Subject: Political Science Book Title: Justice and the Environment
Justice and the Environment
Conceptions of Environmental Sustainability and Theories of Distributive Justice
Dobson, Andrew
Professor of Politics, Keele University
Print publication date: 1998
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: November 2003
Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-829495-5
doi:10.1093/0198294956.001.0001
Abstract:
Environmental sustainability and social, or distributive, justice are both widely regarded as desirable social objectives. But can we assume that they are compatible with each other? This book analyses the complex relationship between these two pressing objectives. Environmental sustainability is taken to be a contested idea, and three distinct conceptions of it are explored and described. These conceptions are then examined in the context of fundamental distributive questions. Among whom or what should distribution take place? What should be distributed? What should the principle of distribution be? The book contains a critical examination of the claims of the ‘environmental-justice’ and ‘sustainable-development’ movements that social justice and environmental sustainability are points on the same virtuous circle, and suggests that radical environmental demands involving the preservation of ‘nature’ are only incompletely served by couching them in terms of justice. The conclusion is that inter-generational justice is the context in which distributive and sustainability agendas are most closely aligned.