Books on the topic 'Intergenerational climate justice'

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1

Climate change and future justice: Precaution, compensation, and triage. London: Routledge, 2012.

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2

Climate Change and Intergenerational Justice. Taylor & Francis Group, 2019.

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3

Skillington, Tracey. Climate Change and Intergenerational Justice. Taylor & Francis Group, 2019.

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4

Skillington, Tracey. Climate Change and Intergenerational Justice. Taylor & Francis Group, 2019.

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5

Luzzatto, Livia Ester. Intergenerational Challenges and Climate Justice. Taylor & Francis Group, 2022.

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6

Skillington, Tracey. Climate Change and Intergenerational Justice. Taylor & Francis Group, 2020.

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7

Diprose, Kristina, Gill Valentine, Robert Vanderbeck, Chen Liu, and Katie McQuaid. Climate Change, Consumption and Intergenerational Justice. Policy Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781529204735.001.0001.

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This book examines lived experiences and perceptions of climate change, changing consumption practices, and intra- and intergenerational justice with urban residents in China, Uganda, and the United Kingdom. The book draws on an interdisciplinary research programme called INTERSECTION, which was funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council from 2014 to 2017. INTERSECTION was an innovative, cross-national programme that employed participatory arts and social research methods with urban residents in three cities: Jinja in Uganda, Nanjing in China, and Sheffield in the United Kingdom. Drawing together a unique dataset from these three cities -- which are very differently positioned in relation to global networks of production and consumption, (de)industrialisation and vulnerability to climate change -- the research demonstrates how people engage selectively with the ‘global storm’ and the ‘intergenerational storm’ of climate change. The research reveals a ‘human sense of climate’ that clouds its framing as an issue of either international and intergenerational justice. Its chapters focus on the global and intergenerational dimensions of climate change, local narratives of climate change, moral geographies of climate change, intergenerational perspectives on sustainable consumption, and imaging alternative futures through community based and creative research practices.
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8

Luzzatto, Livia Ester. Intergenerational Challenges and Climate Justice: Setting the Scope of Our Obligations. Taylor & Francis Group, 2022.

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9

Luzzatto, Livia Ester. Intergenerational Challenges and Climate Justice: Setting the Scope of Our Obligations. Taylor & Francis Group, 2022.

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10

Intergenerational Challenges and Climate Justice: Setting the Scope of Our Obligations. Taylor & Francis Group, 2022.

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11

Cordonier Segger, Marie-Claire, Marcel Szabó, and Alexandra R. Harrington, eds. Intergenerational Justice in Sustainable Development Treaty Implementation. Cambridge University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/9781108768511.

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Economic, technological, social and environmental transformations are affecting all humanity, and decisions taken today will impact the quality of life for all future generations. This volume surveys current commitments to sustainable development, analysing innovative policies, practices and procedures to promote respect for intergenerational justice. Expert contributors provide serious scholarly and practical discussions of the theoretical, institutional, and legal considerations inherent in intergenerational justice at local, national, regional and global scales. They investigate treaty commitments related to intergenerational equity, explore linkages between regimes, and offer insights from diverse experiences of national future generations' institutions. This volume should be read by lawyers, academics, policy-makers, business and civil society leaders interested in the economy, society, the environment, sustainable development, climate change, and other law, policy and practices impacting all generations.
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12

McKinnon, Catriona. Climate Change and Future Justice: Precaution, Compensation and Triage. Taylor & Francis Group, 2012.

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13

McKinnon, Catriona. Climate Change and Future Justice: Precaution, Compensation and Triage. Taylor & Francis Group, 2012.

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14

McKinnon, Catriona. Climate Change and Future Justice: Precaution, Compensation and Triage. Taylor & Francis Group, 2012.

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15

McKinnon, Catriona. Climate Change and Future Justice: Precaution, Compensation and Triage. Taylor & Francis Group, 2012.

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16

McKinnon, Catriona. Climate Change and Future Justice: Precaution, Compensation and Triage. Taylor & Francis Group, 2012.

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17

Valentine, Gill, and Kristina Diprose. Climate Change, Consumption and Intergenerational Justice: Lived Experiences in China, Uganda and the UK. Bristol University Press, 2019.

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18

Valentine, Gill, and Kristina Diprose. Climate Change, Consumption and Intergenerational Justice: Lived Experiences in China, Uganda and the UK. Bristol University Press, 2019.

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19

Climate Change, Consumption and Intergenerational Justice: Lived Experiences in China, Uganda and the UK. Policy Press, 2019.

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20

Gardiner, Stephen M., Simon Caney, Dale Jamieson, and Henry Shue. Climate Ethics. Oxford University Press, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195399622.001.0001.

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This collection gathers a set of seminal papers from the emerging area of ethics and climate change. Topics covered include human rights, international justice, intergenerational ethics, individual responsibility, climate economics, and the ethics of geoengineering. Climate Ethics is intended to serve as a source book for general reference, and for university courses that include a focus on the human dimensions of climate change. It should be of broad interest to all those concerned with global justice, environmental science and policy, and the future of humanity.
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21

Caney, Simon. Climate Change. Edited by Serena Olsaretti. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199645121.013.23.

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This chapter considers two questions of distributive justice that arise when we face dangerous climate change. The first (the Just Target Question) concerns what balance to strike between ensuring that moral subjects are not harmed by climatic changes and ensuring that the policies required to prevent harmful climatic changes are not unduly onerous. The second (the Just Burden Question) concerns how the costs involved in combating dangerous climate change should be distributed among duty-bearers. The chapter identifies several methodological issues we need to confront to address these questions. In addition to this, it outlines how one might answer the Just Target Question, and evaluates several leading accounts of how to answer the Just Burden Question. One central finding is that the issues of justice raised by climate change cannot be treated in isolation but must be analysed as part of a more general global and intergenerational account of justice.
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22

Meijers, Tim. Justice Between Generations. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190228637.013.233.

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A wide range of issues in moral, political, and legal philosophy fall under the heading of “intergenerational justice,” such as questions of justice between the young and the old, obligations to more-or-less distant past and future generations, generational sovereignty, and the boundaries of democratic decision-making.These issues deserve our attention first because they are of great social importance. Solving the challenges raised by aging, stable pension funding, and increasing healthcare costs, for example, requires a view on what justice between age groups demands. Climate change, resource depletion, environmental degradation, population growth, and the like, raise serious concerns about the conditions under which future people will have to live. What kind of world should we bequest to future generations?Second, this debate has theoretical significance. Questions of intergenerational justice force reconsideration of the fundamental commitments (on scope, pattern, site, and currency) of existing moral and political theories. The age-group debate has led to fundamental questions about the pattern of distributive justice: Should we care about people’s lives considered as whole being equally good? This has implausible implications. Can existing accounts be modified to avoid such problematic consequences?Justice between nonoverlapping generations raises a different set of questions. One important worry is about the pattern of intergenerational justice—are future generations owed equality, or should intergenerational justice be cast in terms of sufficiency? Another issue is the currency of intergenerational justice: what kind of goods should be transferred? Perhaps the most puzzling worry resulting from this debate translates into a worry about scope: do obligations of justice extend to future people? Most conventional views on the scope of justice—those that focus on shared coercive institutions, a common culture, a cooperative scheme for mutual advantage—cannot easily be extended to include future generations. Even humanity-based views, which seem most hospitable to the inclusion of future generations, are confronted with what Parfit called the nonidentity problem, which results from the fact that future people are mostly possible people: because of the lack of a fixed identity of future people, it is often impossible to harm them in the comparative sense.
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23

Hassoun, Nicole, and Anders Herlitz. Climate Change and Inequity: How to Think about Inequities in Different Dimensions. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198813248.003.0005.

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This chapter introduces a new framework for thinking about climate justice. Climate change and climate negotiations actualize equity considerations in at least three relevant dimensions: distributions of benefits and burdens across countries, within countries, and across individuals in the world. Our proposed framework enables researchers and policymakers to visualize and combine different equity considerations in these dimensions in a novel way. The simplicity of the framework can facilitate putting equity considerations back on the table in international negotiations. The flexibility of the framework enables expansions and incorporations of other equity considerations, for example intergenerational equity.
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24

Kumar, Rahul. Future Generations. Edited by Serena Olsaretti. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199645121.013.10.

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The policies concerning, for instance, the mitigation of climate change that the current generation chooses to adopt will have far-reaching implications for the lives of future generations. What policies ought to be chosen depends, in part, on what justice requires with respect to the protection of the interests of those who will live in the further future. This chapter discusses the prospects for extending four prominent ways of thinking about justice within a generation to the intergenerational context—Rawlsian contractualism, Hobbesian contractarianism, the rights-based approach, and luck egalitarianism. It argues that none of them offer a wholly satisfactory approach to intergenerational justice. The final section of the chapter discusses whether obligations to protect the interests of future generations are in fact best understood as obligations of justice.
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25

Armstrong, Chris. The Demands of Equality. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198702726.003.0004.

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This chapter clarifies the place that natural resources should have within an egalitarian theory, as one important set of advantages and disadvantages amongst many which drive access to wellbeing. It rejects some rival views which suggest that natural resources are the only things that matter from the point of view of distributive justice, or that natural resources or their value are the only thing we should distribute so as to bring us closer to equality. It claims instead that natural resources are, in a slogan, ‘tremendously important but nothing special’ as drivers of human wellbeing. It then draws out the implications of this view for important questions about natural resource appropriation, climate justice, and intergenerational justice.
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26

Sen, Amartya. Our Obligation to Future Generations. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198825067.003.0007.

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Our reasoned sense of obligations to others can arise from at least three possible sources: cooperation, having caused harm, and effective power to improve suffering. The last source, this chapter argues, is particularly important in considering our obligations to future generations. It draws on a line of reasoning that takes us well beyond contractarian motivations to the idea of the “impartial spectator” as developed by Adam Smith. The interests of future generations come into the story because they are important in our attempt to be impartial spectators. The obligation of power contrasts with the mutual obligations for cooperation at the basic plane of motivational justification. In the context of climate concerns and intergenerational justice, this asymmetry-embracing approach seems to allow an easier entry for understanding our obligations.
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