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Original Articles

An Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare for Scotland, 1980-1991

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Pages 264-291 | Published online: 04 Mar 2011

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Ken Thomson, Nico Vellinga, Bill Slee & Adekunle Ibiyemi. (2014) Mapping Socio-Economic Performance in Rural Scotland. Scottish Geographical Journal 130:1, pages 1-21.
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Ian Moffatt. (1999) Is Scotland sustainable? A the series of indicators of sustainable development. International Journal of Sustainable Development & World Ecology 6:4, pages 242-250.
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Ian Moffatt. (1999) Edinburgh: a sustainable city?. International Journal of Sustainable Development & World Ecology 6:2, pages 135-148.
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Articles from other publishers (15)

Chiara Gigliarano, Francesco Balducci, Mariateresa Ciommi & Francesco Chelli. (2014) Going regional: An index of sustainable economic welfare for Italy. Computers, Environment and Urban Systems 45, pages 63-77.
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Philip Lawn. (2013) The failure of the ISEW and GPI to fully account for changes in human-health capital — A methodological shortcoming not a theoretical weakness. Ecological Economics 88, pages 167-177.
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Philip Lawn & Matthew Clarke. (2010) The end of economic growth? A contracting threshold hypothesis. Ecological Economics 69:11, pages 2213-2223.
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Matthew Clarke & Philip Lawn. (2008) Is measuring genuine progress at the sub-national level useful?. Ecological Indicators 8:5, pages 573-581.
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Matthew Clarke & Philip Lawn. (2008) A policy analysis of Victoria's Genuine Progress Indictor. The Journal of Socio-Economics 37:2, pages 864-879.
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Philip Lawn. (2006) A Stock-Take of Green National Accounting Initiatives. Social Indicators Research 80:2, pages 427-460.
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Eric Neumayer. 2007. Human Well-Being. Human Well-Being 193 213 .
Matthew Clarke & Philip Lawn. (2010) MEASURING VICTORIA'S GENUINE PROGRESS: A GENUINE PROGRESS INDICTOR (GPI) FOR VICTORIA. Economic Papers: A journal of applied economics and policy 24:4, pages 368-389.
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Philip A. Lawn. (2005) An Assessment of the Valuation Methods Used to Calculate the Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare (ISEW), Genuine Progress Indicator (GPI), and Sustainable Net Benefit Index (SNBI). Environment, Development and Sustainability 7:2, pages 185-208.
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Philip Lawn. (2004) To operate sustainably or not to operate sustainability?—That is the long-run question. Futures 36:1, pages 1-22.
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Philip A. Lawn. (2003) A theoretical foundation to support the Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare (ISEW), Genuine Progress Indicator (GPI), and other related indexes. Ecological Economics 44:1, pages 105-118.
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Sebastian Gil & Jerzy Sleszynski. (2003) An index of sustainable economic welfare for Poland. Sustainable Development 11:1, pages 47-55.
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Eric Neumayer. (2000) On the methodology of ISEW, GPI and related measures: some constructive suggestions and some doubt on the ‘threshold’ hypothesis. Ecological Economics 34:3, pages 347-361.
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Alex Farrell. (2005) SUSTAINABILITY AND DECISION-MAKING:. Review of Policy Research 16:3-4, pages 36-74.
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Nick Hanley, Ian Moffatt, Robin Faichney & Mike Wilson. (1999) Measuring sustainability: A time series of alternative indicators for Scotland. Ecological Economics 28:1, pages 55-73.
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