for Sustainable Business (IASB) and plastic futures
Findings
Discussion
Conclusion
Kim Poldner, Domenico Dentoni 18 Aesthetic engagement: material practices of organising towards regenerative futures
Vignette 1: mycelium shoe
Introduction
Vignette 2: 3D-printed dress
Research setting and data creation
Vignette 3: obsolete catwalk
Data creation
Analysis
Findings: practices of aesthetic engagement
Discussion
Practical implication and limitations
Conclusion
Appendix
Part III: Industrial vignettes: exploring industry transition
Fiona Charnley Introduction
The role of business and business models in a circular economy
Stories of implementation
Georgie Hopkins 19 BAM bamboo clothing
Rationale
Leadership
Approach
On reflection
Georgie Hopkins 20 Winnow Solutions Ltd
Rationale
Leadership
Approach
On reflection
Oke Okorie 21 Riversimple
Rationale
Leadership
Approach
On reflection
Georgie Hopkins 22 Rype Office
Rationale
Leadership
Approach
On reflection
Georgie Hopkins 23 Elvis & Kresse
Rationale
Leadership
Approach
On reflection
Jamie Wheaton 24 Circularity Capital
Rationale
Leadership
Approach
On reflection
Ruth Cherrington 25 Teemill
Rationale
Leadership
Approach
On reflection
Jamie Wheaton 26 Forest Green Rovers
Rationale
Leadership
Approach
On reflection
Jamie Wheaton 27 Grover
Rationale
Leadership
Approach
On reflection
Isabelle Housni 28 ReStore project
Rationale
Leadership
Approach
On reflection
Isabelle Housni 29 Packshare
Rationale
Leadership
Approach
On reflection
Isabelle Housni 30 Lendwithcare
Rationale
Leadership
Approach
On reflection
Jamie Wheaton 31 Páramo
Rationale
Leadership
Approach
On reflection
Ruth Cherrington 32 Circular & Co
Rationale
Leadership
Approach
On reflection
Isabelle Housni 33 Terragr’eau
Rationale
Leadership
Approach
On reflection
Ruth Cherrington 34 LUSH cosmetics
Rationale
Leadership
Approach
On reflection
Jamie Wheaton 35 Shark Solutions
Rationale
Leadership
Approach
On reflection
Georgie Hopkins 36 gDiapers
Rationale
Leadership
Approach
On reflection
Georgie Hopkins 37 Ricoh
Rationale
Leadership
Approach
On reflection
Isabelle Housni 38 Riverford Organics
Rationale
Leadership
Approach
On reflection
Georgie Hopkins 39 Oxwash
Rationale
Leadership
Approach
On reflection
Ruth Cherrington 40 Triodos Bank
Rationale
Leadership
Approach
On reflection
Ruth Cherrington 41 Co Cars
Rationale
Leadership
Approach
On reflection
Georgie Hopkins 42 Oddbox
Rationale
Leadership
Approach
On reflection
Ruth Cherrington 43 Fairphone
Rationale
Leadership
Approach
On reflection
Ruth Cherrington 44 Ooho from Notpla
Rationale
Leadership
Approach
On reflection
Jamie Wheaton 45 Repair Café
Rationale
Leadership
Approach
On reflection
Jamie Wheaton 46 Gerrard Street
Rationale
Leadership
Approach
On reflection
Jamie Wheaton 47 Patagonia
Rationale
Leadership
Approach
On reflection
Isabelle Housni 48 Whirli
Rationale
Leadership
Approach
On reflection
Index

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Handbook of the circular economy : transitions and transformation 이용현황 표 - 등록번호, 청구기호, 권별정보, 자료실, 이용여부로 구성 되어있습니다.
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알라딘제공

The De Gruyter Handbook of the Circular Economy provides critical definitions, the mapping of key theoretical and practical dimensions and the development of a landscape map that sets out the main tools and initiatives being developed as part of either a transition or a transformative state. It also provides a narrative that brings forward contributions from the fields of sustainability, eco-innovations, responsible innovations and others. The aim of this handbook is to become the researchers' study almanac for the emerging theme of Circular Economy.

The Circular Economy has gained traction in both the commercial and academic marketplaces as an alternative economic model to the current take-make-dispose, 'Linear Economy'. Aligning a range of contributory philosophies [for example - the Production Economy (Walter Stahel), the Blue Economy (Gunter Pauli), Space-ship Earth (Boulding)] the Circular Economy makes provision for a transformative economic model that enables mankind to operate within Earth's planetary boundaries, by adopting strategies for avoiding waste and harnessing renewable technologies.

Design for reuse (with a Cradle-to-Cradle and not Cradle-to-Grave approach), remanufacturing and closed loop reuse and recycling systems, coupled with revised business models that enable the retention of products and services at their highest levels of value for the longest time, set the Circular Economy up as a more than merely a new form of sustainability. With a key focus on using only renewable resources, many of the new Innovations coming forward also aim to be regenerative to Earth systems and natural resources (the oceans, the climate and other sources of natural capital).

Led by key work from the Ellen MacArthur Foundation (EMF), supported by economic analysis prepared by McKinsey, the field is gaining momentum rapidly. Many new themes are emerging such as circular innovations, circular business models, supply-chain effectiveness (not merely efficiency) and resource-reuse and waste-loop reductions. All economic sectors are included, with particular impetus in mobility (long-term transport systems), mining and mineral extraction, construction, chemical processing, food and biological systems processing, fashion and textiles, the list is growing day-by-day.

What the field lacks however are aggregated, critical definitions, the mapping of the key theoretical and practical dimensions and the development of a landscape map that sets out the main tools and initiatives being developed as part of either a transition or a transformative state. A narrative that also brings forward the contributions from the fields of sustainability, eco-innovations, responsible innovations and others and sets these into the Circular Economy context is also essential for the Circular Economy to consolidate and thus be able to move forwards.