Part I. Introduction
Chapter 1. Justification and scope of the book (Roldan Muradian and Sergio Villamayor-Tomas)
Chapter 3. The Barcelona School of ecological economics and political ecology: Building bridges between moving shores (Sergio Villamayor-Tomas, Brototi Roy and Roldan Muradian)
Part II. Epistemological foundations
Chapter 4. Metaphysical midwifery and the living legacy of Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen (Katharine N. Farrell)
Chapter 5. Languages of valuation (Christos Zografos)
Chapter 6. Post-development: From the critique of development to a pluriverse of alternatives (Federico Demaria, Ashish Kothari, Ariel Salleh, Arturo Escobar and Alberto Acosta)
Chapter 7. Indigenous and local knowledge and social-ecological systems (Victoria Reyes-Garcia)Chapter 8. Degrowth and the Barcelona school (Giorgos Kallis)
Part III. Social metabolism
Chapter 10. Multi-scale integrated analysis of societal and ecosystem metabolism (Mario Giampietro)
Chapter 11. Materials flow analysis in Latin America (Mario Alejandro Perez-Rincon)
Chapter 12. Biophysical approaches to food system analysis in Latin America (Jesus Ramos-Martin and Fander Falconi)
Chapter 13. Ecologically unequal exchange: the renewed interpretation of Latin American debates by the Barcelona School (Beatriz Macchione Saes)
Chapter 14. Flow/Fund Theory and Rural Livelihoods (Jose Carlos Silva-Macher)Chapter 15. Deceitful decoupling: misconceptions of a persistent myth (Alevgul H. Sorman)
Part IV. Environmental justice conflicts and alternatives
Chapter 17. A critical mapping for researching and acting upon environmental conflicts - the case of the EJAtlas (Daniela Del Bene and Sofia Avila)
Chapter 18. The EJAtlas: an unexpected pedagogical tool to teach and learn about environmental social sciences (Mariana Walter, Lena Weber, Leah Temper)
Chapter 19. Commons regimes at the crossroads: environmental justice movements and commoning (Sergio Villamayor-Tomas, Gustavo Garcia-Lopez and Giacomo D'Alisa)Chapter 20. (In)justice in urban greening and green gentrification (Isabelle Anguelovski)
Chapter 21. From the soil to the soul: Fragments of a theory of economic conflicts (Julien-Francois Gerber)Part V. Science and self-reflected activism
Chapter 22. Activism Mobilising Science Revisited (Marta Conde and Marti Orta-Martinez)
Chapter 24. The Barcelona School of ecological economics and social movements for alternative livelihoods (Claudio Cattaneo)
Chapter 25. The ups and downs of feminist activist research: positional reflections (Sara Mingorria, Rosa Binimelis, Iliana Monterroso, Federica Ravera)Chapter 26. From the environmentalism of the poor and the indigenous towards decolonial environmental justice (Brototi Roy and Ksenija Hanacek)
Part IV. Public policy applicationsChapter 27. Agrobiodiversity in Mexican Environmental Policy (Nancy Arizpe and Dario Escobar-Moreno)
Chapter 28. Conventional climate change economics: a way to define the optimal policy? (Jordi Roca and Emilio Padilla)
Chapter 29. Contribution of global cities to climate-change mitigation overrated (Jeroen C.J.M. van den Bergh)Chapter 30. Reconciling Waste Management and ecological economics (Ignasi Puig Ventosa)
Chapter 31. Work and needs in a finite planet: Reflections from ecological economics (Erik Gomez-Baggethun)Chapter 32. Collective action in Ecuadorian Amazonia (Fander Falconia and Julio Oleas)
Chapter 33. The environmentalism of the paid (Esteve Corbera and Santiago Izquierdo-Tort)