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Damages

About: Damages is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 9365 publications have been published within this topic receiving 89750 citations. The topic is also known as: compensation award.


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26 Nov 2014
TL;DR: The directive 2014/104/UE du Parlement europeen et du Conseil du 26 novembre 2014 relative a certaines regles regissant les actions en dommages and interets en droit interne for les infractions aux…
Abstract: La directive 2014/104/UE du Parlement europeen et du Conseil du 26 novembre 2014 relative a certaines regles regissant les actions en dommages et interets en droit interne pour les infractions aux…

22 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on losses and damages associated with urban drought and water insecurity through a review of interventions and policies in seven Asian countries and find evidence of urban droughts leading to tangible losses (e.g., groundwater over-extraction, economic impacts) and intangible losses such as conflict, increased drudgery).

22 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that historical emissions should count for the fair distribution of the benefits and burdens of responding to climate change among currently living people, if and insofar as their consequences can be considered beneficial to currently living and future people.
Abstract: This Article argues for three ways in which historical emissions should count for the fair distribution of the benefits and burdens of responding to climate change among currently living people. First, historical emissions should count as a matter of ideal distributive justice if and insofar as their consequences can be considered beneficial to currently living and future people. Second, it is difficult to justify compensatory measures for damages caused by historical emissions for three main reasons: the non-identity problem, past people's limited knowledge of the long-term consequences of the emissions they caused, and the problem of attributing responsibility for past people's actions to currently living people. Rather than regarding climate damages primarily as a reason for compensation for wrongdoing, we should view them primarily as a justification for redistribution due to undeserved benefits and harms. Third, historical emissions play an important role informing the expectation of people in the developed countries to be able to cause emissions at the current level. If we were in a position to implement a fair, effective and legitimately imposed global climate regime we should not unnecessarily frustrate that expectation.Table of ContentsI. Introduction 598II. How Should We Distribute Emissions? 599A. How to Distribute Emissions? Three Presuppositions 599B. How to Distribute Emissions Ahistorically 601C. Accounting for Historical Emissions in the Distribution of Emission Rights 603III. Claims to Compensation Owing to Climate Damages? 609IV. Conclusion 614I. INTRODUCTIONIntergenerational justice, namely, what currently living people owe to future people and the question of how to interpret the normative significance of what past people did,1 is of central importance in providing an interpretation of what ought to be done to respond to climate change in the present. Answers to questions concerning the past and the future are relevant for determining what currently living people ought to do today. In the climate-justice debate, the time dimensions past, present, and future are interlinked in interesting ways.This Article addresses two questions: First, how should we take into account historical emissions and their beneficial consequences in initially distributing emission rights among currently living people? I will argue first, in Section II, that as a matter of ideal distributive justice, historical emissions should count if and insofar as their consequences can be interpreted as beneficial to currendy living and future people. In their book Climate Change Justice, Eric A. Posner and David Weisbach do not address this issue.2My second question concerns who should pay for the damages that are caused by (historical) emissions, especially assuming that people (taken individually and collectively) have not stayed and will not stay within their fair shares. In Section III, I agree with Posner and Weisbach in arguing that compensation payments are difficult to justify, given the reasons they discuss in Chapter 5 of Climate Change Justice? Insofar as arguments actually succeed in justifying some compensatory measures, they are likely only to justify them for parts of those who cause or suffer from climate change. However, I add what I take to be an important reason for believing that the compensatory rationale is limited in the case of intergenerational relations: to the extent that the contingency of future people's existence and personal identity depend upon currendy living people's decisions and actions, common notions of harming and benefitting are not applicable for interpreting die effects of these actions. …

21 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the role of natural resources depletion and environmental damages in sustainable development of the country is highlighted and the uncertainties and how Malaysia would be able to implement more accurate Green GDP in future were also discussed.
Abstract: sustainability could be implemented with adjustments in calculations. This paper aims to calculate the Green GDP for Malaysia. This measure will almost give policy makers a more arguable estimate for the area of environmental challenges. This paper highlights the role of natural resources depletion and environmental damages in sustainable development of the country. Green GDP is associated with some uncertainties such as lack of comprehensive calculations in estimating data and difficulties in setting the price of natural resources. These uncertainties and how Malaysia would be able to implement more accurate Green GDP in future were also discussed.

21 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors illustrate the direct cost components of various climate policies, and then confront them with the benefits generated, that is, the damage cost avoided, and explore how to use this criterion in the context of international climate cooperation.
Abstract: That climate policies are costly is evident and therefore often creates major fears. But the alternative (no action) also has a cost. Mitigation costs and damages incurred depend on what the climate policies are; moreover, they are substitutes. This brings climate policies naturally in the realm of benefit-cost analysis. In this paper we illustrate the “direct” cost components of various policies, and then confront them with the benefits generated, that is, the damage cost avoided. However, the sheer benefit-cost criterion is not a sufficient incentive to induce cooperation among countries, a necessary condition for an effective global climate policy. Thus, we also explore how to use this criterion in the context of international climate cooperation.

21 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20242
2023929
20221,943
2021234
2020340
2019324