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Justice and Nature

Kantian Philosophy, Environmental Policy, and the Law
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Most decision making in environmental policy today is based on the economic cost-benefit argument. Criticizing the shortcomings of the market paradigm, Gilroy proposes an alternative way to conceptualize and create environmental policy, one that allows for the protection of moral and ecological values in the face of economic demands. Drawing on Kantian philosophy, Gilroy develops a paradigm for justice toward nature that integrates the intrinsic value of humanity and nature into the law. To test the feasibility of this approach, Gilroy applies it to six concrete cases, including environmental risk and wildlife preservation.
List of Tables and Figures Foreword Preface Acknowledgments Introduction: Practical Reason, Moral Capacities, and Environmental Choices The Critical Argument: Moving beyond Market AssumptionsThe Constructive Argument: Kantian Ethics and Practical ChoiceJustice from Autonomy and Ecosystem Policy ArgumentNotes to Introduction Part I Economic Policy Argument and Environmental Metapolicy 1. The Market Paradigm and Comprehensive Policy Argument Practical Reason, Argument, and the Policy ProcessPolicy Design: The Strategy and TActics of Public ChoiceThe Economic Design Approach and Comprehensive Policy ArgumentThe Market Paradigm and Comprehensive Policy ArgumentA Context Model for the Market ParadigmFrom Strategy to TacticsNotes to Chapter 1 2. The Theory of Environment Risk: Preference, Choice, and Individual WelfareThe Economic Viewpoint: From Private Exchange to Public Choice?the Strategic Nature of the Polluter's DilemmaEnvironmental Risk and the Imprisoned RiderEfficiency, Morality, and a "Thin" Theory of AutonomyPublic Choice, "Thick" Autonomy, and Respect for Instrinsic ValueNotes to Chapter 2 3. The Pracrtice of Environmental Risk: THe Market Context Model and Environmental Law Efficiency and Environmental LawTraditional Pollution: Finding the Optimum Level for Efficient Abatement Law and PolicyNotes to Chapter 3 4. Moving beyond the Market Paradigm: Making Space for "Justice from Autonomy" A Substructure: Uncertainty and Environmental EthicsA Superstructure: Environmental Risk and Public AdministrationEcosystems in Ethical ContextToward Ecosystem Policy Design: A Tension of Intrinsic ValuesNotes to Chapter 4 Part II A Kantian Paradigm for Ecosystem Policy ArgumentExecutive Summary 5. Justice from Autonomy: The Individual and Nature The Three Components of Practical ReasonOur Kantian Duties to NatureKant's Environmental Imperative: Harmonize Humanity and Nature!Notes to Chapter 5 6. Justice form Autonomy: Collective Action Practical Reason and Strategic RationalityMoral Agency and Collective ActionKantian Communitarianism: Juridical Means to Ehtical EndsNotes to Chapter 6 7. Justice from Autonomy: The Legitimate State The Moral Basis of the Legitimate StateThe Principle of Autonomy and the Attributes of the Active CitizenPublic Trust and the Harmony of FreedomNotes to Chapter 7 8. Justice from Autonomy: Maxims and Methods Politics, Autonomy, and Public ChoicePrinciples and Maxims for Public ChoiceImplementing Maxims: Two DistinctionsFrom Maxims to MethodsThe Kantian Context Model and "Ecosystem" DesignNotes to Chapter 8 Part III Ecosystem Argument: Applications and Implications 9. The Theory of Environmental Risk Revisited: "Rules of Thumb" for Administrative Decision Making The Theory of Environmental Risk: Uncertainty, Ehtics, and ScienceThe Kantian Administrator and Ecosystem DesignThe Predilections and Reorientation of the Public ManagerDavie: From Economic to Ecosystem Policy ArgumentNotes to Chapter 9 10. The Practice of Environmental Risk Revisited: Case Studies in Ecosystem Policy ArgumentEcosystem Integrity and the Extraction Decision: The Cases fo Wilderness and WildlifeAssurance and the Disposal Interface: NIMBY and Comparative RiskTrust and the Production Decision: NEPA and FDA RegulationEcosystem Policy Argument and the BaselineThe Baseline Standard and Political EvaluationNotes to Chapter 10 Epilogue Ecosystem Argument in the States: Act 250 and Proposition 65 Federal Policy and State ExperimentsVermont's Act 250California's Proposition 65Justice and Federal GovernmentNotes Selected Bibliography Names Index Subject Index
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