Global-scale solar geoengineering raises critical ethical questions, including questions of distributive, procedural, and intergenerational justice. Although geoengineering is sometimes framed as a response to injustice, insofar as it might benefit those most vulnerable to climate-related harms, geoengineering also has the potential to exacerbate climate injustice, especially if control of research, governance, and potential plans for deployment remains concentrated in the hands of a few. The scope and scale of solar geoengineering, the diverse concerns it raises, and the lack of consensus surrounding it pose particular challenges for justice. I argue that addressing these challenges requires an inclusive, dialogical approach that takes seriously diverse perspectives, particularly the perspectives of those who are most affected by climate change and those who have had the least voice in decisions surrounding it. The concept of recognition––as developed in the work of Nancy Fraser, David Schlosberg, and others––offers a normative ground for this approach and can help guide the development of institutions and practices directed toward geoengineering justice.
...More
Article
Thilo Wiertz;
(May 2016)
Visions of Climate Control: Solar Radiation Management in Climate Simulations
(/isis/citation/CBB285814777/)
Article
Kintisch, Eli;
(December 2012)
Overview of Climate Engineering
(/isis/citation/CBB159642691/)
Article
Rob Bellamy;
(March 2015)
A Sociotechnical Framework for Governing Climate Engineering
(/isis/citation/CBB453591963/)
Article
Nassim JafariNaimi;
(March 2018)
Our Bodies in the Trolley’s Path, or Why Self-driving Cars Must *Not* Be Programmed to Kill
(/isis/citation/CBB556129964/)
Book
Jeroen Oomen;
(2021)
Imagining Climate Engineering: Dreaming of the Designer Climate
(/isis/citation/CBB894445522/)
Article
Russell, Lynn M.;
(Winter 2012)
Offsetting Climate Change by Engineering Air Pollution to Brighten Clouds
(/isis/citation/CBB075664319/)
Article
Heli Huhtamaa;
Samuli Helama;
(2017)
Distant impact: tropical volcanic eruptions and climate-driven agricultural crises in seventeenth-century Ostrobothnia, Finland
(/isis/citation/CBB463677812/)
Article
Bonnheim, Noah Byron;
(2010)
History of Climate Engineering
(/isis/citation/CBB001221293/)
Book
Hamblin, Jacob Darwin;
(2013)
Arming Mother Nature: The Birth of Catastrophic Environmentalism
(/isis/citation/CBB001212052/)
Article
Meredith McKittrick;
(2017)
Theories of “Reprecipitation” and Climate Change in the Settler Colonial World
(/isis/citation/CBB459811663/)
Article
White, Robert M;
(Spring 2001)
Climate Systems Engineering
(/isis/citation/CBB820034762/)
Article
Hugo Silveira Pereira;
(2017)
The technodiplomacy of Iberian transnational railways in the second half of the nineteenth century
(/isis/citation/CBB700807464/)
Article
Erin A. Cech;
Anneke Metz;
Jessie L. Smith;
Karen deVries;
(September 2017)
Epistemological Dominance and Social Inequality: Experiences of Native American Science, Engineering, and Health Students
(/isis/citation/CBB816459691/)
Article
Yoshio Nukaga;
(July 2016)
Ethics Expertise and Public Credibility: A Case Study of the Ethical Principle of Justice
(/isis/citation/CBB610704199/)
Article
Barbara L. Allen;
(November 2018)
Strongly Participatory Science and Knowledge Justice in an Environmentally Contested Region
(/isis/citation/CBB069762669/)
Chapter
Vleuten, Erik van der;
(2006)
Understanding network societies: Two decades of large technical systems studies
(/isis/citation/CBB001180989/)
Article
Benjamin K. Sovacool;
Katherine Lovell;
Marie Blanche Ting;
(November 2018)
Reconfiguration, Contestation, and Decline: Conceptualizing Mature Large Technical Systems
(/isis/citation/CBB797225432/)
Article
Lucy Suchman;
Karolina Follis;
Jutta Weber;
(November 2017)
Tracking and Targeting: Sociotechnologies of (In)security: (Introduction)
(/isis/citation/CBB721841161/)
Article
Roderic N. Crooks;
(2019)
Times Thirty: Access, Maintenance, and Justice
(/isis/citation/CBB487672024/)
Article
Arne Pollock;
Banu Subramaniam;
(November 2016)
Introduction to Special Issue: Resisting Power, Retooling Justice: Promises of Feminist Postcolonial Technosciences
(/isis/citation/CBB706070191/)
Be the first to comment!