Success and its price: The institutionalization and political relevance of industrial ecology

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

12-1-2006

Abstract

As industrial ecology (IE) solidifies conceptually and methodologically, and as it gains visibility and legitimacy in academia, industry, and government, it is important that the IE community periodically evaluate the status of its emerging institutional arrangements. At the same time, industrial ecologists should assess the political relations developing between the field and the larger world. We analyze four institutional criteria: professional legitimacy, viable clientele, entrepreneurial acumen, and occupational opportunities, as well as a more controversial fifth measure - political relevance. Drawing a comparison with the field of ecology, we argue that efforts to foster IE institutionally can, ironically, conflict with the objective of seeing IE become "the science and engineering of sustainability." The article concludes by reflecting on the importance of this kind of critical appraisal and on why many observers of the field remain hopeful. © 2006 by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Yale University.

Identifier

33645640824 (Scopus)

Publication Title

Journal of Industrial Ecology

External Full Text Location

https://doi.org/10.1162/108819806775545394

e-ISSN

15309290

ISSN

10881980

First Page

79

Last Page

88

Issue

1-2

Volume

10

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