Invisible (bio)economies: a framework to assess the ‘blind spots’ of dominant bioeconomy models

HIGHLIGHTS

SUMMARY

    With increasing global challenges, such as anthropogenic climate change and exacerbating environmental damage, the emerging bioeconomy-an economy primarily based on renewable biological resources-seems to provide a bright vision of green(er) economic growth, a welfare state with high social standards as well as environmental protection (EU 2018, p 8). Various environmental initiatives, think tanks, civil society organizations (e_g, Mills 2015; Civil Society Action-Forum on Bioeconomy/denkhausbremen 2019; Biofuture Platform 2016) and scholars (Birch et_al 2010; Birch and Tyfield 2012; Backhouse et_al 2021; see also Eversberg et_al 2022) have thus criticized the . . .

     

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