Doughnut Economics: Seven Ways to Think Like a 21st-Century Economist

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by Kate Raworth


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  ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

  This book comes out of 25 years of learning, unlearning, and relearning economics and there are many people I would like to thank because they have inspired me on that long journey. My first thanks are to my economics tutors Andrew Graham, Frances Stewart, Wilfred Beckerman and David Vines, without whose inspirational teaching I would never have been drawn to thinking like an economist in the first place. I am extremely grateful, in turn, to the students I have had the privilege to teach, especially those at Oxford University’s Environmental Change Institute and at Schumacher College. It is largely thanks to their creativity and openness to new ways of thinking that I have such confidence in the planetary household managers of the future.

  Many of the ideas in this book have grown out of Doughnut discussions that I have had in a range of countries over the past five years, with Oxfam colleagues, university students, Occupy protestors, corporate executives, UN negotiators, community groups, government policymakers, NGOs, academics and scientists. Thank you all – and particular thanks to Oxfam for giving me the opportunity to create the Doughnut in the first place.

  My superb literary agents Maggie Hanbury, Robin Straus and Harriet Poland have all given me outstanding support from the get-go. I am also profoundly grateful to my editors Nigel Wilcockson at Penguin Random House and Joni Praded at Chelsea Green for their excellent and incisive suggestions and advice; to my copyeditor, Beth Humphries, and to Rowan Borchers at Penguin Random House, who helped guide the book through its production stages. Thank you to Joss Saunders at Oxfam, Marla Guttman and Laura Crowley at Reed Smith, and to John Fullerton and Nora Bouhaddada at Capital Institute, who all provided expert technical support and advice. My especial thanks to Diane Ives and the Kendeda Fund for generously backing this book and its ideas: your support has been invaluable.

 

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