Climate Justice and Feasibility: Normative Theorizing, Feasibility Constraints, and Climate Action

This collection helps bridge the divide between the work of normative theorists and climate action (or inaction). In this volume, contributors reflect on how we should understand the relationship between theorizing about climate justice, the principles of justice that result, and feasibility constraints on climate action. Some explore the role of theorists or the usefulness of their theories for guiding policymaking and action on climate change, while others discuss concerns with who is establishing what the feasibility constraints are and how they are doing so. Others identify and discuss psychological feasibility constraints on just climate action, or draw important parallels and distinctions between the feasibility constraints that were tackled in order to address the COVID-19 pandemic and those that need to be tackled in order to respond to global climate change.

The international and interdisciplinary contributors offer a range of approaches and frameworks, to re-think the ways that concerns of justice should be considered on the policy level, speaking to students, research scholars, activists, and policymakers.

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Climate Justice and Feasibility: Normative Theorizing, Feasibility Constraints, and Climate Action

This collection helps bridge the divide between the work of normative theorists and climate action (or inaction). In this volume, contributors reflect on how we should understand the relationship between theorizing about climate justice, the principles of justice that result, and feasibility constraints on climate action. Some explore the role of theorists or the usefulness of their theories for guiding policymaking and action on climate change, while others discuss concerns with who is establishing what the feasibility constraints are and how they are doing so. Others identify and discuss psychological feasibility constraints on just climate action, or draw important parallels and distinctions between the feasibility constraints that were tackled in order to address the COVID-19 pandemic and those that need to be tackled in order to respond to global climate change.

The international and interdisciplinary contributors offer a range of approaches and frameworks, to re-think the ways that concerns of justice should be considered on the policy level, speaking to students, research scholars, activists, and policymakers.

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Climate Justice and Feasibility: Normative Theorizing, Feasibility Constraints, and Climate Action

Climate Justice and Feasibility: Normative Theorizing, Feasibility Constraints, and Climate Action

Climate Justice and Feasibility: Normative Theorizing, Feasibility Constraints, and Climate Action

Climate Justice and Feasibility: Normative Theorizing, Feasibility Constraints, and Climate Action

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Overview

This collection helps bridge the divide between the work of normative theorists and climate action (or inaction). In this volume, contributors reflect on how we should understand the relationship between theorizing about climate justice, the principles of justice that result, and feasibility constraints on climate action. Some explore the role of theorists or the usefulness of their theories for guiding policymaking and action on climate change, while others discuss concerns with who is establishing what the feasibility constraints are and how they are doing so. Others identify and discuss psychological feasibility constraints on just climate action, or draw important parallels and distinctions between the feasibility constraints that were tackled in order to address the COVID-19 pandemic and those that need to be tackled in order to respond to global climate change.

The international and interdisciplinary contributors offer a range of approaches and frameworks, to re-think the ways that concerns of justice should be considered on the policy level, speaking to students, research scholars, activists, and policymakers.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781538154205
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
Publication date: 10/12/2021
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 260
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Corey Katz is assistant professor of philosophy at Georgian Court University and was the post-doctoral researcher in the ethics of sustainable development at the Center for Ethics and Human Values and the Philosophy Department at the Ohio State University. His research lies at the intersection of global, long-term environmental problems like climate change, and ethical and political philosophy.

Sarah Kenehan associate professor of philosophy at Marywood University and works on issues of climate justice, global justice, and applied ethics. Recent publications include: Food, Environment, and Climate: Justice at the Intersection (Rowman and Littlefield, ed. With Erinn Gilson).

Table of Contents

Introduction, Corey Katz and Sarah Kenehan

1. Feasibility and Climate Justice, David Weisbach

2. Utopia, Feasibility, and the Need for Interpretive and Clinical Climate Ethics, Joshua McBee

3. Falling On Your Own Feasibility Sword? Challenges for Climate Policy Based on “Simple Self-Interest,” Stephen Gardiner and Justin Lawson,

4. Climate Justice, Feasibility Constraints, and the Role of Political Philosophy, Brian Berkey

5. Is a Just Climate Policy Feasible?, Kirsten Meyer

6. The “Pathway Problem,” Probabilistic Feasibility, and Non-ideal Climate Justice, Jared Houston

7. Making the Great Climate Transition: Between Justice and Feasibility, Fabian Schuppert

8. Is Climate Justice Feasible? A Psychological Perspective on Challenges and Opportunities for Achieving a Just Climate Regime, Ezra Markowitz and Andrew Monroe

9. Climate Change, Individual Preferences, and Procrastination, Fausto Corvino

10. COVID Pandemic and Climate Change: An Essay on Soft Constraints and Global Risks, Lukas H. Meyer and Marcelo de Araujo

About the Contributors

Index

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