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research article

Coming Full Circle Why Social and Institutional Dimensions Matter for the Circular Economy

Moreau, Vincent  
•
Sahakian, Marlyne
•
Van Griethuysen, Pascal
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2017
Journal of Industrial Ecology

In light of the environmental consequences of linear production and consumption processes, the circular economy (CE) is gaining momentum as a concept and practice, promoting closed material cycles by focusing on multiple strategies from material recycling to product reuse, as well as rethinking production and consumption chains toward increased resource efficiency. Yet, by considering mainly cost-effective opportunities within the realm of economic competitiveness, it stops short of grappling with the institutional and social predispositions necessary for societal transitions to a CE. The distinction of noncompetitive and not-for-profit activities remains to be addressed, along with other societal questions relating to labor conditions, wealth distribution, and governance systems. In this article, we recall some underlying biophysical aspects to explain the limits to current CE approaches. We examine the CE from a biophysical and social perspective to show that the concept lacks the social and institutional dimensions to address the current material and energy throughput in the economy. We show that reconsidering labor is essential to tackling the large share of dissipated material and energy flows that cannot be recovered economically. Institutional conditions have an essential role to play in setting the rules that differentiate profitable from nonprofitable activities. In this context, the social and solidarity economy, with its focus on equity with respect to labor and governance, provides an instructive and practical example that defies the constraints related to current institutional conditions and economic efficiency. We show how insights from the principles of the social and solidarity economy can contribute to the development of a CE by further defining who bears the costs of economic activities.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1111/jiec.12598
Web of Science ID

WOS:000405315600006

Author(s)
Moreau, Vincent  
Sahakian, Marlyne
Van Griethuysen, Pascal
Vuille, François  
Date Issued

2017

Publisher

Massachusetts Institute of Technology Press

Published in
Journal of Industrial Ecology
Volume

21

Issue

3

Start page

497

End page

506

Subjects

Circular economy

•

Flow fund model

•

Industrial ecology

•

Institutional economics

•

Labor

•

Social and solidarity economy

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
CEN  
Available on Infoscience
September 5, 2017
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/140316
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