'The good economy': a conceptual and empirical move for investigating how economies and versions of the good are entangled
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/24127Dato
2021-09-20Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Asdal, Kristin; Cointe, Béatrice; Hobæk, Bård; Reinertsen, Hilde; Huse, Tone; Morsman, Silje Rebecca; Måløy, TommasSammendrag
Across Europe and the OECD, the bioeconomy is promoted as that
which will succeed the carbon economy: an economy based in ‘the bio’ that will be
innovative, sustainable, responsible and environmentally friendly. Yet how to critically approach an economy justifed not only by its accumulative potentials but also
its ability to do and be good? This paper suggests the concept of ‘the good economy’ as an analytical tool for investigating how economic practice is entangled in
versions of the good. Building upon the classic contributions of Weber, Thompson
and Foucault in combination with valuation studies, this paper shows how the good
economy concept can be employed to examine how the economic and the good are
intertwined. Empirically, the paper teases out how what is made to be good in the
bioeconomy is radically diferent than in economies of the recent past. While ‘the
good economy’ of the early oil and aquaculture economy concerned how to insert
this economy into society in a good manner, society is surprisingly absent in the
contemporary bioeconomy. The bioeconomy is enacted as an expert issue, pursued
by the tools of economic valuation, and based in the unquestioned idea that ‘the bio’
makes any economy good.
Forlag
SpringerSitering
Asdal, Cointe, Hobæk, Reinertsen, Huse, Morsman, Måløy. 'The good economy': a conceptual and empirical move for investigating how economies and versions of the good are entangled. BioSocieties. 2021Metadata
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