1. Goals, Agenda, and Policy Recommendations for Ecological Economics
Part I. Developing an Ecological Economic World View
2. What Do We Want to Sustain? Environmentalism and Human Evaluations
3. Elements of Environmental Macroeconomics
4. Paramount Positions in Ecological Economics
5. Sustainability and the Problem of Valuation
6. Driving Forces, Increasing Returns and Ecological Sustainability
7. Sustainability and Discounting the Future
8. Ecological Health and Sustainable Resource Management
9. Ecological Perception, Environmental Policy and Distributional Conflicts: Some Lessons from History
10. A New Scientific Methodology for Global Environmental Issues
11, Reserved Rationality and the Precautionary Principle: Technological Change, Time and Uncertainty in Environmental Decision Making
Part II. Accounting, Modeling and Analysis
12. The Environment as Capital
13. Alternative Environmental and Resource Accounting Approaches
14. Correcting National Income for Environmental Losses: A Practical Solution for a Theoretical Dilemma
15. National Accounting, Time and the Environment: A Neo-Austrian Approach
16. Accounting in Ecological Systems
17. Contributory Values of Ecoystem Resources
18. Ecological-Economic Analysis for Regional Sustainable Development
19. Natural Resource Scarcity and Economic Growth Revisted: Economic and Biophysical Perspectives
Part III. Institutional Changes and Case Studies
20. Economic Biases Against Sustainable Development
21. Assuring Sustainability of Ecological Economic Systems
22. Local and Global Incentives for Sustainability: Failures in Economic Systems
23. Intergenerational Transfers and Ecological Sustainability
24. Economic Strategies for Mitigating the Impacts of Climate Change on Future Generations
25. The Role for Economic Incentives in International Allocation of Abatement Effort
26. Rethinking Ecological and Economic Education: A Gestalt Shift
27. Ecological Economics and Mulidisciplinary Education
28. Ecological Engineering: Approaches to Sustainability and Biodiversity in the U.S. and China
29. On the Significance of Open Boundaries for an Ecologically Sustainable Development of Human Socities
30. Integrated Agro-Industrial Ecosystems: An Assessment of the Sustainability of a Cogenerative Approach to Food, Energy and Chemicals Production by Photosenthesis
31. Government Policy and Ecological Concerns: Some Lessons from the Brazilian Experience
32. Tropical Moist Forest Management: The Urgency of Transition to Sustainability