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Patterns of European bioeconomy policy. Insights from a cross-case study of three policy areas

Thomas Vogelpohl, Katrin Beer, Benjamin Ewert, Daniela Perbandt, Annette Elisabeth Töller, Michael Böcher

2021Environmental Politics30 citationsDOI

Abstract

The concept of the bioeconomy has risen to great popularity with governments around the world as a new paradigm for a sustainable economy. However, it is still highly contentious what the bioeconomy actually is or should be, which results in a certain vagueness of bioeconomy policy strategies. European bioeconomy policy is a prime example of this. Despite two dedicated bioeconomy strategies, it appears to be highly fragmented and heterogeneous when it comes to concrete political processes and measures. Against this backdrop, we aim to find patterns of European bioeconomy policy by applying the political process-inherent dynamics approach (PIDA) to the three sub-areas of bioplastics, biofuels and bioenergy. Aggregating the respective results, the overarching pattern of European bioeconomy policy is rather shaped by the interplay of specific problem structures, institutional frameworks and actor constellations in its policy sub-areas than by the ambiguous umbrella concept of the bioeconomy.

Topics & Concepts

VaguenessPopularityPoliticsProcess (computing)Political scienceEconomicsRegional scienceEconomic systemBusinessGeographyPhilosophyLawOperating systemLinguisticsFuzzy logicComputer scienceBioeconomy and Sustainability DevelopmentBiotechnology and Related FieldsChemistry and Chemical Engineering
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