Fr. 75.00

Freedom and Environment - Autonomy, Human Flourishing Political Philosophy of Sustainability

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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Must freedom be sacrificed to achieve ecological sustainability - or vice versa? Can we be genuinely free and live in sustainable societies? This book argues that we can, if we recognise and celebrate our ecological embeddedness, rather than seeking to transcend it.
But this does not mean freedom can simply be redefined to fit within ecological limits. Addressing current unsustainability will involve significant restrictions, and hence will require political justification, not just scientific evidence.

Drawing on material from perfectionist liberalism, capabilities approaches, human rights, relational ethics and virtue theory, Michael Hannis explores the relationship between freedom and sustainability, considering how each contributes to human flourishing. He argues that a substantive and ecologically literate conception of human flourishing can underpin both capability-based environmental rights and a eudaimonist ecological virtue ethics. With such a foundation in place, public authorities can act both to facilitate ecological virtue, and to remove structural incentives to ecological vice.

Freedom and Environment is a lucid addition to existing literature in environmental politics and virtue ethics, and will be an excellent resource to those studying debates about freedom with debates about ecological sustainability.

List of contents

Selected Contents:  Introduction  Chapter 1: Sustainability of What?  Chapter 2: Neutrality or Sustainability?  Chapter 3: Freedom and Flourishing  Chapter 4: Capabilities, Consumption and Environmental Rights  Chapter 5: Autonomy, Interdependence and Virtue  Chapter 6: The Virtues of Acknowledged Ecological Dependence  Chapter 7: Facilitating Ecological Virtue Index

Summary

Drawing on material from perfectionist liberalism, capabilities approaches, human rights, relational ethics and virtue theory, Michael Hannis explores the one such area of interaction, the relationship between freedom and sustainability. The aim is to achieve some measure of commensurability by considering both as constitutive of, or means to the end of, human flourishing.

Report

'Michael Hannis' new book represents a valuable addition to the literatures on capabilities and justice, on the one hand, and environmental virtue ethics, on the other. In addition, it provides a sustained and penetrating account of the relationship between human freedom and ecological sustainability-two sometimes conflicting goals that must be reconciled if humanity is to have a decent future on Earth.'-Philip Cafaro, Colorado State University
'This book aptly examines how ecological sustainability and freedom - both required for the possibility of human flourishing - can be understood as mutually compatible. Employing theoretic resources from the capabilities approach and environmental virtue ethics, Hannis presents an important, compelling, and pragmatic conception of the political change, institutional reorientation, and ethical adaptation called for as we enter the Anthropocene.'-Allen Thompson, Oregon State University
'Imagine we didn't face the most serious environmental crisis in our history: wouldn't we still want to live in a human society characterised by respect for human freedom and where acting as a virtuous citizen was rewarded? Those resisting effective action to address unsustainability often claim to be protecting the sacred cow of freedom. Mike Hannis offers a detailed, life-affirming and much-needed rebuttal of such claims, revealing them to be conceptually as well as practically incoherent. He demonstrates that the aims of saving the planet and creating a free and flourishing human society are not only compatible but mutually reinforcing.'-Molly Scott Cato, Professor of Green Economics, Roehampton University; Green MEP for South West England, UK
'This is a book that covers a lot of ground very intelligently, and advances an unusually well integrated set of arguments to pull together several current areas of environmental scholarship in a stimulating, cohesive way.'-Piers H.G. Stephen, The White Horse Press

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