Reconceiving the good life : the key to sustainable globalisation


Autoria(s): Sampford, Charles
Data(s)

09/02/2009

Resumo

Resource-intensive, high-carbon, Western lifestyles are frequently criticised as unsustainable and deeply unsatisfying. However, these lifestyles are still attractive to the majority of Westerners and to a high proportion of the developing world’s middle classes. This paper argues that the imminent threat of catastrophic climate change constitutes an immediate political, economic and ethical challenge for citizens of the developed world that cannot be tackled by appeals to asceticism or restraint. There can be no solution to climate change until sustainable conceptions of the good life are developed that those in the west want to live and which others might want to live. While the ultimate solution to climate change is the development of low carbon lifestyles, it is important that government initiatives, governance arrangements and economic incentives support rather than undermine that search. Like the global financial crisis, the climate change crisis also demonstrates what happens when weaknesses in national, corporate and professional governance are exacerbated by weaknesses in global governance. In tackling the latter, it is critical the mistakes now evidenced in the former are avoided – including a rethinking of carbon market and carbon tax alternatives. It is also critical that individuals must take responsibility for their actions as consumers, voters and investors.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/43380/

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/43380/1/Sampford-Reconceiving-the-Good-Life-HL.pdf

http://www.griffith.edu.au/criminology-law/griffith-social-behavioural-research/news-and-events/good-life-conference2

Sampford, Charles (2009) Reconceiving the good life : the key to sustainable globalisation. In The Good Life Conference, 12 February 2009, Griffith University, Brisbane, Qld. (Unpublished)

Direitos

Copyright 2009 Charles Sampford

Fonte

Faculty of Law; Law and Justice Research Centre; School of Law

Palavras-Chave #220100 APPLIED ETHICS #Social responsibility #ethics
Tipo

Conference Paper