Philosophical Foundations of Climate Change Policy
Oxford University Press Inc (Verlag)
978-0-19-756798-2 (ISBN)
By far the most influential philosophical position has been the variant of utilitarianism most popular among economists, which maintains that we have an obligation to maximize the well-being of all people, from now until the end of time. Climate change represents an obvious failure of maximization. Many environmental philosophers, however, find this argument unpersuasive, because it also implies that we have an obligation to maximize economic growth. Yet their attempts to provide alternative foundations for policy have proven unpersuasive. Joseph Heath presents an approach to thinking about climate change policy grounded in social contract theory, which focuses on the fairness of existing institutions, not the welfare of future generations, in order to generate a set of plausible policy prescriptions.
Joseph Heath is Professor in the Department of Philosophy and the Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy at the University of Toronto. A fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and the Trudeau Foundation, Heath is the author of several books, both popular and academic. His most recent, The Machinery of Government (Oxford, 2020), is a study of the ethics of public administration. He is also the author of Enlightenment 2.0, which won the Shaughnessy Cohen prize for Political Writing in Canada.
Introduction
1. False Starts
1.1 Traditional environmental ethics
1.2 Liberal environmentalism
1.3 Conclusion
2. Climate Change and Growth
2.1 The undemandingness problem
2.2 Limits to growth
2.3 Impacts of climate change
2.4 Sustainability and fungibility
2.5 Catastrophe
2.6 Conclusion
3. Intergenerational Justice
3.1 The consequentialist challenge
3.2 The structure of intergenerational cooperation
3.3 Applications and objections
3.4 Just savings
3.5. Conclusion
4. Carbon Pricing
4.1 Market reciprocity
4.2 Carbon pricing
4.3 Example: food
4.4 Complementary policies
4.5 Conclusion
5. The Social Cost of Carbon
5.1 Embedded CBA
5.2 Basic principles of CBA
5.3 CBA and regulation
5.4 Objections and replies
5.5 Climate change
5.6 Compensating the losers
6. Positive Social Time Preference
6.1 The case for temporal neutrality
6.2 Reflective equilibrium
6.3 Institutionalized responsibility
6.4 Thinking politically
6.5 Discounting for deontologists
6.6 Conclusion
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Erscheinungsdatum | 14.07.2021 |
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Verlagsort | New York |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 168 x 243 mm |
Gewicht | 662 g |
Themenwelt | Geisteswissenschaften ► Philosophie ► Ethik |
Naturwissenschaften | |
Technik ► Umwelttechnik / Biotechnologie | |
ISBN-10 | 0-19-756798-3 / 0197567983 |
ISBN-13 | 978-0-19-756798-2 / 9780197567982 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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