Intergenerational Responsibility: Historical Emissions and Climate Change Adaptation
Abstract
It is widely held that climate change requires that we engage in strategies of adaptation as well as mitigation, but the normative questions surrounding justice in adaptation remains insufficiently investigated. This paper asks, from a presumption that climate change adaptation presents burdens which needs to be fairly distributed between states, what a fair way of allocating remedial responsibility for adaptation would look like. A number of principles are analyzed, some of which attach normative weight to causal contribution to the problem and others not. The conclusion is that none of the suggestions prevalent in the literature is without profound problems, but a promising path for the future is to construct pluralistic models of justice which are sensitive to both a state’s level of pollution and its ability to pay. The paper ends, however, by predicting that while adaptation from a normative standpoint is an other-regarding duty, actual future adaptations regimes are likely to be market-based. Particularly likely is an insurance-based regime, according to which each state is expected to fend for its own protection.
Link to web site
http://qog.pol.gu.se/digitalAssets/1350/1350638_2007_4_jagers_duus-otterstrom.pdf
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Date
2007-10Author
Jagers, Sverker C.
Duus-Otterström, Göran
Keywords
mitigation
adaptation
climate change
justice
causal responsibility
remedial responsibility
polluter pays principle
the ability to pay principle
insurance
ISSN
1653-8919
Series/Report no.
Working Papers
2007:04
Language
eng