Foundations of a Sustainable Economy: Moral, Ethical and Religious Perspectives / edited by Umar Burki, Toseef Azid and Robert Francis Dahlstrom
Material type:
- 9781032051888
- 174.4 FOU
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Central Library | 174.4 FOU (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 000841 |
Includes bibliographical references and index
1. Sustainability and morality
Part I: Theoretical foundations
2. Sustainability principles and triple bottom line performance in supply chains
3. The circular economy
4. Environmental policy enforcement
Part II: Religion and sustainability
5. Concept of sustainability in Abrahamic religions
6. A Buddhist approach for a sustainable existence
7. Ontological authority of sustainability in Buddhist and Hindu traditions: the art of planetary maintenance
8. Market behavior and sustainable development in the Islamic Framework
9. Religion and development: an Islamic approach to socio-economic development
10. Accountability and Sustainability in Islamic accounting literature
Part III: Empirical evidence
11. Financial development and ecological footprint nexus: a comparative analysis
12. Inequality and sustainability
13. Socio-economic metabolism of Canada: a case study of energy flows from 1990 to 2011
14. Environmental quality and happiness: a perspective of developed and developing countries
15. Altruism a critical prerequisite for sustainable development: implications for Waqf Institutions in Islamic Republic of Iran
16. Social enterprise and Waqf: an alternative sustainable vehicle for Islamic social finance
17. Sustainable development and the work of Ibn Khaldun: the case of Indonesia
18. People, planet and profitability (3Ps): a gender management perspective
19. Challenges and opportunities
This book addresses current practices related to sustainable development, its challenges and the future. People belonging to different genders regardless of their age, social class and education should be equal as citizens and individuals, and identical in their rights and responsibilities.
The business sector, authorities, societies and religious circles have the potential to play a fundamental role in curbing social ills and the degradation of the environment in this modern world. The authors of this book argue that without good governance, the status of a human being is unlikely to improve. They make the case that to achieve sustainability, government, society and the economy must ensure a platform for people to participate in decision-making and benefit from the rights they are accorded. By covering a range of perspectives across economic, social and moral life, the book will shed light on the problems and possible solutions to sustainable development and the triple bottom line, of people, planet and profit, under the umbrella of morals and divine law.
This will be a useful guide for undergraduate and postgraduate students across multiple disciplines, such as economics, religious studies, business studies, political science, anthropology and sociology. ---provided by publisher
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