Fifty years ago, innovation studies researchers were critical towards the pioneering ‘Limits to Growth’ analysis of world economy-environment relations. Whilst criticism took distinct forms, their arguments shared hope in the ability of technology to decouple economic growth from environmental collapse. This idea has remained prominent in policy ever since. In revisiting that debate, however, this paper recalls how critics’ hope was conditional upon a radical restructuring of political and economic relations at the international level. This was a period when Third World solidarity was pushing the United Nations towards an equitable economic order for post-colonial justice - including a global redistribution of technological capabilities and self-reliance. These hopes crumbled in the face of the neoliberal counter- revolution; and today, green growth frames technology as a device for evading, not enabling, radical political and economic change. Given the alarming fact that Limits to Growth scenarios appear more prescient than ever, what lessons can post-growth approaches to technology draw from this history?
Funding
STEPS 2nd five years funding (IDS leading) - REVISED COSTS : ESRC-ECONOMIC & SOCIAL RESEARCH COUNCIL
Supporting and Harnessing diversity? Experiments in Appropriate Technology : ESRC-ECONOMIC & SOCIAL RESEARCH COUNCIL | RES 332 25 0005
Technologies for social inclusion and sustainability in Latin America : ESRC-ECONOMIC & SOCIAL RESEARCH COUNCIL | RES 074 27 0013
Technologies for social inclusion and sustainability in Latin America : Economic and Social Research Council | ES/I005234/1
The STEPS (Social, Technological and Environmental Pathways to Sustainability) Centre : Economic and Social Research Council | ES/I021620/1