Research Output
Regenerative Design in the Circular Economy: an oxymoron?
  | The Circular Economy (CE) model considers the life cycle of material goods and examines its journey from cradle to cradle, which tries to put human beings in the same species picture as other living things and focuses on design of materials and systems. The Ellen MacArthur Foundation (EMAF) argues for an industrial economy that is restorative or regenerative by design and aims. Regenerative design requires a multidisciplinary approach which transcends the disciplines of design only. Despite the use of the terms restoration and regeneration, these have not been readily defined in the context of a circular economy. In this paper we critique the term 'regenerative' from different interdisciplinary perspectives. Interdisciplinarity analyses, synthesizes and harmonizes links between disciplines into a coordinated and coherent whole. Regenerative design has found different meanings and outcomes in different disciplines. Regenerative design is a key component of heterodox economic models such as the circular economy and doughnut economics which contend that the current orthodox economic model of indefinite linear growth is not compatible with 21st century needs. Regenerative design is proposed as a key tool in meeting the needs of the heterodox economic models. In this paper use cases illustrate the different understandings of regenerative design from different disciplinary backgrounds and proposes a unifying definition. This paper argues that regenerative design in context of the Circular Economy is misunderstood and needs clearer definitions that support a genuinely restorative economy but conversely will need a new politics, fit for the conditions of the Anthropocene.

  • Date:

    14 March 2024

  • Publication Status:

    Accepted

  • Funders:

    Edinburgh Napier Funded

Citation

Panneels, I., Sinclair, M., & Alder, E. (2024, May). Regenerative Design in the Circular Economy: an oxymoron?. Presented at Cumulus Budapest 2024 Conference, Budapest, Hungary

Authors

Keywords

Regenerative design; interdisciplinarity; doughnut economics; Anthropocene; ontopolitics

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