经济发展与环境正义:残酷的难题还是共生关系?(我们可以有B计划,但没有B星球!)

Q2 Social Sciences
Abhishek Kumar
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引用次数: 0

摘要

美国政治哲学家、哈佛大学教授迈克尔·桑德尔(Michael Sandel)有一句名言:“正义不仅仅是分配事物的正确方式。它还涉及到正确评估事物的方式。在当今以经济为中心的全球化世界中,人类已经忘记了环境和野生动物对我们生活的真正价值。环境破坏和野生动物犯罪是今天的“公地悲剧”,我们对它的冷漠只会导致我们自我毁灭。这种做法可以被称为人类毁灭竞赛中的一个标志。人类的悲剧不仅在于环境破坏和野生动物犯罪是当今的现实,而且还在于我们自己不知道环境破坏和野生动物犯罪首先发生在人类身上。环境破坏的影响不再是研究假设的主题;相反,这些假设试图衡量它的大小。2016年的头条是“最高法院称,发展比老虎更重要”,这让许多人感到惊讶和担忧,原因很简单,即使是寻求正义的“最后手段”,也同意政府关于发展比环境更重要的论点。历届政府,无论是中央政府还是各邦政府,都一直认为印度是一个发展中国家,大约22%的人口仍然处于贫困状态,为了使他们摆脱贫困,国家需要建立基础设施,创造就业机会,促进工业化等等,不幸的是,所有这些发展活动都会对环境和野生动物产生一些负面影响。政府有义务消除贫困,这是无可争议的,但环境破坏能成为一种负担吗
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Economic Development and Environmental Justice: Cruel Conundrum or Symbiotic Relationship? (We Can Have Plan B, but No Planet B!)
An American political philosopher and Harvard University professor, Michael Sandel, famously remarked that “Justice is not only about the right way to distribute things. It is also about the rightway to value things.”1 In today’s globalized economiccentric world, humans have forgotten the real value of the environment and wildlife to our life. Environmental destruction and wildlife crimes are today’s “tragedy of the commons,” and our apathy towards it would lead us only to self-destruction. This approach can be termed as a signature in the race to human destruction. The human tragedy is not merely that environmental destruction and wildlife crimes are a de trop reality of today, but also that we ourselves do not know that environmental destruction and wildlife crimes are something that happens to humankind in the first place. The impact of environmental destruction is no longer a subject matter of research hypotheses; rather, such hypotheses attempt to measure its magnitude. It was the 2016 headline reading “Development More Important Than Tigers, Supreme Court Says”2 that raised eyebrows and concerned many for the simple reason that even the “last resort” to get justice (read environmental justice here) is agreeing with the government’s argument of development over the environment. The successive governments, both at the Centre and the states, have always argued that India is a developing nation with somewhat 22 percent of its population still under the garb of poverty,3 and in order to bring them out of poverty, the state needs to create basic infrastructure, generate employment, promote industrialization, etc., and all these development activities, unfortunately, will have some negative impacts on the environment and wildlife. It is a non-debateable obligation on the part of the government to eradicate poverty, but can environmental destruction be a
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
14
期刊介绍: Drawing upon the findings from island biogeography studies, Norman Myers estimates that we are losing between 50-200 species per day, a rate 120,000 times greater than the background rate during prehistoric times. Worse still, the rate is accelerating rapidly. By the year 2000, we may have lost over one million species, counting back from three centuries ago when this trend began. By the middle of the next century, as many as one half of all species may face extinction. Moreover, our rapid destruction of critical ecosystems, such as tropical coral reefs, wetlands, estuaries, and rainforests may seriously impair species" regeneration, a process that has taken several million years after mass extinctions in the past.
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