Towards the Ethics of a Green Future

The Theory and Practice of Human Rights for Future People

Marcus Düwell editor Gerhard Bos editor Naomi van Steenbergen editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd

Published:15th May '18

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Towards the Ethics of a Green Future cover

What are our obligations towards future generations who stand to be harmed by the impact of today’s environmental crises? This book explores ecological sustainability as a human rights issue and examines what our long-term responsibilities might be.

This interdisciplinary collection of chapters provides a basis for understanding the debates on the provision of sustainability for future generations from a diverse set of theoretical standpoints. Covering a broad range of perspectives such as risk and uncertainty, legal implementation, representation, motivation and economics, Towards the Ethics of a Green Future sets out the key questions involved in this complex ethical issue. The contributors bring theoretical discussions to life through the use of case studies and real-world examples. The book also includes clear and tangible recommendations for policymakers on how to put the suggestions proposed within the book into practice.

This book will be of great interest to all researchers and students concerned with issues of sustainability and human rights, as well as scholars of environmental politics, law and ethics more generally.

"This book results from years of collective work on some of the key philosophical issues raised by climate change and intergenerational justice. Its focus on rights renders it very distinctive. It is interdisciplinary in content, wide in coverage and accessible. An absolutely welcome addition to the sustainability literature."Axel Gosseries, FNRS Research Professor, University of Louvain, Belgium and Head of the Hoover Chair in Economic and Social Ethics

"An exceptionally broad yet incisive exploration of human rights, climate change, and sustainability. Well-argued essays on the philosophy, politics, economics, and psychology of environmental human rights break much new ground, and together offer a persuasive argument supporting intergenerational justice and a sustainable environmental future."Richard P. Hiskes, author of The Human Right to a Green Future

"Outstanding philosophers take rights, especially the rights of the future people who will live in our distant wake, seriously by taking seriously the concrete complexities of the policies needed now to protect them later, providing, for example, a probing and nuanced critique of economists’ standard but misleading analysis of climate change as a negative externality, a wide-ranging and perceptive exploration of how current political procedures can be changed to protect future interests, and an imaginative assault on the neglected challenge of how to motivate people today to take essential actions on behalf of the now nameless and faceless people yet to be born."Henry Shue, Centre for International Studies, University of Oxford, UK, author of Basic Rights (1996) and Climate Justice (2014)

"Climate change is the most important ethical challenge facing the world today. Understanding our duties to future generations is critical. This admirable and timely collection contains important voices on central issues, of human rights, intergenerational justice and governance. It should interest all those concerned with the ethics of a green future."Steve Gardiner, Professor of Philosophy and Ben Rabinowitz Endowed Professor of Human Dimensions of the Environment, University of Washington, USA

Towards the Ethics of a Green Future is essential for anyone interested

in intergenerational or climate ethics. It is also suitable for upper division or

graduate level courses on climate ethics or intergenerational justice. Because

of the wide range of topic covered, it offers a clear ‘lay of the land’ of the intergenerational

ethics literature. --J. SPENCER ATKINS, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Environmental Values, Vol 28, No. 4, August 2019

ISBN: 9781138069329

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 400g

218 pages