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Building a Micro Foundation for Industrial Ecology
Author(s) -
Andrews Clinton J.
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
journal of industrial ecology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.377
H-Index - 102
eISSN - 1530-9290
pISSN - 1088-1980
DOI - 10.1162/108819800300106375
Subject(s) - industrial ecology , foundation (evidence) , normative , ecology , agency (philosophy) , field (mathematics) , empirical research , applied ecology , sociology , biology , sustainability , epistemology , social science , geography , plant ecology , archaeology , philosophy , mathematics , pure mathematics
Industrial ecologists study phenomena at several distinct scales, and linking the resulting insights could advance the field. The disciplines of ecology and economics have each attempted, with partial success, to accomplish this by building a behavioral micro foundation, and industrial ecology should do the same. These fields all study evolving systems made up of autonomous individuals who operate in a largely self‐interested manner, exhibit diverse behaviors, and self‐organize many higher‐level structures such as communities or sectors in a bottom‐up fashion. Industrial ecologists should explicitly attempt to integrate empirical and normative views about agency, and more carefully distinguish between two types of agents—firms and individual humans.