All Stories

  1. Trade, Ecologically Unequal Exchange and Colonial Legacy: The Case of France and its Former Colonies (1962–2015)
  2. Measuring Progress towards a Circular Economy: A Monitoring Framework for Economy-wide Material Loop Closing in the EU28
  3. From resource extraction to outflows of wastes and emissions: The socioeconomic metabolism of the global economy, 1900–2015
  4. Energy transitions and social revolutions
  5. Global Material Flows and Resource Productivity: Forty Years of Evidence
  6. The Material Stock–Flow–Service Nexus: A New Approach for Tackling the Decoupling Conundrum
  7. Regional specialization and market integration: agroecosystem energy transitions in Upper Austria
  8. Socioecological transition in the Cauca river valley, Colombia (1943–2010): towards an energy–landscape integrated analysis
  9. Global socioeconomic material stocks rise 23-fold over the 20th century and require half of annual resource use
  10. Metabolismo y paisaje acuático en una ciudad en la industrialización: una evaluación cuantitativa del uso de los recursos y su relación con la transformación del paisaje acuático urbano en Viena del siglo XIX
  11. Widening the analysis of Energy Return on Investment (EROI) in agro-ecosystems: Socio-ecological transitions to industrialized farm systems (the Vallès County, Catalonia, c.1860 and 1999)
  12. Erratum to “International inequality of environmental pressures: Decomposition and comparative analysis” [Ecol. Indic. 62 (2016) 163–173]
  13. The metabolic transition of a planned economy: Material flows in the USSR and the Russian Federation 1900 to 2010
  14. Corrigendum to “Global patterns of metal extractivism, 1950–2010: Providing the bones for the industrial society's skeleton” [Ecol. Econ., Volume 122, February 2016, Pages 101–110]
  15. International inequality of environmental pressures: Decomposition and comparative analysis
  16. Global patterns of metal extractivism, 1950–2010: Providing the bones for the industrial society's skeleton
  17. Opening the black box of energy throughputs in farm systems: A decomposition analysis between the energy returns to external inputs, internal biomass reuses and total inputs consumed (the Vallès County, Catalonia, c.1860 and 1999)
  18. A Forest Transition: Austrian Carbon Budgets 1830–2010
  19. From Energy Source to Sink: Transformations of Austrian Agriculture
  20. Long-Term Trends in Global Material and Energy Use
  21. More Than the Sum of Its Parts: Patterns in Global Material Flows
  22. Social Ecology
  23. Transitions in Sociometabolic Regimes Throughout Human History
  24. Transitions in European land-management regimes between 1800 and 2010
  25. Patterns and changes of land use and land-use efficiency in Africa 1980–2005: an analysis based on the human appropriation of net primary production framework
  26. Adaptation on an Agricultural Frontier: Socio-Ecological Profiles of Great Plains Settlement, 1870–1940
  27. Exploring long-term trends in land use change and aboveground human appropriation of net primary production in nine European countries
  28. Social metabolism of Czech agriculture in the period 1830–2010
  29. Providing Food While Sustaining Soil Fertility in Two Pre-industrial Alpine Agroecosystems
  30. How Circular is the Global Economy?: An Assessment of Material Flows, Waste Production, and Recycling in the European Union and the World in 2005
  31. From farm to gun and no way back: Habsburg gunpowder production in the eighteenth century and its impact on agriculture and soil fertility
  32. Human Appropriation of Net Primary Production: Patterns, Trends, and Planetary Boundaries
  33. Patterns of change in material use and material efficiency in the successor states of the former Soviet Union
  34. Cropland area embodied in international trade: Contradictory results from different approaches
  35. The global metabolic transition: Regional patterns and trends of global material flows, 1950–2010
  36. Accounting for the Material Stock of Nations
  37. Resource Use in Small Island States
  38. A sociometabolic reading of the Anthropocene: Modes of subsistence, population size and human impact on Earth
  39. Boserup’s Theory on Technological Change as a Point of Departure for the Theory of Sociometabolic Regime Transitions
  40. Development and Dematerialization: An International Study
  41. Consumption‐based Material Flow Accounting
  42. Bioenergy: how much can we expect for 2050?
  43. Feeding and cleaning the city: the role of the urban waterscape in provision and disposal in Vienna during the industrial transformation
  44. Changes in water and land: the reconstructed Viennese riverscape from 1500 to the present
  45. Global human appropriation of net primary production doubled in the 20th century
  46. Europe’s other debt crisis caused by the long legacy of future extinctions
  47. Is there a 1970s Syndrome? Analyzing Structural Breaks in the Metabolism of Industrial Economies
  48. Human Appropriation of Net Primary Production, Stocks and Flows of Carbon, and Biodiversity
  49. Pushing the Planetary Boundaries
  50. Natural and socioeconomic determinants of the embodied human appropriation of net primary production and its relation to other resource use indicators
  51. Modelling Transport as a Key Constraint to Urbanisation in Pre-industrial Societies
  52. How Material and Energy Flows Change Socio-natural Arrangements: The Transformation of Agriculture in the Eisenwurzen Region, 1860–2000
  53. A City and Its Hinterland: Vienna’s Energy Metabolism 1800–2006
  54. Global Socio-metabolic Transitions
  55. Sustaining Agricultural Systems in the Old and New Worlds: A Long-Term Socio-Ecological Comparison
  56. Global socioeconomic carbon stocks in long-lived products 1900–2008
  57. Long-term trajectories of the human appropriation of net primary production: Lessons from six national case studies
  58. India's biophysical economy, 1961–2008. Sustainability in a national and global context
  59. The Physical Economy of the United States of America
  60. Global bioenergy potentials from agricultural land in 2050: Sensitivity to climate change, diets and yields
  61. The Metabolic Transition in Japan
  62. Methodology and Indicators of Economy‐wide Material Flow Accounting
  63. Reply to Keller and Springborn: No doubt about invasion debt
  64. Material and Energy Productivity
  65. The Danube and Vienna: urban resource use, transport and land use 1800–1910
  66. Diet, trade and land use: a socio-ecological analysis of the transformation of the olive oil system
  67. A socio-metabolic transition towards sustainability? Challenges for another Great Transformation
  68. Socioeconomic legacy yields an invasion debt
  69. Energy use and economic development: A comparative analysis of useful work supply in Austria, Japan, the United Kingdom and the US during 100years of economic growth
  70. Global patterns of materials use: A socioeconomic and geophysical analysis
  71. Land use change, biomass production and HANPP: The case of Hungary 1961–2005
  72. Embodied HANPP: Mapping the spatial disconnect between global biomass production and consumption
  73. Analyzing the global human appropriation of net primary production — processes, trajectories, implications. An introduction
  74. Growth in global materials use, GDP and population during the 20th century
  75. What determines geographical patterns of the global human appropriation of net primary production?
  76. Socio-metabolic transitions in developing Asia
  77. Using embodied HANPP to analyze teleconnections in the global land system: Conceptual considerations
  78. Long term changes in social metabolism and land use in Czechoslovakia, 1830–2000: An energy transition under changing political regimes
  79. The Global Sociometabolic Transition
  80. Industrialization, Fossil Fuels, and the Transformation of Land Use
  81. Global patterns of socioeconomic biomass flows in the year 2000: A comprehensive assessment of supply, consumption and constraints
  82. Socio-ecological regime transitions in Austria and the United Kingdom
  83. The Energetic Metabolism of the European Union and the United States: Decadal Energy Input Time-Series with an Emphasis on Biomass
  84. A comprehensive global 5 min resolution land-use data set for the year 2000 consistent with national census data
  85. Quantifying and mapping the human appropriation of net primary production in earth's terrestrial ecosystems
  86. Long-term dynamics of terrestrial carbon stocks in Austria: a comprehensive assessment of the time period from 1830 to 2000
  87. Der soziale Metabolismus der Industrialisierung: Die Überwindung der energetischen Schranken des agrarischen Wirtschaftens Der soziale Metabolismus der Industrialisierung: Die Überwindung der energetischen Schranken des agrarischen Wirtschaftens
  88. The physical economy of the European Union: Cross-country comparison and determinants of material consumption
  89. Das Ende der Fläche
  90. From LTER to LTSER: Conceptualizing the Socioeconomic Dimension of Long-term Socioecological Research
  91. Milk, Manure, and Muscle Power. Livestock and the Transformation of Preindustrial Agriculture in Central Europe
  92. Resource flows and land use in Austria 1950–2000: using the MEFA framework to monitor society–nature interaction for sustainability
  93. Progress towards sustainability? What the conceptual framework of material and energy flow accounting (MEFA) can offer
  94. Ecological footprints and human appropriation of net primary production: a comparison
  95. Calculating national and global ecological footprint time series: resolving conceptual challenges
  96. Human appropriation of net primary production and species diversity in agricultural landscapes
  97. Land-use change and socio-economic metabolism in Austria—Part II: land-use scenarios for 2020
  98. Land-use change and socio-economic metabolism in Austria—Part I: driving forces of land-use change: 1950–1995
  99. Human Appropriation of Net Primary Production
  100. The process of industrialization from the perspective of energetic metabolism
  101. Changes in ecosystem processes induced by land use: Human appropriation of aboveground NPP and its influence on standing crop in Austria
  102. How to calculate and interpret ecological footprints for long periods of time: the case of Austria 1926–1995
  103. Global Environmental Change and Historical Transitions
  104. Global Environmental Change and Historical Transitions
  105. Land use and industrial modernization: an empirical analysis of human influence on the functioning of ecosystems in Austria 1830–1995
  106. Landschaft, Landnutzung und industrielle Modernisierung
  107. The interrelations of Future Global Bioenergy Potentials, Food demand, and Agricultural Technology
  108. Kapitel 1. Gesellschaftliche Naturverhältnisse Globale Transformationen der Energie- und Materialflüsse
  109. Land and Water: Linkages to Bioenergy
  110. The Local Base of the Historical Agrarian – Industrial Transition and the Interaction between Scales
  111. The Great Transformation: A Socio-metabolic Reading of the Industrialization of the United Kingdom
  112. The Fossil-Fuel-Powered Carbon Sink: Carbon Flows and Austria’s Energetic Metabolism in a Long-term Perspective
  113. Land-use Change and Socioeconomic Metabolism: A Macro View of Austria 1830–2000
  114. Conclusions: Likely and Unlikely Pasts, Possible and Impossible Futures
  115. Global materials flows