
The Past Three Centuries Have Witnessed The Accumulation Of Unprecedented Levels Of Wealth And The Production Of Unprecedented Risks. These Risks Include The Declining Integrity And Stability Of Many Of The World's Environments, Which Face Dramatic And Possibly Irreversible Change As The Environmental Burdens Of Late Modern Lifestyles Increasingly Shift To Fragile Ecosystems, Vulnerable Communities, And Future Generations. Globalization Has Increased The Scope And Scale Of These Risks, As Well As The Pace Of Their Emergence. It Has Also Made Possible Global Environmental Governance, Attempts To Manage Risk By Unprecedented Numbers And Types Of Authoritative Agents, Including State And Non-state Actors At The Local, National, Regional, And Global Levels. In The Gardeners' Dirty Hands: Environmental Politics And Christian Ethics, Noah Toly Offers An Interpretation Of Environmental Governance That Draws Upon Insights Into The Tragic - The Need To Forego, Give Up, Undermine, Or Destroy One Or More Goods In Order To Possess Or Secure One Or More Other Goods. Toly Engages Christian And Classical Greek Ideas Of The Tragic To Illuminate The Enduring Challenges Of Environmental Politics. He Suggests That Christians Have Unique Resources For Responsible Engagement With Global Environmental Politics While Acknowledging The Need For Mutually Agreed, And Ultimately Normative, Restraints.
This book investigates how the concept of the tragic, drawn from Christian and classical Greek thought, informs the enduring challenges and ethical dilemmas inherent in global environmental governance. Noah J. Toly, an expert in urban and environmental studies, examines the tension between the accumulation of wealth and the production of environmental risks. He argues that environmental politics is fundamentally a series of tragic choices where securing certain goods necessitates the sacrifice of others, requiring a normative framework for responsible engagement.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and readers often note the book's sophisticated synthesis of theological ethics and political science. Experts highlight this as a significant contribution to the discourse on how normative values shape international environmental policy.
Page Count:
288
Publication Date:
2019-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190249439
ISBN-13:
9780190249434
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