
EU Sustainable Prosperity Policy Database
Structured overview about transformative policy ideas to move the EU into the Doughnut

Overview
Our policy database provides a coherent structure of transformative policy proposals from the academic literature that can help shape sustainable prosperity and move economies into the Doughnut. It aims to help policymakers comprehend what policy instruments are suitable to promote a sustainable and inclusive transformation structured along various policy areas.
Why use it?
1. Link the Doughnut to policymaking
2. Discover what policies can help you achieve different objectives in the doughnut
3. learn about what it means to become agnostic about GDP.
Who is it for?
policymakers, consultants, trainers
How long does it take?
flexible
How many people is it for?
as many as possible
Links
Click here to access the policy database.
Click here to debunk arguments in support of economic growth.
Background
Today’s ecological and socio-economic challenges threaten the long-term stability and resilience of European society. Even though the magnitude of these challenges is broadly acknowledged, political efforts to properly tackle them remain insufficient. To move Europe into the “safe and just space for humanity”, innovative policy approaches are required.
In fact, these policy approaches must equally address social, ecological and economic goals in a coherent manner and help overcome the primacy of economic growth as a policy goal. However, due to the perception that economic growth is essential to ensuring employment, tackling fiscal debt and achieving higher incomes and levels of well-being, this is easier said than done. Not only does policy have to focus on a wider set of objectives, it also has to liberate economic and political stability from its structural dependency on economic growth. In this way, policymakers are enabled to freely choose among different means to achieve political ends, rather than relying on one specific aspect like economic growth.
However, a consistent synthesis of policies seeking to overcome the existing growth imperatives and shape a sustainable and thriving European and global economy is currently missing. Researchers have put forward a multitude of proposals. However, the practical application of these proposals entails several challenges related to the interconnectedness, coherence and concretion of policies as well as their level of implementation by government.
This project aims to fill this gap. Our policy framework provides a coherent structure of policy proposals from the academic literature that can help shape sustainable prosperity. In doing so, the project aims to help policymakers comprehend what policy instruments are suitable to promote transformative actions and, in doing so, contribute to political objectives.
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Member
Aubrey O'Neill
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Aitor Marcos Diaz
Los Angeles, CA, US / Bilbao, Euskadi, ES
Aitor is a behavioral-ecological economist investigating demand-side solutions for climate change mitigation. His research interests lie in how citizens, both as economic agents and political subjects, interact with climate solutions. Aitor obtained his PhD in 2023 from the University of the Basque Country, where he focused on the limitations of information and economic incentives for promoting sustainable consumption. As a postdoctoral researcher at the USC Wrigley Institute for Environment & Sustainability, he is developing a research agenda at the intersection of decision science, consumer research, and ecological economics. Specifically, he plans to use experimental economics and quantitative social science methods to examine how demand-side solutions for climate change mitigation influence the norms, beliefs, preferences, and structural factors that shape resource and energy demand. By focusing on the demand side of the equation, his research revolves around the following solutions: Reducing, shifting, or making consumption patterns more efficient; divesting from fossil fuels and investing to accelerate the energy transition; adopting low-carbon lifestyles; and building political support for pathways to a net-zero economy.
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Lucas Lima
São Paulo, Brasil
Lucas Ferreira Lima Graduated in Economic Sciences (UFU - Brazil), Master in Economic Development (UNICAMP - Brazil) and PhD student in Economic Development (UNICAMP- Brazil). Professor at Faculdades PHORTE and FMU in São Paulo. Researcher in the following areas: Contemporary Brazilian Economy, Economic Development and Ecological Economics.
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Kareen Urrutia
Auckland, New Zealand
I am a passionate forester/ecologist interested on working towards a sustainable and climate-resilient world. I currently study a master in Environmental Science at the University of Auckland. I have facilitated webinars on Ecological Economics in the past for Guatemalan students, aiming to bring this "system-based thinking" to as many people as possible for transforming our economies. I enjoy hiking, exploring nature, swimming, and reading.
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Michael Soro
Dublin, Leinster, Ireland
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Max Russell
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Elena Gonzalez
Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America
I am a Costa Rican civil engineer with a MSc in Engineering and Public policy focusing on Energy and the Environment, currently living in the US. As an engineer I worked in large public infrastructure projects and private development.
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Member
Christian Blem Charity
København, Region Hovedstaden, Danmark
My passion lies at the intersection of tech and business, which permeates through my entire background, from hobbies (tech gadgets) to education (MSc Business Administration and Information Systems), and career (4.5 years in Deloitte Digital working with Robotic Process Automation and CRM). My current occupation is no exception to this. In Mindpool, we work to solve two issues; enable a future of combined human intelligence and computers for proactive, inclusive, and smarter decision-making. We help organizations bridge critical decision-making, forecasting, and problem-solving with the collective intelligence of their very own people - a resource too often lost in hierarchies and silos.