Social Metabolism Analysis
Social metabolism analysis studies a society as if it were a living organism that takes in materials and energy from nature, transforms them, builds up stocks, and excretes wastes and emissions, characterizing this biophysical throughput through systematic accounting. The concept and its intellectual lineage were synthesized by Marina Fischer-Kowalski and colleagues at the Vienna School of Social Ecology in their two-part 1998 history of materials flow analysis, which traced the metabolism metaphor from nineteenth-century thinkers to its modern, quantitative form. The method draws a boundary around a socio-economic system, a country, region, or city, and accounts for the materials and energy entering it through domestic extraction and imports, the stocks accumulated in buildings and infrastructure, and the outputs released as wastes, emissions, and exports. Mass and energy balances ensure the accounts are internally consistent, yielding indicators such as domestic material consumption and per-capita material flow that describe the scale and structure of a society's resource use. By comparing throughput to economic output over time, the analysis examines whether economies are decoupling growth from material and energy use. Social metabolism is a foundational framework in social ecology and industrial ecology for assessing biophysical sustainability.
Source record
Citations copied verbatim from the method’s source record. No claim-level verification is inferred from them.
- Fischer-Kowalski, M. (1998). Society's Metabolism: The Intellectual History of Materials Flow Analysis, Part I, 1860-1970. Journal of Industrial Ecology, 2(1), 61-78. · DOI 10.1162/jiec.1998.2.1.61
- Fischer-Kowalski, M., & Huttler, W. (1998). Society's Metabolism: The Intellectual History of Materials Flow Analysis, Part II, 1970-1998. Journal of Industrial Ecology, 2(4), 107-136. · DOI 10.1162/jiec.1998.2.4.107
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Related methods
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