The Politics of Permaculture: Towards an Ecologically Situated Approach to Resource Policy and Governance. Mackenzie, J. In 2003.
abstract   bibtex   
The contributions to environmental politics of Torgerson, Oelschlager, Dryzek, Harrè and others, converge in their respective acknowledgements that the shift towards an ‘ecologically situated’ approach to environmental policy, including resource governance, will require the emergence and consolidation of a new lingua franca of environmental discourse. In this paper, I suggest that an extrapolation of permaculture ethics may provide a gambit through which such a discourse may be assembled and organised. I examine six key signifying elements derived from Orr and Capra’s approach to ecological literacy – network, nested system, flow, cycle, development and dynamic balance – and explore the implications that these might have for resource governance and policy, including the (re)framing of assessment indicators, energy auditing, resource management and integrated planning and development.
@inproceedings{mackenzie_politics_2003,
	title = {The {Politics} of {Permaculture}: {Towards} an {Ecologically} {Situated} {Approach} to {Resource} {Policy} and {Governance}},
	shorttitle = {The {Politics} of {Permaculture}: {Towards} an {Ecologically} {Situated} {Approach} to {Resource} {Policy} and {Governance}},
	abstract = {The contributions to environmental politics of Torgerson, Oelschlager, Dryzek, Harrè and others, converge in their respective acknowledgements that the shift towards an ‘ecologically situated’ approach to environmental policy, including resource governance, will require the emergence and consolidation of a new lingua franca of environmental discourse. In this paper, I suggest that an extrapolation of permaculture ethics may provide a gambit through which such a discourse may be assembled and organised. I examine six key signifying elements derived from Orr and Capra’s approach to ecological literacy – network, nested system, flow, cycle, development and dynamic balance – and explore the implications that these might have for resource governance and policy, including the (re)framing of assessment indicators, energy auditing, resource management and integrated planning and development.},
	author = {Mackenzie, J.},
	year = {2003},
	keywords = {\#nosource},
}

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