Emergent Imaginaries and Fragmented Policy Frameworks in the Canadian Bio-Economy

Climate change means that countries like Canada need to find suitable transition pathways to overcome fossil-fuel dependence; one such pathway is the so-called ‘bio-economy’. The bio-economy is a term used to define an economic system in which biological resources (e.g., plants) form the basis of pr...

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Main Author: Kean Birch
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2016-10-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/8/10/1007
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spelling doaj-e9f4717fb91343bbbc00acf632181e5e2020-11-24T23:05:57ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502016-10-01810100710.3390/su8101007su8101007Emergent Imaginaries and Fragmented Policy Frameworks in the Canadian Bio-EconomyKean Birch0Department of Social Science, York University, Toronto, ON M3J 1P3, CanadaClimate change means that countries like Canada need to find suitable transition pathways to overcome fossil-fuel dependence; one such pathway is the so-called ‘bio-economy’. The bio-economy is a term used to define an economic system in which biological resources (e.g., plants) form the basis of production and production processes. For example, it would involve the replacement of petroleum energy, inputs, chemicals, and products with bioenergy, biological inputs, bio-chemicals, and bio-products. A number of countries and jurisdictions have established policy strategies in order to promote and support the development of a bio-economy, exemplified by the European Union where the bio-economy represents a key pillar in its broader Horizon 2020 strategy. Other countries, like Canada, do not yet have an over-arching bio-economy strategy, but have a series of diverse, and often competing, policy visions and frameworks. It is useful to analyse countries like Canada in order to understand how these policy visions and policy frameworks are co-constituted, and what this might mean for the development of an over-arching bio-economy strategy. This raises a number of questions: How is the bio-economy imagined by different social actors? How are these imaginaries and policy frameworks co-produced?http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/8/10/1007bio-economybio-based economybiofuelspolicy imaginariespolicy frameworksCanada
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kean Birch
spellingShingle Kean Birch
Emergent Imaginaries and Fragmented Policy Frameworks in the Canadian Bio-Economy
Sustainability
bio-economy
bio-based economy
biofuels
policy imaginaries
policy frameworks
Canada
author_facet Kean Birch
author_sort Kean Birch
title Emergent Imaginaries and Fragmented Policy Frameworks in the Canadian Bio-Economy
title_short Emergent Imaginaries and Fragmented Policy Frameworks in the Canadian Bio-Economy
title_full Emergent Imaginaries and Fragmented Policy Frameworks in the Canadian Bio-Economy
title_fullStr Emergent Imaginaries and Fragmented Policy Frameworks in the Canadian Bio-Economy
title_full_unstemmed Emergent Imaginaries and Fragmented Policy Frameworks in the Canadian Bio-Economy
title_sort emergent imaginaries and fragmented policy frameworks in the canadian bio-economy
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2016-10-01
description Climate change means that countries like Canada need to find suitable transition pathways to overcome fossil-fuel dependence; one such pathway is the so-called ‘bio-economy’. The bio-economy is a term used to define an economic system in which biological resources (e.g., plants) form the basis of production and production processes. For example, it would involve the replacement of petroleum energy, inputs, chemicals, and products with bioenergy, biological inputs, bio-chemicals, and bio-products. A number of countries and jurisdictions have established policy strategies in order to promote and support the development of a bio-economy, exemplified by the European Union where the bio-economy represents a key pillar in its broader Horizon 2020 strategy. Other countries, like Canada, do not yet have an over-arching bio-economy strategy, but have a series of diverse, and often competing, policy visions and frameworks. It is useful to analyse countries like Canada in order to understand how these policy visions and policy frameworks are co-constituted, and what this might mean for the development of an over-arching bio-economy strategy. This raises a number of questions: How is the bio-economy imagined by different social actors? How are these imaginaries and policy frameworks co-produced?
topic bio-economy
bio-based economy
biofuels
policy imaginaries
policy frameworks
Canada
url http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/8/10/1007
work_keys_str_mv AT keanbirch emergentimaginariesandfragmentedpolicyframeworksinthecanadianbioeconomy
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