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Sweden is seen as a forerunner in environmental and ecological policy. Now available in paperback, Sweden and ecological governance is about policies and strategies for ecologically rational governance, and uses the Swedish case study to ask whether or not it is possible to move from a traditional environmental policy to a broad, integrated pursuit of sustainable development, as illustrated through the ‘Sustainable Sweden’ programme.The study begins by looking at the spatial dimensions of ecological governance, and goes on to consider the integration and effectiveness of sustainable development policies. It analyses the tension between democracy and sustainable development, which has a broader relevance beyond the Swedish model, to other nation states as well as the European Union as a whole.In this book the author offers the latest word in advanced implementation of sustainable development by a front-runner in environmental and ecological policy. It will be useful for students of environmental politics and sustainable development researchers.This book is relevant to both United Nations Sustainable Development Goals 7 and 11, Affordable and clean energy and Sustainable cities and communities.An electronic edition of this book is freely available under a Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND) licence.
Lennart J. Lundqvist is Professor of Environmental Politics and Administration in the Department of Political Science at Goteborg University
1. Where the grass is greener: criteria for ecologically rational governance2. ‘Nested enterprises’? Spatial dimensions of ecological governance3. Up or down with the ecology cycle? Strategies for temporally rational ecological governance4. The commons of governing – the knowledge base of ecological governance5. Governing in common – integration and effectiveness in ecological governance 6. Democracy and ecological governance – a balancing act7. Where the buck stops: governmental power and authority in democratic ecological governance 8. Straddling the fence: on the possibility of sustainability and democracy in advanced industrial nationsReferencesIndex