this book is available from the British Library.
Names: Vanderheiden, Steve, author.
Title: Environmental political theory / Steve Vanderheiden.
Description: Cambridge, UK ; Medford, MA : Polity, 2020. | Includes bibliographical references and index. | Summary: “A systematic outline of how the environmental crisis is transforming political theory’s fundamental concepts”-- Provided by publisher.
Identifiers: LCCN 2020008758 (print) | LCCN 2020008759 (ebook) | ISBN 9781509529612 (hardback) | ISBN 9781509529629 (paperback) | ISBN 9781509529643 (epub)
Subjects: LCSH: Environmentalism--Political aspects. | Environmental policy. | Environmental ethics.
Classification: LCC JA75.8 .V36 2020 (print) | LCC JA75.8 (ebook) | DDC 320.01--dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2020008758
LC ebook record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2020008759
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Glossary
All words defined in this glossary are in bold at first occurrence in the text.
all-affected principle:under this principle, accountability binds decision makers to those affected by them by allowing the latter to hold the former to account in their decisionsAnthropocene:the proposed current geological age, characterized by human activity having a dominant influence on climate and the environmentbiotic community:group of organisms that interact with each other in an ecosystemcarbon offsets:reduction in carbon dioxide emissions to counterbalance emissions made elsewhere (for example, offsetting one’s emissions from airline travel by planting trees to sequester a comparable amount of carbon)carrying capacity:capacity of a system (usually measured in population size) to support life without ecological degradationchoice architecture:design of different ways of presenting choices in terms of the behaviors that they tend to yieldconsiderability:the status of being worthy of moral considerationconsumerism:a social and economic order that encourages the private acquisition and consumption of goods and services in continually increasing amountsdistributive justice:an account of justice that focuses on how laws, policies, and institutions result in unequal distributions of benefits and burdens in society, often including principles defining a just distributionecological modernization:a school of thought within the social sciences which maintains that economic growth can be reconciled with sustainability imperatives, typically through the use of efficient technologies and designecological steady-state:an economy with a constant stock of natural capital and stable population size that does not exceed the capacity of its ecosystem to sustainably yield resources and absorb wastes over timeepistemic authority:a type of authority or persuasive power vested in certain persons by virtue of their expertise (in contrast with democratic authority, which depends on claims to represent or be responsive to the people at large); lay persons may defer to the judgment of experts or otherwise attach undue weight to their opinions on prescriptive matters due to their knowledge claims on related factsethical holism:claim that wholes such as ecosystems have moral standing, apart from that of their individual membersexternality:unremunerated cost of economic exchange that is borne by neither buyer nor seller, but imposed on society at largefood security:according to the FAO, “food security exists when all people, at all times, have physical and economic access to sufficient, safe and nutritious food that meets their dietary needs and food preferences for an active and healthy life”global justice integrationists:following Caney, a global justice “isolationist” applies distributive justice principles to particular goods, like greenhouse emissions, while an “integrationist” refuses to do so, insisting that such principles can apply only to whole bundles of goods (social, political, economic, environmental), such that shortages of one kind of good can be compensated with more of anothergreen consumerism:movement or practice of buying “green” products or services in an effort to reform production processes through consumer demand, and thus to mitigate environmental degradationhuman exceptionalism:the belief that humans are categorically different from other animals in fact, typically used to justify differential status or treatment of nonhumanshuman security:protection of persons and peoples against serious threats, including violence and deprivationhumanitarian intervention:use of force by a state or coalition of states against another state for the purpose of protecting human rightsinstrumental value:value that we attribute to things in the world because of their potential to contribute to human welfare (in contrast with intrinsic value, which is when such things are viewed as valuable in themselves)international Paretianism:condition (cast by Posner & Weisbach as a constraint on international politics) in which an international agreement advances the interests of all state parties to it and no state is made worse off by itjurisdiction:practical authority to make legal decisions and administer justicelaissez faire:policy of governments to refrain from interfering in markets, e.g. through regulations to protect workers or the environmentland ethic:from Leopold’s A Sand County Almanac, the ethical principle that “a thing is right when it tends to preserve the integrity, stability, and beauty of the biotic community”nation:a community of people, when conscious of its unity, desire for autonomy, and shared interestsnecessitous migrants:forcibly displaced migrants, whether stateless due to fleeing violence or through loss of territory, who lack a practical ability to return to their territories of origin or recent residencenegative liberty:a conception in which persons are free from impediments posed by othersovershoot:temporary condition of a population exceeding its carry capacity, resulting in ecological degradation and consequent reductions to or collapse of that system’s carrying capacitypeoples:particular groups of persons that share features such as a common language or culture, historical residence of a place, or other distinguishing contributors to group identitypopular sovereignty:principle that state authority originates in, and continues to require, popular consentpositive liberty:requires that an individual have the power and resources to fulfill their potentialpostmaterial values:values not associated with physical or economic wellbeing; thought to manifest more strongly in persons or societies where material (i.e. related to physical or economic security) values have largely been metprior appropriation:principle that the earliest users of water for beneficial purposes have rights to continue using that water (key legal principle of water law in the American west)private sphere:domain of activity in which individual actions are considered private, to be protected from the interference of others (in contrast to the public sphere, which is properly subjected to political scrutiny)procedural legitimacy:quality of a political decision that issues from the processes by which it was made, yielding the belief by those bound by it that the decision is validPromethean:view (named for Prometheus from Greek mythology) that technological innovation would allow humans to overcome ecological limits, making resources practically abundantremedial