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Climate change geoengineering philosophical perspectives, legal issues, and governance frameworks

Title
Climate change geoengineering [electronic resource] : philosophical perspectives, legal issues, and governance frameworks / edited by Wil C.G. Burns, Andrew L. Strauss.
ISBN
9781107278455
1107278457
9781461936626
1461936624
9781139161824
1139161822
9781107273962
110727396X
9781107275195
1107275199
9781107023932
1107023939
Published
Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2013.
Physical Description
1 online resource (330 pages)
Notes
2.3.1 Core Problems of Global GHG Control.
Summary
In this book, eleven prominent authorities on climate change consider the legal, policy and philosophical issues presented by geoengineering.
Other formats
Print version:
Format
Books / Online
Language
English
Added to Catalog
August 11, 2014
Contents
Cover; Climate Change Geoengineering; Title; Copyright; Contents; Contributors; Introduction The Emerging Salience of Geoengineering; Part I Ethics and Philosophy; 1 Geoengineering and Moral Schizophrenia; 1. Ethical Shortsightedness and the Context of Climate Engineering; 1.1 Two Questions; 1.2 A Perfect Moral Storm; 2. Moral Schizophrenia; 2.1 Moral Schizophrenia; 2.2 Agent 1; 2.3 Wayne's Folly; 2.4 Climate Parallels; 3. Implications; 4. Objections; 4.1 Who Is Wayne?; 4.2 What about a "Pure" Actor?; 4.3 Can We Just Get on With Our Science (Please)?
4.4 Do Scientists Not Have a Special Moral Obligation to Pursue Geoengineering?4.5 What Other Options?; 4.6 Are We Not Already Advocating for a "Portfolio" Approach?; 5. Conclusion; Acknowledgments; 2 The Ethical Foundations of Climate Engineering; 1. Introduction; 2. The Consequentialist Worldview; 3. Conception of the Earth; 4. Calculation versus Humility; 5. Preferring the Natural; 6. The Meaning of Facts; 7. Identifying "Winners and Losers"; 8. Technological Thinking; Acknowledgments; 3 The Psychological Costs of Geoengineering; 1. Introduction; 2. Geoengineering; 3. Loss.
4. The Psychological Importance of Geoengineering4.1 Relative Status; 4.2 Security; 4.3 Hope; 5. Conclusion; Part II Law and Governance; 4 Geoengineering and Climate Management; 1. Introduction; 2. Geoengineering: Fifteen Years Later; 2.1 Nomenclature: Let Us Get Rid of "Geoengineering"; 2.2 What Has Not Changed, or: 500 Wrongs Do Make a Right; 2.3 What Has Changed; 2.3.1 Geoengineering Comes of Age; 3. The (U.N.) Empire Strikes Back; 4. What Can Brown Do for the Earth?; Summary: Plus C'est la Même Chose, Plus ça Change; 5. The Case for Plan B.
5.1 Are We Still Afraid of Giant Laser Space Frisbees?5.1.1 Moral Hazard: "Don't Worry, Be Happy"?; 5.1.2 Risks: Unk-Unks; 5.1.3 Equity: The Rain in Spain Falls Mainly ... ; 5.1.4 Future Costs: In the Art of Stopping; 5.1.5 Monitoring and Institutions: Going Rogue; 5.2 The Vicissitudes of Inevitability; 5.2.1 Utopian Dreams, Dystopian Nightmares; 5.2.2 Killing Mother Nature; 5.2.3 One Man Cannot Make a Difference; 6. Conclusion, or, How I Learned to Keep Worrying and Still Love Climate Management; Acknowledgments; 5 Climate Engineering and the Anthropocene Era.
1. The Climate Change Problem and Responses to It1.1 The Modern Transformation and Its Potential Limits; 1.2 The Global Political Economy of Climate Change; 2. GHG Controls: An Option Fraught with Contradictions; 2.1 GHG Control: Potential Net Benefits Are Small; 2.1.1 Theory Suggests Small Net Benefits; 2.1.2 GHG Control and Other Policy Goals; 2.2 National Institutions and GHG Control; 2.2.1 Institutional Constraints; 2.2.2 U.S. Command-and-Control Regulation; 2.2.3 China's Institutions and GHG Intensity; 2.3 The High Costs of Global Agreement on GHG Control.
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