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Book ChapterDOI

Sustainable Development and the Agenda of Global Social Justice

TLDR
In this paper, the authors focus on the interdependency of social justice/environmental justice and sustainability even when sustainability is framed as green environment and social justice focuses on the brown social agenda of poverty reduction.
Abstract
This chapter explores the concept of “just sustainability”. The notions of “sustainability” and “social justice” share the common agenda of conservation of nature. As per the Brundtland report, sustainability is conceived as a test of humanity’s ability to meet “the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs”. However, there are different paradigms of sustainability in the literature, namely the “green” or environmental agenda and the “social justice” focused “brown” or poverty reduction agenda. While the more immediate focus of social justice and/or environmental justice (both social justice and environmental justice focus on distributive conceptions of justice: human security issues related to justice, equity, human rights, and poverty reduction, and so on) is intragenerational, the more pressing focus of sustainability is intergenerational. The agendas of “social justice” and “sustainability” thus seem to be conflicting. In this chapter, I focus on the interdependency of social justice/environmental justice and “sustainability” even when sustainability is framed as green environment and social justice focuses on the brown social agenda of poverty reduction. The paper builds on the argument that unless global social justice (intragenerational access) is ensured under a fair social and institutional arrangement, the relationship of economic growth with sustainable development will always remain contentious and sustainable development will remain a mere ideal. I conclude that organisations and institutions must explore the common ground between justice and sustainability.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Discourses on the Natural Environment in North Korea: Changing Regime Dynamics in the 1990s

TL;DR: For example, during the mid- and late 1990s in North Korea, a period marked by the "Arduous March", discourse shifted from "conquering" the natural environment to "rationally using and protecting" it.
References
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Book ChapterDOI

Poverty and Wealth

TL;DR: As a discipline, psychology has not been afraid to cross boundaries and examine the phenomena that are central to other disciplines Cross-cultural psychology examines issues of interest to anthropologists; clinical psychologists and psychiatrists are often interested in the same thing; while mathematical psychology could be seen almost as a branch of mathematics Educational psychologists, counselling psychologists, military psychologists and medical psychologists are interested in behavior in settings occupied by other experts as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Alternatives for Community and Environment: Where Justice and Sustainability Meet

Julian Agyeman
- 01 Jul 2005 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, Alternatives for Community and Environment: Where Justice and Sustainability Meet, the authors present a set of alternatives for community and environment where justice and sustainability meet.
Journal ArticleDOI

Toward a Holistic Approach to the Ideal of Sustainability

TL;DR: The concept of sustainable development has evolved considerably since first arising during the 1980s as discussed by the authors, and different currents of social, political, economic and ecological thinking have been isolated efforts to define the content and scope of the notion of sustainability, each from its distinct perspective.
Journal ArticleDOI

Global economy, justice and sustainability

TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on the relationship between justice and sustainability, and argue that sustainability itself is about sustaining inter alia justice, and that justice itself requires intergenerationally the sustaining of the conditions of a good life for all.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Ethicist Conception of Environmental Problems

B. Dickson
- 01 May 2000 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyze and criticise these claims and argue that both the highly mediated nature of the relationship between individuals and the natural environment and the pervasive pressure on firms in market economies to reduce their costs provide reasons to question the ethicist assumptions.
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