Description

Book Synopsis
The planet is undergoing a global change in climate that has begun to negatively affect populations and is predicted to accelerate in the coming decades. The human beings now on Earth are the first to exist when the climatic dynamics of the planet are scientifically understood. That understanding makes patently clear that the aggregate effects of human activities have a distinct impact on planetary climate and the way humans will live, if they survive, in the future. This appears to be a tipping point time in human history when future climatic catastrophes that threaten generations of humans might be preventable if governments, institutions, and organizations now take mitigating actions. That suggests that the people currently alive on the planet bear a collective responsibility to address the negative human impact on climate.

Table of Contents

The Struggle for Climate Justice in a Non-Ideal World Simon Caney 9

Climate Justice Beyond International Burden Sharing Steve Vanderheiden 27

Equalizing the Intergenerational Burdens of Climate Change - An Alternative to Discounted Utilitarianism Darrel Moellendorf Axel Schaffer 43

High Stakes: Inertia or Transformation? Henry Shue 63

Climate Policy when Preference Are Endogenous: And Sometimes They Are Linus Mattauch Cameron Hepburn 76

Two Theories of Responsibility for Past Emissions of Carbon Dioxide Michelle Hayner David Weisbach 96

On Climate Matters: Offsetting, Population, and Justice Elizabeth Cripps 114

Climate Matters Pro Tanto, Does It Matter Alb Things-Considered? Holly Lawford-Smith 129

Climate Matters for Future People Paul Bou-Habib 143

A Reply To My Critics John Broome 158

No Justice in Climate Policy? Broome versus Posner, Weisbach, and Gardiner Alyssa R. Bernstein 172

Anthropocentrism in Climate Ethics and Policy Katie McShane 189

Should We Tolerate Climate Change Denial? Catriona McKinnon 205

A Global Right of Water Tim Hayward 217

Saving Species but Losing Wildness: Should We Genetically Adapt Wild Animal Species to Help Them Respond to Climate Change? Clare Palmer 234

Corporate Responsibility, Democracy, and Climate Change Denis G. Arnold 252

The Ethics of Dieselgate Luc Bovens 262

From the Anrhropocene to the Ecozoic: Philosophy and Global Climate Change Brian G. Henning 284

Flourishing in the Age of Climate Change: Finding the Heart of Sustainability William Throop 296

Ethics and Global Climate Change

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    A Paperback / softback by Peter A. French, Howard K. Wettstein

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      View other formats and editions of Ethics and Global Climate Change by Peter A. French

      Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
      Publication Date: 29/11/2016
      ISBN13: 9781119341321, 978-1119341321
      ISBN10: 1119341329

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The planet is undergoing a global change in climate that has begun to negatively affect populations and is predicted to accelerate in the coming decades. The human beings now on Earth are the first to exist when the climatic dynamics of the planet are scientifically understood. That understanding makes patently clear that the aggregate effects of human activities have a distinct impact on planetary climate and the way humans will live, if they survive, in the future. This appears to be a tipping point time in human history when future climatic catastrophes that threaten generations of humans might be preventable if governments, institutions, and organizations now take mitigating actions. That suggests that the people currently alive on the planet bear a collective responsibility to address the negative human impact on climate.

      Table of Contents

      The Struggle for Climate Justice in a Non-Ideal World Simon Caney 9

      Climate Justice Beyond International Burden Sharing Steve Vanderheiden 27

      Equalizing the Intergenerational Burdens of Climate Change - An Alternative to Discounted Utilitarianism Darrel Moellendorf Axel Schaffer 43

      High Stakes: Inertia or Transformation? Henry Shue 63

      Climate Policy when Preference Are Endogenous: And Sometimes They Are Linus Mattauch Cameron Hepburn 76

      Two Theories of Responsibility for Past Emissions of Carbon Dioxide Michelle Hayner David Weisbach 96

      On Climate Matters: Offsetting, Population, and Justice Elizabeth Cripps 114

      Climate Matters Pro Tanto, Does It Matter Alb Things-Considered? Holly Lawford-Smith 129

      Climate Matters for Future People Paul Bou-Habib 143

      A Reply To My Critics John Broome 158

      No Justice in Climate Policy? Broome versus Posner, Weisbach, and Gardiner Alyssa R. Bernstein 172

      Anthropocentrism in Climate Ethics and Policy Katie McShane 189

      Should We Tolerate Climate Change Denial? Catriona McKinnon 205

      A Global Right of Water Tim Hayward 217

      Saving Species but Losing Wildness: Should We Genetically Adapt Wild Animal Species to Help Them Respond to Climate Change? Clare Palmer 234

      Corporate Responsibility, Democracy, and Climate Change Denis G. Arnold 252

      The Ethics of Dieselgate Luc Bovens 262

      From the Anrhropocene to the Ecozoic: Philosophy and Global Climate Change Brian G. Henning 284

      Flourishing in the Age of Climate Change: Finding the Heart of Sustainability William Throop 296

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