Intergenerational Democracy, Environmental Justice and the Case of Nuclear Waste (Routledge Explorations in Energy Studies)

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Intergenerational Democracy, Environmental Justice and the Case of Nuclear Waste (Routledge Explorations in Energy Studies)

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  • 製本 Hardcover:ハードカバー版/ページ数 190 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9781032728018
  • DDC分類 363.1799

Full Description

This book explores the interplay between intergenerational justice and intragenerational justice using nuclear waste management as a consistent case to explore these themes.

Lee Towers and Matthew Cotton examine the issue of intergenerational justice from a social scientific perspective, drawing on central case studies of nuclear waste management in Canada, Finland, and the United Kingdom. They connect indigenous philosophies and notions of justice with the concept of intergenerational democracy, advocating for better inclusion of youth and elders in decision-making that affects their well-being. As such, the book's primary objectives are fourfold:

To assess whether trade-offs between intergenerational and intragenerational justice are necessary, and if so, what these trade-offs are and how they might be resolved.
To critically assess dominant western liberal philosophical approaches that shape contemporary intergenerational justice thinking in policy and practice, and consider alternatives drawn from anthropology and indigenous philosophies.
To assess how far our current capitalist system can achieve substantive forms of justice.
To critically examine three nuclear waste management case studies and assess how far these achieve environmental and energy justice and how they exemplify tensions between inter- and intragenerational justice.

This short, accessible volume will be of great interest to students and scholars of energy, environmental justice, and ethics.

Contents

Introduction

Defining Intergenerational Justice

Three Features of Intergenerational Justice

Children as Proxies of Future Generations

Indigenous Societies and the World System

Humanity, Ethnoclass, Ability, Gender, and Sexuality

Book Outline

Part One - Intergenerational justice dilemmas

Chapter 1: The philosophical challenge of intergenerational justice

Philosophical challenges and concepts in intergenerational justice

Can future people have rights? The non-identity problem

What obligations do we hold to future generations? The problem of reciprocity

The weighting of future obligations - the issue of social discounting

Sufficientarianism, or is enough, enough?

Environmental Rights

Ontological challenges

Conclusions

Chapter 2: Alternative philosophical traditions

Social Relations of the Gift

Indigenous Perspectives on Justice and Time

Defining the Human Across Deep Time

The Over-determination of Man

Conclusions - a new/old subjectivity for intergenerational justice

Chapter 3: Mainstream Economics and Scarce Justice

Generational Wealth Transfers

Trading Justice

The Economics of the Anthropocene

Conclusions

Chapter 4: Abundant Justice and Democracy

Intergenerational Dilemmas

Children and Young People as Future Generational Proxies

Intergenerational Democracy

Media Framings of Youth Protestors

Youth as Proxies

The UN Convention on the Rights of Children

The Intergenerational Capability Approach

Future Studies, Decoloniality, and Backcasting

Mainstream Future Studies

Backcasting Decolonised?

Conclusions

Part Two - Nuclear Waste and Intergenerational Democracy

Chapter 5: Critical Nuclear Concepts

Nuclear Landscapes & Communities

Peripheralisation

Energopower

Nuclear Colonialism

Conclusions

Chapter 6: Canada and the Nuclear Waste Management Organisation

Context and Histories

NWMO - Aims, Scope and Assumptions

The Search for a GDF Site and Implementation

Conclusions

Chapter 7: The World's First GDF - Finland

Context and History

Aims, Scope and Assumptions of NWMOs in Finland

STUK

TVO & Fortum

Posiva

Shared Assumptions

Implementation of the Most Advanced GDF in the World

Finland's Search for a GDF

Media Representations and Consumption

Intragenerational and Intergeneration Justice and Finland's GDF

Conclusions

Chapter 8: The United Kingdom and Nuclear Power and Waste

Context and history of nuclear technologies in the United Kingdom

Period one - Economic and Military Securitisation

Period 2. Nuclear energy expansion and the recognition of waste as an environmental concern

Period 3. The Deliberative Turn

Period 4. Climate change securitisation

Current UK Nuclear Waste Policy

Implementation of the GDF

Expanding Costs and Expanding Inventories

Democratic Deficits and the Nuclear

Conclusion

Conclusion: Justice for All

Nuclear Waste Management and Justice

Distributional Justice

Procedural Justice

The Justice of Recognition

The Justice of Redress and Reparation

Ghosts of Seppo and Western Science

The Darkness of the Grave or the Womb?

References

Index

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