01700nam a22002177a 4500003000400000005001700004008004100021020002300062040000800085082001700093084002500110100002700135245005600162260003200218300001600250440004200266520110700308650002701415700002201442700001801464OSt20260325152011.0260325b |||||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d a9780367484583 (HB) ckul a179.1bBRO/R 2Colon Classification aBrown, Donald A (Eds.) aRoutledge Handbook of Applied Climate Change Ethics aNew York:bRoutledge,c2024 axvii, 469p. aRoutledge Handbooks in Applied Ethics aThe Routledge Handbook of Applied Climate Change Ethics is a powerful reference source for the identification and exploration of the underlying ethical issues in climate change law and policy. Bridging theory with practice, it takes ethical engagement out of the classroom and into the halls of governance. The Handbook‘s 39 chapters--written by a diverse and inter-disciplinary team of experts from around the world--are case studies divided into five parts. Parts I-IV highlight the ethical issues that arise in climate change policy formation, from duties not to harm to duties to consider the views and voices of those who will be, or are being, harmed; from the role of human rights, justice, and democracy to how to identify and respond to disinformation and denialism. It also raises the ethics of various policy responses, such as cap-and-trade, carbon taxing, and geo-engineering. Part V offers a way forward, with strategies on how to expressly consider ethics in climate change policy formation, from negotiations to education, media, communication, and the power and potential of shaming. aEthicsvClimate Change aGwiazdon, Kathryn aWestra, Laura