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  1. sustainability Robert Solow Text of an invited lecture on the occasion of the fortieth anniversary of Resources for the Future, 8 October 1992 You may be relieved to know that this talk will not be a harangue about the intrinsic incompatibility of economic growth and concern for the natural environment.

  2. Sustainability: An Economist's Perspective ROBERT M. SOLOW Robert M. Solow is Institute Professor of Economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a Nobel Laureate in Economics. This talk is different from anything else anyone has heard at Woods Hole; certainly for the last two days. Three people have asked me, "Do you plan

  3. An almost practical step toward sustainability Robert Solow The author is Institute Professor of Economics at the Massachusetts In-stitute of Technology, where he has taught for more than 40 years. Professor Solow was awarded the Nobel Prize for Economics in 1987. Much of Professor Solow's work as an economist has focused on the

  4. Weak sustainability is an idea based upon the work of Nobel laureate Robert Solow, and John Hartwick. which states that 'human capital' can substitute 'natural capital'. The weak sustainability paradigm stems from the 1970s.

  5. In his highly regarded lecture, “An Almost Practical Step toward Sustainability,” economist and Nobel Prize winner Robert Solow proposed a model for sustainable economic growth. His strategy complemented the Malthusian model of economic stagnation and was based on his assumption of a “weak sustainability,” in which the substitutability ...

  6. By David Mollica Edited By Tom Campbell. Book Sustainability. Edition 1st Edition. First Published 2009. Imprint Routledge. Pages 10. eBook ISBN 9781315241951.

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  8. Dec 1, 2000 · For Robert Solow, 1974b, Solow, 1991, sustainability is simply a matter of distributional equity, about sharing the capacity for well-being between present people and future people: [It is] an obligation to conduct ourselves so that we leave to the future the option or the capacity to be as well off as we are.

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