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Full Description
This book highlights world perspectives on critical aspects impacting the circular economy and the Just Transition. In doing so, it provides recommendations based on the seven pillars of the circular economy which involve: design for durability and longevity, reduce, reuse and recycle, refurbishment and remanufacturing, recovery and regeneration, product as a service, sustainable supply chains, and digital technologies and data.
The edited collection is clearly divided into topics and regions relative to these core elements of the circular economy and the Just Transition. Topics discussed include: Sustainable Fashion with a focus on Asia; Gender Issues in Africa; Critical Minerals with a focus on South America; Nuclear Energy Development in Europe; Renewable energy initiatives in the EU and North Africa; Urban regeneration- Challenges and Solutions for cities in the EU and South America; and the perspectives of Early Career Researchers to the study of Energy Justice.
The book provides a global approach to these issues which are at the core of the just transition to a circular economy. These issues are the impetus of what can drive a just transition to a circular economy in this time of global crisis.
Contents
PART 1: INTRODUCTION.- Chapter 1: Incentivizing Circular Economy strategies towards a Just Transition: Alicia Phillips & Laura Kaschny.- PART 2: REFORM, RESTRUCTURE & REORGANIZE, TO TRANSFORM SOCIETY.- Chapter 2: Whose energy justice? Situated knowledges from women-led grassroots 'organising' in the Global South: Beatriz Arnal-Calvo, Carmen Freed Huici and Kathlen Schneider.- Chapter 3: Democratising EU Nuclear Policy through energy justice: Dr. Zamira Xhaferri, Filiz Doğan, Emiliano Castillo Jara, Gianna Giardini & Hazal Mengi.- Chapter 4: Regenerating cities through energy communities: A justice-based comparative perspective from Roma (Italy) and Brasilia (Brazil): Dr. Ari Rogério Ferra Júnior & Gianna Giardini.- PART 3: REUSE: MAXIMISE RESOURCE EFFICIENCY & SUSTAINABILITY BY MANAGING CONSUMPTION.- Chapter 5: Policy trade-offs in a Just Transition Framework: Examining the Fast Fashion Crisis in Bangladesh through a degrowth lens- Nils Grolimund, Shuddha S. Das, Laura Peña and Silvia Ciacchi.- Chapter 6: Towards 'just' mining: From restoration to restorative justice- Francisca Soto-Monteverde, Carlotta Terhorst, Clelia Zardini, Tareq Yacoub Helou and Alase Adetokunbo.- PART 4: REDUCE: LOWER GHG EMISSIONS.- Chapter 7: A procedural justice analysis of cross-border green hydrogen initiatives between the EU & Tunisia- Paola Jiminez-Casanova, Shakya A. Wickramanayake, Sonia Chabane, Dr. Strahinja Obrenović & Syed Sajad Ali Shah.- PART 5: CONCLUSION.- Chapter 8: Applying a critical reflective framework to energy justice: Piloting the 'what is the problem represented to be' framework in an academic context- Sil Katrien Maslov-Lescrauwaet, Klaudia Szabelka, Rachel Walters, Tom Hambley, Päivi Tikkakoski.- Chapter 9: Building a just transition and circular economy future, Alicia Phillips & Laura Kaschny.



