Environmental Reform, Negative Duties, and Petrocrats: A Strategic Green Energy Argument

Date

2015

Authors

Nili, Shmuel

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Publisher

University of Chicago Press

Abstract

This article constructs an argument for the development of green energy that can appeal to Americans moderately skeptical of climate change. Accepting—arguendo and in a qualified way—key empirical and normative assumptions of American environmental skeptics, I make two main moves. First, while environmentalists often justify the development of green energy through references to future generations, I try to show that they need a present-oriented argument focused on negative duties to respect rights in order to justify prioritizing the development of green energy to environmental skeptics in the United States. Second, I construct such an argument, calling on affluent democracies to develop green energy in order to be able to stop their complicity, through oil trade, in petrocrats’ violation of their peoples’ property rights. I anticipate multiple objections, including the objection that stopping trade with petrocrats will not lead to green energy as a replacement.

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Source

Journal of Politics

Type

Journal article

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Access Statement

Open Access

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Restricted until