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Economic Justice

About: Economic Justice is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 41600 publications have been published within this topic receiving 661535 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is argued that while some ambiguity exists, the decisions of the UNFCCC provide a strong basis for a justice-oriented approach to adaptation finance, and in practice, adaptation finance has reflected developed country interests far more than the principles of justice adopted by Parties.
Abstract: Finance for developing countries to adapt to the adverse impacts of climate change now tops the international climate negotiation agenda. In this article, we first assess how adaptation finance came to the top of the agenda. Second, drawing upon Amartya Sen's (2010) “realization-focused comparison” theory of justice, we develop a definition of adaptation finance justice based upon the texts of the 1992 UNFCCC and its subsidiary bodies. From this perspective, we assess three main points of contention between countries on both sides of the North-South divide: The Gap in raising the funds, The Wedge in their distribution, and The Dodge in how they are governed. Overall, we argue that while some ambiguity exists, the decisions of the UNFCCC provide a strong basis for a justice-oriented approach to adaptation finance. However, in practice, adaptation finance has reflected developed country interests far more than the principles of justice adopted by Parties.

129 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The global Covid-19 pandemic has rapidly overwhelmed our societies, shocked the global economy and overburdened struggling health care systems and other social institutions around the world as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: The global Covid-19 pandemic has rapidly overwhelmed our societies, shocked the global economy and overburdened struggling health care systems and other social institutions around the world. While such impacts of Covid-19 are becoming clearer, the implications of the disease for energy and climate policy are more prosaic. This Special Section seeks to offer more clarity on the emerging connections between Covid-19 and energy supply and demand, energy governance, future low-carbon transitions, social justice, and even the practice of research methodology. It features articles that ask, and answer: What are the known and anticipated impacts of Covid-19 on energy demand and climate change? How has the disease shaped institutional responses and varying energy policy frameworks, especially in Africa? How will the disease impact ongoing social practices, innovations and sustainability transitions, including not only renewable energy but also mobility? How might the disease, and social responses to it, exacerbate underlying patterns of energy poverty, energy vulnerability, and energy injustice? Lastly, what challenges and insights does the pandemic offer for the practice of research, and for future research methodology? We find that without careful guidance and consideration, the brave new age wrought by Covid-19 could very well collapse in on itself with bloated stimulus packages that counter sustainability goals, misaligned incentives that exacerbate climate change, the entrenchment of unsustainable practices, and acute and troubling consequences for vulnerable groups.

129 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article explored the experiences of white college students as they make sense of their race and their roles in racial justice movements and found that college affects the development of racial justice allies, which may allow student affairs professionals to more effectively encourage this type of development.
Abstract: This paper explores the experiences of White college students as they make sense of their race and their roles in racial justice movements. Findings from two separate but related qualitative studies, when viewed together, result in an exploratory model of racial justice ally development. Racial justice allies are White students who actively work against the system of oppression that maintains their power. The model presented in this paper explores how college affects the development of racial justice allies, which may allow student affairs professionals to more effectively encourage this type of development.

129 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is revealed that distributive, procedural, and interactional (in)justice contribute to higher levels of knowledge hiding behavior among employees and that this impact is non-linear (asymmetric).

129 citations

Book
01 Jan 1987
TL;DR: The European Council: Looking Back to Look Forward as mentioned in this paper has a long history in the European Parliament and the Council of the European Council, and the role of the Presidency of the Council has been discussed extensively.
Abstract: PART I: THE EUROPEAN COUNCIL: OVERVIEW AND HISTORY 1. Introduction: The Many Faces of the European Council 2. Multiple Approaches for Understanding a Contested Institution: Three Models 3. Pre-History: the Birth of Institutionalised Summitry 4. History: Generations of Leaders and the Institutional Trajectory PART II: THE ROLE OF THE EUROPEAN COUNCIL WITHIN THE EU ARCHITECTURE 5. Political and Procedural Leadership: General Functions and Specific Powers 6. Towards a New Institutional Balance? Trends in Inter-Institutional Relations PART III: INSIDE THE EUROPEAN COUNCIL: THE DYNAMICS OF DECISION MAKING 7. The Presidency: Charismatic Master or Facilitating Manager? 8. Rules for Organisation: the Search for an Optimal Institutional Arrangement 9. Decision-Making: The Ways to Consensus Formation 10. Decision-Making: The Power Dimension PART IV: ACTIVITIES, AGREEMENTS AND ACTS 11. Deepening: The Constitutional Architect 12. Widening: The Master of Enlargement 13. Economic Governance: Towards a 'gouvernement economique'? 14. External Action: In Search of a Coherent and Effective Global Role 15. The Area of Freedom, Security and Justice: Pre-Constitutional and Pre-Legislative Functions PART V: CONCLUSIONS AND PERSPECTIVES: A KEY INSTITUTION'S RISE AND DECLINE? 16. The European Council: Looking Back to Look Forward

129 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202414
20233,633
20227,866
20211,595
20201,689
20191,729