Acknowledgements
Introduction
Chapter One: Can we act unjustly towards the future?
Chapter Two: How much do we owe the future?
Chapter Three: What do we owe the future?
Chapter Four: What are our climate duties to the future?
Chapter Five: Can policies be legitimate towards the future?
Conclusion
Notes
References
Index
Axel Gosseries heads the Hoover Chair in Economic and Social Ethics, University of Louvain.
“There are few more important issues than intergenerational
justice. Axel Gosseries’s wonderfully clear book provides an
invaluable map of this complex terrain, which ranges from the
duties we have toward our successors to mitigate climate change, to
the puzzles raised by appeals to intergenerational fairness when
dealing with a pandemic, and to the fact that we make decisions for
the sake of people who do not yet exist and thus do not have a say
over what we do on their behalf. A must read.”
Cecile Fabre, All Souls College, University of Oxford
“A much-needed book written with care and lucidity. Gosseries
demystifies philosophical thinking about intergenerational justice,
showing its importance for next steps in the fight against
injustice. A compelling read for anyone who cares about what we owe
to future people.”
Catriona McKinnon, University of Exeter
“Using very clear language capable of simplifying such a complex
topic, [Axel Gosseries] manages to make this book on future
generations and justice accessible both to those with a
philosophical background and to those without. The book is
praiseworthy in more respects than I could manage to convey with a
review …”
Zeitschrift für Ethik und Moralphilosophie
“Axel Gosseries takes stock of the intergenerational justice
research with mastery, precision and clarity, also pointing to
future research directions … A major analytical rigour is combined
with writing smoothness that makes for pleasant reading. I think
anyone interested in intergenerational justice can benefit
significantly from this book.”
Fausto Corvino, Notizie di Politeia
“[A] splendid book. It provides an introduction to the topic of
intergenerational justice that is accessible and an excellent guide
to someone unfamiliar with the issues. At the same time it has much
of interest to those who are well versed in these debates. It has
rich and illuminating discussions of, among other things, what
principles of justice should govern how people treat future
generations, environmental sustainability, climate change, and the
implications of our impacts on future people for ideals of
democratic legitimacy and normative theorizing about institutional
design.”
Simon Caney, Journal of Practical Ethics
“[A] concise and tightly argued overview of the vexing issues
intergenerational justice raises, particularly when we are dealing
with nonoverlapping birth cohorts. … [A]n ideal introduction for
those who wish to learn about the topic for the first time but also
a rewarding read for well-acquainted readers.”
Goran Duus-Otterstrom, Journal of Practical Ethics
"[Gosseries’] endeavour to keep his arguments comprehensible to a
general audience without detracting from the book’s nuance, thereby
illuminating his ideas with a wide array of plausible examples,
might be the most applaudable achievement of What is
Intergenerational Justice? The book’s helpful structure … as well
as an accessible presentation of its theory of intergenerational
justice leave the reader with an ample understanding of the
philosophical issues surrounding the notion … the study addresses
the topic at the core of contemporary debates about
intergenerational justice in a constructive and practical manner,
thereby further supporting the author’s petition for the relevancy
and necessity of philosophy for current crises."
Helene Weinbrenner, Intergenerational Justice Review
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