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Call for Papers

"Climate Change: Politics, Policy, and Justice"
International Conference
Bern University
Bern (Switzerland)
19-21 August 2009

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Since the late 1980s climate change has been centre-stage in
the international policy arena. However, as of yet, little
has been done to incorporate all global players while at the
same time catalysing the type of action that must be taken
in order to combat this problem. There are likely many
reasons for this current inaction, including but surely not
limited to: questions surrounding climate science and
predictions; questions concerning the most effective way to
cope with the problem; and questions relating to the fair
distribution of the burden of dealing with climate change.
The focus of this conference will be to discuss the latter
issue, i.e. the role of justice as it arises in the context
of climate change.

Justice related issues emerge in the debate over climate
change policy on many levels. First, and probably most
obviously, it must be determined what role each global actor
will play in any coordinated effort to mitigate climate
change. The answer to this question is not straightforward,
as there are numerous factors that must be considered,
including whether rights to emit greenhouse gases (GHG)
should be divided equally among all nations, or whether
rights to emit should be a function of the geographical
placement of a nation, the population of a nation, the level
of development of a nation, or even perhaps some combination
of these elements.

Second, and intimately related to the first issue, it has to
be decided to what degree (if any) a nationÂ’s historical
emissions ought to be considered. As with the first issue,
there is no clear-cut way to work through this problem,
since there are seemingly justifiable reasons for engaging
in all of the following: severely limiting the largest
historical emittersÂ’ claims to present and future emissions,
considering only the historical record from the point in
time in which a nation could reasonably have known of the
harm it was contributing to, or, alternatively, agreeing
that historical emissions should have no weight in the
discussion, but rather all nations should agree on a fair
emissions target from the present forward.

Third, it must be determined to what degree (if any) future
people ought to be taken into consideration when
establishing climate change policy, since it has been
predicted that the effects of climate change will stretch
far into the future. Addressing this question requires
having discussions on how future people can have justice
claims on current people, what those justice claims might
be, and how far into the future these claims reach.

Fourth, it must be determined what types of entities have
viable justice claims. Is it only individual persons that
can make coherent justice claims? Or can nations,
industries, businesses, non-human animals, species,
ecosystems, and the like have and make meaningful justice
claims?

Finally, we must determine the level of responsibility
individual actors have in mitigating and adapting to climate
change, since it is not evident whether this responsibility
falls only on nations, or whether it also rests with
individuals, businesses, and industries, as well. Clearly
then, the issue of justice and climate change is both
complex and requires immediate attention.

The highlight of this conference will be presentations by
three scholars, all of whom have published widely on the
various concerns of justice and their relation to climate
change. These scholars include Professor Simon Caney,
Oxford; Professor Stephen Gardiner, University of
Washington; and Professor Lukas Meyer, Graz University.

Please send abstracts (500-800 words) for paper proposals to
<[email protected]> no later than May 1st.
Applicants will know of their acceptance by May 15th.
Quality papers will be invited to contribute to an edited
collection of the conference proceedings. Graduate students
are encouraged to submit proposals, as travel funding has
been set aside to aid exemplary graduate student presenters.

For more information, please see the conference website:
http://www.climateandjustice.org

The site will be continually updated with travel and lodging
information, the conference schedule, and other useful
information as it becomes available.

If you have further questions, please contact Sarah Kenehan
at <[email protected]>.


Contact:

Sarah Brigid Kenehan
Department of Philosophy
Bern University
Laengassstrasse 49a
CH-3000 Bern 9
Switzerland
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://www.climateandjustice.org




 
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