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Call for Papers

Theme: Climate Change, Sustainability and an Ethics of an Open Future
Type: Annual Conference
Institution: Societas Ethica
   ESF Network "A Right to a Green Future"
Location: Soesterberg (Netherlands)
Date: 22.–25.8.2012
Deadline: 31.3.2013

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Climate change, dwindling resources, and growth of the global
population have emerged as challenges for all areas of political
action in modern societies. These challenges have been on the
political agenda since the "Limits to Growth" report was released in
1972. While the challenges are well known, and while there appears to
be some form of consensus that sustainability is a goal worth
striving for, there is little discussion of how the changes necessary
to achieve this goal will affect our political institutions, our
social relationships, our moral responsibilities, and our
self-understanding in general. The more far-reaching the necessary
changes are, the more pressing the following questions will become:
To what extent are political and economic institutions - national as
well as global - capable of realizing sustainable politics and what
is its ethical basis? To what extent will personal liberties, such as
freedom of movement, property rights, and reproductive autonomy, need
to be limited in order to realize sustainable politics? How could we
extend the current system of human rights to incorporate the rights
of future generations? Can we expect human beings to take
responsibility for the living conditions of future generations, and
how do such responsibilities affect philosophical and eschatological
theories? An ethics of an open future must develop criteria for moral
action under conditions of uncertainty. A developed theory of the
principle of precaution in ethics and law is, however, lacking.

Paper channels:

1. Climate change and scarcity of resources as ethical challenges
2. Sustainability, future generations and human rights
3. Democracy, global governance and political ethics
4. An open future; philosophical and theological responses
5. Reflections from different cultural and religious perspectives
6. Open channel

Authors are invited to submit an abstract of max. 4,000 characters.
Abstracts should be suitable for blind review.

Please send in the following two documents as Word attachments to:
[email protected]

Document 1:
Your name, first name, email address, institutional address, the
title of your abstract, the topic under which your abstract falls,
and, if eligible, your application to participate in the Young
Scholars' Award competition (see information below).

Document 2:
Your abstract and title (max. 4,000 chars; we do not accept full
papers) with all identifying references removed.

Deadline for submissions is March 31, 2013.

Societas Ethica Young Scholars' Award:
The Young Scholars' Award is awarded to the best presentation by a
young scholar at the Societas Ethica Annual conference. Young
scholars for the purpose of this competition are PhD student and PhDs
who earned their degree less than two years ago and do not have a
tenure-track academic position. If you wish to be considered for the
YSA, please indicate this in the file with the personal information
accompanying your abstract. For more information about Societas
Ethica Young Scholars' Award, please visit the website at:
www.societasethica.info


Contact:

Johanna Romare
Societas Ethica
Centre for Applied Ethics
Linköping University
SE-581 83 Linköping
Sweden
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://www.societasethica.info




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