Description

Book Synopsis
Ethics of Sustainability develops a comprehensive ethical foundation for sustainability by bringing together nine ethical principles together in a cohesive manner to provide the badly needed ethical arguments that support the sustainability concept.

Table of Contents
Preface xiii

Acknowledgments xv

Introduction xvii

MAKING CONNECTIONS xviii

SHIFTING TOWARD SUSTAINABILITY xix

THE STRUCTURE OF THIS BOOK xx

Chapter 1

A Context for Sustainability 1

THE RATIONALE FOR SUSTAINABILITY 1

Sustainability Interlude 1

A Response to a Crisis 2

CONTEMPORARY CHALLENGES 5

Population and Consumption 6

Climate Change 6

Nonrenewable Resource Depletion 8

Loss of Biodiversity 9

Overfishing 10

Eutrophication 12

Desertification and Acidification 13

Poverty 14

Ecosystem Services and Quality of Life 14

THE ETHICAL CONTEXT OF SUSTAINABILITY 15

THE THREE-LEG MODEL OF SUSTAINABILITY 15

CONCLUSION 17

Chapter 2

The Technology Challenge 21

OVERVIEW OF TECHNOLOGY 21

Defining Technology 22

A Brief History of Technology 22

THE TECHNOLOGY PARADOX 25

Technological Optimism versus Technological Pessimism 25

Developing a More Nuanced View of the Impacts of Technology 27

CONSEQUENCES OF TECHNOLOGY 28

Predicting Consequences of Technology 29

Reducing the Uncertainty of Technology 31

Technology Risk Assessment, Acceptance, and Management 32

ALTERNATIVE, APPROPRIATE, AND SUSTAINABLE TECHNOLOGY 34

THE ETHICAL IMPLICATIONS OF TECHNOLOGY 36

SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS 37

Chapter 3

Introduction to Ethical Concepts 41

RELIGIOUS ETHICS 42

Common Ideals 42

Views of Human Nature 45

SECULAR AND PHILOSOPHICAL ETHICAL TRADITIONS 46

Justice 47

Deontological Ethics 47

Rights 48

Consequentialist Ethics 51

Objectivism and Ethical Relativism 52

Objectivism and Relativism in Sustainability 55

ETHICS AS A TOOL FOR MAKING DECISIONS 55

Framing Ethical Problems 56

Conflicting Values 56

THE THREE LEGS OF SUSTAINABILITY 58

Social Ethics 59

Environmental Ethics 60

Economic Ethics 61

Integrating the Three Legs 63

CONCLUSION 64

Chapter 4

Social Dimensions of Sustainability Ethics 67

JUSTICE, FAIRNESS, AND RECIPROCITY 67

The Golden Rule 68

Ethics of Care 71

DISTRIBUTIONAL PRINCIPLES 72

Distribution in a Just Society 73

Distributing Disadvantages 74

EXPLORING INTERDEPENDENCE 75

Thinking Globally, Acting Locally 76

Life on Spaceship Earth 78

Environmental Justice 80

OBLIGATIONS TO FUTURE GENERATIONS 81

Intergenerational Justice 82

A Look Back at Looking Forward 84

Future Quality of Life 85

Beyond Seven Generations 87

CONCLUSION 90

Chapter 5

Environmental Dimensions of Sustainability Ethics 95

THE EMERGENCE OF ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS 95

The Birth of Modern Environmental Ethics 96

Environmentalism Becomes Mainstream 98

Undertones of the Sacred 99

RELIGION AND ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS 99

Religion and Nature 99

Greening Religion 101

ECOLOGICAL PRINCIPLES IN ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS 103

Development of Ecology 103

CARICATURES OF NATURE 104

A Closer World 105

CONTEMPORARY APPROACHES IN ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS 107

Getting the Scale of Ethics Right 108

Deep Ecology, Ecofeminism, and Social Ecology 109

Pluralistic Approaches 111

Bioregionalism 112

The New Agrarian Movement 113

ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS AND NONHUMAN ANIMALS 114

Making a Case for the Individual 114

Mixed Communities 115

ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS AND THE ETHICS OF SUSTAINABILITY 116

Identifying Values 117

Emphasizing Human Priorities 117

CONCLUSION 118

Chapter 6

Economic Dimensions of Sustainability Ethics 123

FROM CLASSICAL ECONOMICS TO ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS 124

The Advent of Modern Economics 124

Ecological Economics and the Classical Economists 125

Neoclassical Economics 128

Criticisms of Neoclassical Economics 130

Physical Limitations 131

Influences of Ecology 132

THE ECOLOGICAL ECONOMIC MODEL 134

Natural Capital and Ecological Services 135

Discounting the Future 136

The Economic Value of Natural Systems 137

Feedback between Ecological and Economic Systems 139

TOOLS OF ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS 144

The Polluter Pays Principle 144

Extended Producer Responsibility 145

Beneficiary Pays Principle 146

Full Cost Accounting, Full Cost Pricing, and Life-Cycle Costing 148

CONCLUSION 150

Chapter 7

Integrating the Three Legs of Sustainability 155

THE PRECAUTIONARY PRINCIPLE 156

A Legal Context 157

Precaution in Practice 159

Precaution as Risk Management 160

Cost-Benefit Analysis 161

Including Stakeholders 162

Including Science 164

Compensation for Risks 165

The March of Progress 167

IRRECONCILABLE DIFFERENCES 168

Lifeboat Ethics 168

Tragedy of the Commons 169

Hardin’s Challenge 170

POVERTY REDUCTION VERSUS ENVIRONMENTAL PRESERVATION 170

Linking Social and Environmental Goals 171

Finding Synergistic Solutions 172

The Role of Technology 174

MANAGING THE GLOBAL COMMONS 175

The Need for a Central Authority 176

Moving beyond the Tragedy of the Commons 177

International Multilateral Agreements 179

Non-Governmental Organizations 180

The Role of Government 181

TRANSCENDING THE THREE-LEGGED STOOL MODEL 182

Integrating the Three Legs 182

Complex Adaptive Systems 183

Integrating Behavior at Different Scales 184

Resilience in Social-Ecological Systems 187

Resilience and the Precautionary Principle 188

Resilience and Technology 189

Conflicting Values 191

THE DISTRIBUTION OF POWER IN DECISION MAKING 192

The Principle of Transparency 193

Transparency in Industry 194

Transparency and Technology 196

The Value of Autonomy 197

CONCLUSION 199

Chapter 8

Improving Our Thinking about Sustainability 209

OBSTACLES TO MAKING GOOD DECISIONS 210

Rational Decision Making 210

Limits of Rationality 212

Cognitive Heuristics 214

Discounting the Future 217

Complexity 219

How Barriers to Rationality Affect Decisions 220

STRATEGIES FOR ADDRESSING LIMITS TO RATIONALITY 224

Becoming Environmentally Informed 224

Becoming Socially and Economically Informed 226

Systems Thinking 227

CONCLUSION 235

Chapter 9

The Process of Changing Behavior 239

THEORY OF PLANNED BEHAVIOR 239

Attitudes 240

Subjective Norms 240

Perceived Control 241

Understanding Planned Behavior 242

OBSTACLES TO SUSTAINABLE BEHAVIOR 243

Political Obstacles to Sustainable Behavior 244

Lack of Social Capital 244

Accepting Unsustainable Outcomes 245

Individualization 246

Distancing 248

HOW CHANGE HAPPENS 251

The Five Phases of Individual Change 251

Diffusion of Innovation 253

Applying Diffusion of Innovation 254

STRATEGIES FOR EFFECTING CHANGE 257

Small Wins 257

Reasonable Person Model 258

Moving People toward Change 261

CONCLUSION 262

Chapter 10

Creating Change with Groups 267

ADVANTAGES OF GROUP DECISION MAKING 267

Additional Insights 268

New Discoveries 270

Increased Buy-In 271

TYPES OF COLLABORATIVE PROCESSES 272

MAKING THE MULTI-STAKEHOLDER PROCESS WORK 273

Social Learning 273

Building Shared Understanding 275

Trust 281

Iterative Approach 284

LEARNING ORGANIZATIONS 287

Developing the Ideal of a Learning Organization 288

Creating Change in a Learning Organization 289

CONCLUSION 290

Chapter 11

Applying an Ethic of Sustainability 295

MAKING ETHICAL DECISIONS FOR A SUSTAINABLE FUTURE: AN OVERVIEW 295

Social Sustainability 296

Ecological Sustainability 296

Economic Sustainability 297

Integrating the Dimensions of Sustainability 298

CONTEMPORARY SUSTAINABILITY-BASED FRAMEWORKS 298

The Natural Step 299

The Hannover Principles 300

Corporate Social Responsibility 300

PUTTING IT ALL TOGETHER 303

Sustainability Frameworks and Ethics 303

Picturing the Three-Legged Stool Model 304

A FINAL CRITIQUE 313

Index 319

Working Toward Sustainability

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    A Hardback by Charles J. Kibert, Martha C. Monroe, Anna L. Peterson

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      Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
      Publication Date: 02/12/2011
      ISBN13: 9780470539729, 978-0470539729
      ISBN10: 0470539720
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      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Ethics of Sustainability develops a comprehensive ethical foundation for sustainability by bringing together nine ethical principles together in a cohesive manner to provide the badly needed ethical arguments that support the sustainability concept.

      Table of Contents
      Preface xiii

      Acknowledgments xv

      Introduction xvii

      MAKING CONNECTIONS xviii

      SHIFTING TOWARD SUSTAINABILITY xix

      THE STRUCTURE OF THIS BOOK xx

      Chapter 1

      A Context for Sustainability 1

      THE RATIONALE FOR SUSTAINABILITY 1

      Sustainability Interlude 1

      A Response to a Crisis 2

      CONTEMPORARY CHALLENGES 5

      Population and Consumption 6

      Climate Change 6

      Nonrenewable Resource Depletion 8

      Loss of Biodiversity 9

      Overfishing 10

      Eutrophication 12

      Desertification and Acidification 13

      Poverty 14

      Ecosystem Services and Quality of Life 14

      THE ETHICAL CONTEXT OF SUSTAINABILITY 15

      THE THREE-LEG MODEL OF SUSTAINABILITY 15

      CONCLUSION 17

      Chapter 2

      The Technology Challenge 21

      OVERVIEW OF TECHNOLOGY 21

      Defining Technology 22

      A Brief History of Technology 22

      THE TECHNOLOGY PARADOX 25

      Technological Optimism versus Technological Pessimism 25

      Developing a More Nuanced View of the Impacts of Technology 27

      CONSEQUENCES OF TECHNOLOGY 28

      Predicting Consequences of Technology 29

      Reducing the Uncertainty of Technology 31

      Technology Risk Assessment, Acceptance, and Management 32

      ALTERNATIVE, APPROPRIATE, AND SUSTAINABLE TECHNOLOGY 34

      THE ETHICAL IMPLICATIONS OF TECHNOLOGY 36

      SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS 37

      Chapter 3

      Introduction to Ethical Concepts 41

      RELIGIOUS ETHICS 42

      Common Ideals 42

      Views of Human Nature 45

      SECULAR AND PHILOSOPHICAL ETHICAL TRADITIONS 46

      Justice 47

      Deontological Ethics 47

      Rights 48

      Consequentialist Ethics 51

      Objectivism and Ethical Relativism 52

      Objectivism and Relativism in Sustainability 55

      ETHICS AS A TOOL FOR MAKING DECISIONS 55

      Framing Ethical Problems 56

      Conflicting Values 56

      THE THREE LEGS OF SUSTAINABILITY 58

      Social Ethics 59

      Environmental Ethics 60

      Economic Ethics 61

      Integrating the Three Legs 63

      CONCLUSION 64

      Chapter 4

      Social Dimensions of Sustainability Ethics 67

      JUSTICE, FAIRNESS, AND RECIPROCITY 67

      The Golden Rule 68

      Ethics of Care 71

      DISTRIBUTIONAL PRINCIPLES 72

      Distribution in a Just Society 73

      Distributing Disadvantages 74

      EXPLORING INTERDEPENDENCE 75

      Thinking Globally, Acting Locally 76

      Life on Spaceship Earth 78

      Environmental Justice 80

      OBLIGATIONS TO FUTURE GENERATIONS 81

      Intergenerational Justice 82

      A Look Back at Looking Forward 84

      Future Quality of Life 85

      Beyond Seven Generations 87

      CONCLUSION 90

      Chapter 5

      Environmental Dimensions of Sustainability Ethics 95

      THE EMERGENCE OF ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS 95

      The Birth of Modern Environmental Ethics 96

      Environmentalism Becomes Mainstream 98

      Undertones of the Sacred 99

      RELIGION AND ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS 99

      Religion and Nature 99

      Greening Religion 101

      ECOLOGICAL PRINCIPLES IN ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS 103

      Development of Ecology 103

      CARICATURES OF NATURE 104

      A Closer World 105

      CONTEMPORARY APPROACHES IN ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS 107

      Getting the Scale of Ethics Right 108

      Deep Ecology, Ecofeminism, and Social Ecology 109

      Pluralistic Approaches 111

      Bioregionalism 112

      The New Agrarian Movement 113

      ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS AND NONHUMAN ANIMALS 114

      Making a Case for the Individual 114

      Mixed Communities 115

      ENVIRONMENTAL ETHICS AND THE ETHICS OF SUSTAINABILITY 116

      Identifying Values 117

      Emphasizing Human Priorities 117

      CONCLUSION 118

      Chapter 6

      Economic Dimensions of Sustainability Ethics 123

      FROM CLASSICAL ECONOMICS TO ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS 124

      The Advent of Modern Economics 124

      Ecological Economics and the Classical Economists 125

      Neoclassical Economics 128

      Criticisms of Neoclassical Economics 130

      Physical Limitations 131

      Influences of Ecology 132

      THE ECOLOGICAL ECONOMIC MODEL 134

      Natural Capital and Ecological Services 135

      Discounting the Future 136

      The Economic Value of Natural Systems 137

      Feedback between Ecological and Economic Systems 139

      TOOLS OF ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS 144

      The Polluter Pays Principle 144

      Extended Producer Responsibility 145

      Beneficiary Pays Principle 146

      Full Cost Accounting, Full Cost Pricing, and Life-Cycle Costing 148

      CONCLUSION 150

      Chapter 7

      Integrating the Three Legs of Sustainability 155

      THE PRECAUTIONARY PRINCIPLE 156

      A Legal Context 157

      Precaution in Practice 159

      Precaution as Risk Management 160

      Cost-Benefit Analysis 161

      Including Stakeholders 162

      Including Science 164

      Compensation for Risks 165

      The March of Progress 167

      IRRECONCILABLE DIFFERENCES 168

      Lifeboat Ethics 168

      Tragedy of the Commons 169

      Hardin’s Challenge 170

      POVERTY REDUCTION VERSUS ENVIRONMENTAL PRESERVATION 170

      Linking Social and Environmental Goals 171

      Finding Synergistic Solutions 172

      The Role of Technology 174

      MANAGING THE GLOBAL COMMONS 175

      The Need for a Central Authority 176

      Moving beyond the Tragedy of the Commons 177

      International Multilateral Agreements 179

      Non-Governmental Organizations 180

      The Role of Government 181

      TRANSCENDING THE THREE-LEGGED STOOL MODEL 182

      Integrating the Three Legs 182

      Complex Adaptive Systems 183

      Integrating Behavior at Different Scales 184

      Resilience in Social-Ecological Systems 187

      Resilience and the Precautionary Principle 188

      Resilience and Technology 189

      Conflicting Values 191

      THE DISTRIBUTION OF POWER IN DECISION MAKING 192

      The Principle of Transparency 193

      Transparency in Industry 194

      Transparency and Technology 196

      The Value of Autonomy 197

      CONCLUSION 199

      Chapter 8

      Improving Our Thinking about Sustainability 209

      OBSTACLES TO MAKING GOOD DECISIONS 210

      Rational Decision Making 210

      Limits of Rationality 212

      Cognitive Heuristics 214

      Discounting the Future 217

      Complexity 219

      How Barriers to Rationality Affect Decisions 220

      STRATEGIES FOR ADDRESSING LIMITS TO RATIONALITY 224

      Becoming Environmentally Informed 224

      Becoming Socially and Economically Informed 226

      Systems Thinking 227

      CONCLUSION 235

      Chapter 9

      The Process of Changing Behavior 239

      THEORY OF PLANNED BEHAVIOR 239

      Attitudes 240

      Subjective Norms 240

      Perceived Control 241

      Understanding Planned Behavior 242

      OBSTACLES TO SUSTAINABLE BEHAVIOR 243

      Political Obstacles to Sustainable Behavior 244

      Lack of Social Capital 244

      Accepting Unsustainable Outcomes 245

      Individualization 246

      Distancing 248

      HOW CHANGE HAPPENS 251

      The Five Phases of Individual Change 251

      Diffusion of Innovation 253

      Applying Diffusion of Innovation 254

      STRATEGIES FOR EFFECTING CHANGE 257

      Small Wins 257

      Reasonable Person Model 258

      Moving People toward Change 261

      CONCLUSION 262

      Chapter 10

      Creating Change with Groups 267

      ADVANTAGES OF GROUP DECISION MAKING 267

      Additional Insights 268

      New Discoveries 270

      Increased Buy-In 271

      TYPES OF COLLABORATIVE PROCESSES 272

      MAKING THE MULTI-STAKEHOLDER PROCESS WORK 273

      Social Learning 273

      Building Shared Understanding 275

      Trust 281

      Iterative Approach 284

      LEARNING ORGANIZATIONS 287

      Developing the Ideal of a Learning Organization 288

      Creating Change in a Learning Organization 289

      CONCLUSION 290

      Chapter 11

      Applying an Ethic of Sustainability 295

      MAKING ETHICAL DECISIONS FOR A SUSTAINABLE FUTURE: AN OVERVIEW 295

      Social Sustainability 296

      Ecological Sustainability 296

      Economic Sustainability 297

      Integrating the Dimensions of Sustainability 298

      CONTEMPORARY SUSTAINABILITY-BASED FRAMEWORKS 298

      The Natural Step 299

      The Hannover Principles 300

      Corporate Social Responsibility 300

      PUTTING IT ALL TOGETHER 303

      Sustainability Frameworks and Ethics 303

      Picturing the Three-Legged Stool Model 304

      A FINAL CRITIQUE 313

      Index 319

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