Abstract
Changing the productive structure and democratizing any country would not be emancipating if top priority was not given to generation of activities that create of bioproducts to elicit changes in the energy matrix if top priority were not strengthing the society. The aim of the research is promoting the analysis of the construction of society by contributing to processes geared toward decarbonization and reducing pollution by bioproducts. The hypothesis tests if bioproducts effects on economy and rural development or if non-democracy deepens its opportunities to alter conditions of social and material equality. The outcome is the necessity to empower society rather than the market. It must also enable communities over the country. Another consequence is the empowered community can promote the development of freedoms and capacities to reflect critically and cooperatively, and allow each individual and each collective to be themselves (empirical research with Partier Surui). In the end, the research presents a strategy of sustainability accumulation, distribution, and redistribution. We consider four axes, which interact with and complement each other in the long term: a) education for narrowing inequity gaps; b) technology, innovation, and knowledge; c) environmental sustainability; and d) productive structure and strategic sector.
Presenters
Pedro Diaz PeraltaVisiting Fellow, Yale School of the Environment - Michelle L. Bell´s Research Group, Yale University, United States Claudia Ribeiro Pereira Nunes
Student, PhD, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Madrid, Spain
Details
Presentation Type
Paper Presentation in a Themed Session
Theme
Sustainability in Economic, Social, and Cultural Context
KEYWORDS
Governance, Innovation, Sustainability, Circular economy, Decarbonization
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