Fr. 52.50

Principles of Justice and Real-World Climate Politics

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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This volume will address whether and to what extent those working to better understand or achieve climate justice should think about the real-world feasibility of their theories or proposals.

List of contents










Introduction, Corey Katz and Sarah Kenehan
1. Integrating Justice in Climate Policy Assessments: Towards a Deliberative Transformation of Feasibility, Dominic Lenzi and Martin Kowarsch
2. Governance Toward Goals: Synergies, Equity, Feasibility, Idil Boran and Kenneth Shockley
3. Climate Justice in the Non-Ideal Circumstances of International Negotiations, Michel Bourban
4. International Law as a Basis for a Feasible Ability-to-Pay Principle, Ewan Kingston
5. Climate Justice, Inherited Benefits, and Status Quo-Expectations, Lukas H. Meyer
6. Towards Climate Justice: Making the Polluters Pay for Loss and Damage, Md Fahad Hossain, Danielle Falzon, M. Feisal Rahman, and Saleemul Huq
7. Deficient International Leadership as a Feasibility Constraint: The Case of Multilateral Negotiations on Climate-induced Human Mobility, Jörgen Ödalen & Felicia Wartiainen
8. Feasibility and Justice in Decarbonizing Transitions, Ivo Wallimann-Helmer
About the Contributors
Index


About the author










Corey Katz is assistant professor of philosophy at Georgian Court University and was the post-doctoral researcher in the ethics of sustainable development at the Center for Ethics and Human Values and the Philosophy Department at the Ohio State University. His research lies at the intersection of global, long-term environmental problems like climate change, and ethical and political philosophy.
Sarah Kenehan is associate professor of philosophy at Marywood University and works on issues of climate justice, global justice, and applied ethics. Recent publications include: Food, Environment, and Climate: Justice at the Intersection (Rowman and Littlefield, ed. With Erinn Gilson).


Summary

This volume will address whether and to what extent those working to better understand or achieve climate justice should think about the real-world feasibility of their theories or proposals.

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