Litcius/Paper detail

Doughnuts for strategies: A tool for an emerging sustainable welfare paradigm

Mladen Domazet, Máté Fischer, Alexandra Köves

2023European Journal of Social Security14 citationsDOI

Abstract

The Degrowth Doughnut (a modification of the original Doughnut visualization of boundaries and foundations created by economist Kate Raworth) can be considered a visualization tool for assessing the current environmental and social capacity of a country to transform into an ecologically and socially sustainable modus operandi. Its sufficiently rich set of criteria, including cultural, socio-economic and biophysical indicators, gives us an overall picture of the problems to be dealt with and the strengths to build on in the immediate future. Its simple boundary-threshold structure presents limiting and aspirational targets in a single image. As such, it is also a tool that can aid eco-social policymaking to prioritize decisions and seek synergies between choices made. This research will present the Hungarian Degrowth Doughnut and use it as a case study when applied to the aims and expected impacts of Hungary’s operational National Clean Development Strategy. We will illustrate the degrowth-relevant priorities and assess the adequacy of the responses proposed by the Strategy, providing a critical analysis of the national policy options. Behind such climate and sustainability strategies are always a wealth of important value choices and moral considerations. Is there a safe and just operating space in the minds of the Hungarian policymakers? To what extent, if at all, are the fundamental principles of post-growth theories incorporated into a Hungarian sustainability strategy? We believe that a case study like this can also provide inspiration for further practical application of the Degrowth Doughnut elsewhere.

Topics & Concepts

DegrowthSustainabilitySustainable developmentPlanetary boundariesEconomic systemSet (abstract data type)EconomicsSustainable growth rateGreen growthEnvironmental economicsPublic economicsManagement sciencePolitical scienceComputer scienceEcologyProgramming languageFinanceBiologyLawSustainable Development and Environmental PolicyGlobal Energy and Sustainability Research