Global Energy Justice: Problems, Principles, and Practices
Cambridge University Press, 10/2/2014
EAN 9781107041950, ISBN10: 1107041953
Hardcover, 414 pages, 22.8 x 15.2 x 2.4 cm
Language: English
We need new ways of thinking about, and approaching, the world's energy problems. Global energy security and access is one of the central justice issues of our time, with profound implications for happiness, welfare, freedom, equity, and due process. This book combines up-to-date data on global energy security and climate change with fresh perspectives on the meaning of justice in social decision-making. Benjamin K. Sovacool and Michael H. Dworkin address how justice theory can help people to make more meaningful decisions about the production, delivery, use, and effects of energy. Exploring energy dilemmas in real-life situations, they link recent events to eight global energy injustices and employ philosophy and ethics to make sense of justice as a tool in the decision-making process. They go on to provide remedies and policies that planners and individuals can utilize to create a more equitable and just energy future.
1. Introduction
2. The global energy system
3. Virtue and energy efficiency
4. Utility and energy externalities
5. Energy and human rights
6. Energy and due process
7. Energy poverty, access, and welfare
8. Energy subsidies and freedom
9. Energy resources and future generations
10. Fairness, responsibility, and climate change
11. Conclusion.