Rectifying Climate Injustice: Reparations for Loss and Damage: Routledge Studies in Environmental Justice
Autor Laura García-Portelaen Limba Engleză Hardback – 22 oct 2024
Laura García-Portela argues that loss and damage occur after people’s capabilities have fallen below a threshold of sufficiency due to the negative impacts of climate change, thereby infringing people’s human rights. She argues for a historical responsibility principle for reparations for loss and damage (the Polluter Pays Principle, PPP) grounded in her Continuity Account. According to this account, responsibility for reparations is based on the duty to refrain from emissions-generating activities that would infringe people’s human rights. A new duty to provide reparations arises when human rights are infringed by climate change-inducing activities. Importantly, she examines how the latest developments in attribution science can help in developing a rectificatory account for loss and damage, an approach that has not been considered in depth by climate justice scholars so far.
Striving to improve the reader’s understanding of loss and damage as outlined by The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, this book will be of great interest to students and scholars of climate justice, environmental justice, and environmental ethics.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781032508344
ISBN-10: 1032508345
Pagini: 168
Ilustrații: 4
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Greutate: 0.44 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Seria Routledge Studies in Environmental Justice
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1032508345
Pagini: 168
Ilustrații: 4
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Greutate: 0.44 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Seria Routledge Studies in Environmental Justice
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Public țintă
Postgraduate and Undergraduate AdvancedNotă biografică
Laura García-Portela is an assistant professor of philosophy at Erasmus University Rotterdam. Before that, she held postdoctoral positions at the PhilETAS (Philosophy of Engineering, Technology and Science) research group, based at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT, Germany) and the Environmental Sciences and Humanities Institute at the University of Fribourg (Switzerland). She has also held visiting, research, and teaching positions at University of Valencia (Spain), Keele University (UK), and University of Washington (US). She graduated in summer 2021 from the Department of Philosophy and the Interdisciplinary Doctoral Program in Climate Change, University of Graz. Her dissertation was awarded the Luis Díez del Corral Prize from the Center of Political and Constitutional Studies in Spain (research centered attached to the Spanish Ministry of Presidency) and the Roland Atefie Preis from the Austrian Academy of Science. Her work lies at the intersection between political philosophy, philosophy of climate science, and philosophy of climate law and is published in numerous international journals.
Cuprins
Introduction
1. An international mechanism for loss and damage
1.1 A brief history of loss and damage
1.2 Contributing to an International Mechanism for Loss and Damage
1.3 The contested role of compensation in climate negotiations
2. A terminological note
3. Philosophical Methodology
3.1 General methodology: reflective equilibrium
3.2 Climate justice specific methodology
4. Assumptions and limitations 4.1 The scope of justice: recipients and duty-bearers of climate justice
4.2 Sufficientarianism: background theory of distributive justice
5. Summary of chapters
Chapter One: A minimal capabilities-based approach
1. Life disruptions as harm and the minimal understanding of loss and damage
2. A minimal capabilities-based account of loss and damage.
3. Answering some challenges to an ex-post categorization of L&D
4. Conceptual clarifications and types of reparation for loss and damage
4.1 The notions of ‘loss’ and ‘damage’ in loss and damage
4.2 Reparations for economic damage, non-economic losses, and non-economic damage
5. Conclusions
Chapter Two: In search for a justified rectificatory justice principle
1. Two Objections against the Polluter Pays Principle
2. The Beneficiary Pays Principle and Some Intuitive Reactions to the Objections
3. The Causation Objection and the Beneficiary Pays Principle
4. The Excusable Ignorance Objection and Fairness Considerations
4.1 A fresh look at the Excusable Ignorance Objection
4.2 Fairness Considerations, the Beneficiary Pays Principle, and Replies to Some Objections.
5. Conclusions
Chapter Three: Reasons awaiting satisfaction
1. The continuity thesis and the Continuity Account
2. The Continuity Account and the objections against the Polluter Pays Principle
3. Alternative accounts
3.1 Strict liability
3.2 Counterfactual liability
3.3 Outcome responsibility
4. Conclusions
Chapter Four: Climate Harm and Attribution Science
1. Attribution methods: the probabilistic and the storyline approach
2. The reaction and criticism of the PEA community towards the storyline approach
3. The storyline approach and the criticism of overstatement
4. On how the probabilistic approach is affected by similar objections
5. Conclusions
Chapter Five: Towards a Rectificatory Policy Mechanism for Loss and Damage
1. Towards an adequacy-for-purpose view for attribution methods
2. An adequacy-for-purpose view for rectifying climate injustice
3. Distributing liability and achieving rectificatory justice
4. The Political Feasibility Objection
4.1 Introducing and exploring the feasibility concern
4.2 Motivational and psychological aspects of the Political Feasibility Objection
5. Conclusions
Final Conclusions
Index
1. An international mechanism for loss and damage
1.1 A brief history of loss and damage
1.2 Contributing to an International Mechanism for Loss and Damage
1.3 The contested role of compensation in climate negotiations
2. A terminological note
3. Philosophical Methodology
3.1 General methodology: reflective equilibrium
3.2 Climate justice specific methodology
4. Assumptions and limitations 4.1 The scope of justice: recipients and duty-bearers of climate justice
4.2 Sufficientarianism: background theory of distributive justice
5. Summary of chapters
Chapter One: A minimal capabilities-based approach
1. Life disruptions as harm and the minimal understanding of loss and damage
2. A minimal capabilities-based account of loss and damage.
3. Answering some challenges to an ex-post categorization of L&D
4. Conceptual clarifications and types of reparation for loss and damage
4.1 The notions of ‘loss’ and ‘damage’ in loss and damage
4.2 Reparations for economic damage, non-economic losses, and non-economic damage
5. Conclusions
Chapter Two: In search for a justified rectificatory justice principle
1. Two Objections against the Polluter Pays Principle
2. The Beneficiary Pays Principle and Some Intuitive Reactions to the Objections
3. The Causation Objection and the Beneficiary Pays Principle
4. The Excusable Ignorance Objection and Fairness Considerations
4.1 A fresh look at the Excusable Ignorance Objection
4.2 Fairness Considerations, the Beneficiary Pays Principle, and Replies to Some Objections.
5. Conclusions
Chapter Three: Reasons awaiting satisfaction
1. The continuity thesis and the Continuity Account
2. The Continuity Account and the objections against the Polluter Pays Principle
3. Alternative accounts
3.1 Strict liability
3.2 Counterfactual liability
3.3 Outcome responsibility
4. Conclusions
Chapter Four: Climate Harm and Attribution Science
1. Attribution methods: the probabilistic and the storyline approach
2. The reaction and criticism of the PEA community towards the storyline approach
3. The storyline approach and the criticism of overstatement
4. On how the probabilistic approach is affected by similar objections
5. Conclusions
Chapter Five: Towards a Rectificatory Policy Mechanism for Loss and Damage
1. Towards an adequacy-for-purpose view for attribution methods
2. An adequacy-for-purpose view for rectifying climate injustice
3. Distributing liability and achieving rectificatory justice
4. The Political Feasibility Objection
4.1 Introducing and exploring the feasibility concern
4.2 Motivational and psychological aspects of the Political Feasibility Objection
5. Conclusions
Final Conclusions
Index
Descriere
This book provides an account of how rectificatory justice for climate change loss and damage is possible and provides an extensive response to its challenges.