Dear Colleagues,
Submissions are invited for a Special Issue of
Land, on 'Sustainable Land-Based Bioeconomy Development'.
Guest Editors:
Dr. Stefanie Linser, Dr. Martin Greimel, Prof. Dr. Andreas Pyka.
The bioeconomy as a scientific concept was first introduced in the 1970s through an analysis of the economic process with respect to fundamental laws of physics, implying
that negative impacts of resource extraction could be reduced by a circular economy with minimized resource throughput. This notion of the bioeconomy being closely linked to natural laws never caught up in political economics and was reinterpreted at the beginning
of the new millennium as a political agenda for industrial biomass production in the EU. Following extensive criticism on having missed out on social and ecological sustainability, the EU revised its strategies as sectoral programs and inspired countries around
the world to develop their own interpretations of a bioeconomy. A sustainable and circular bioeconomy is also a pathway to the achievement of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by 2030 because the bioeconomy relates to a number of SDGs.
Today, the predominantly academically led discussion has developed into a so-called “mixed-source metadiscourse”, being on a par with comprehensive concepts such as sustainable
development or global governance, providing a broad narrative for a decarbonized economy.
As a common denominator, all bioeconomy development perspectives anticipate increased biomass utilization which, in turn, puts land use and availability into particular
focus. In light of this conclusion, the aim of this Special Issue is to encourage further discussions on the concept of sustainable bioeconomy development by providing a backdrop through presenting the recent state of the discourse. Further, approaches to
monitor, assess and report the implementation of bioeconomy strategies have also become ever more important.
To provide an account on current approaches and implementations, we welcome paper contributions in the form of either empirical research or conceptual/theoretical works
on selected perspectives of a land-based bioeconomy through policy analysis, literature reviews and indicator-based monitoring mainly in the following categories:
Deadline for manuscript submissions:
31 December 2022.
Further details at:
https://www.mdpi.com/journal/land/special_issues/land_bioeconomy
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Posted by IUFRO Headquarters on behalf of:
Dr. Stefanie Linser
Senior Researcher
Institute of Forest, Environment and Natural Resource Policy,
University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna (BOKU)
and European Forest Institute, Forest Policy Research Network
Feistmantelstrasse 4
1180 Vienna, Austria
Tel. +43 (1) 47654 73222
stefanie.linser@efi.int
New website: https://fprn.info/