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This interdisciplinary book brings philosophers and non-philosophers to the table to address questions of water ethics, specifically in terms of how moral questions inform decision making around water security at local, national, and international scales. Water security, which pertains to the experience of assured access to clean water, is a broad concept that intersects human rights, politics, economics, law, legislation, public health, trade, agriculture, and energy. Decisions made at each of these intersection points have ramifications for human well being, especially for the populations that are marginalized in a societal and political sense. In this book, the ethical dimensions of decision-making at those intersection points are explored, and real-world examples are used to tease out some key insights. It charts how ethical consideration can help shape a future in which everyone will be water secure.
Provides a clear, non-specialist introduction to key concepts in the newly-emerging area of water ethics Links philosophical theory with actual, contemporary case studies For the first time, links issues of water ethics to challenges of resource and environmental security
Auteur
Ingrid Leman Stefanovic is an author and consultant in environmental and institutional change management. A former professor and dean of the Faculty of Environment at Simon Fraser University, Vancouver, Canada, she is also professor emerita, Department of Philosophy, University of Toronto, where she spent the majority of her career teaching and conducting research on how values and perceptions affect public policy, planning, and environmental decision making. Dr Stefanovic has served as executive co-director of the International Association for Environmental Philosophy and senior scholar at the Center for Humans & Nature, Chicago and New York. Recent books include Safeguarding Our Common Future: Rethinking Sustainable Development, the co-edited volume The Natural City: Re-Envisioning the Built Environment and The Wonder of Water: Lived Experience, Policy and Practice.
Zafar Adeel is the Executive Director PWRC and Professor of Professional Practice at SFU. His 25-year work experience covers a range of environmental and policy issues, including 18 years as a senior UN official.
Contenu
Acknowledgements.- Preface.- Introduction.- I. Understanding Water Ethics .- Introduction.- Chapter 1. Valuing Water (Ingrid Leman Stefanovic and Clifford Atleo).- Chapter 2. Water and Ecological Ethics in the Anthropocene (Bruce Jennings and Kathryn Gwiazd).- Chapter3. Contextualizing a Human Rights Perspective for Water Ethics: From Exploitation to Empowerment and Beyond (Alex Wellington).- Chapter 4. Uses of Feminist Eco-criticism for Water Policy (Annette Louise Bickford).- Chapter 5. Water, Stakeholder Values, and Decision Making (Bruce Morito).- II. Place-based Challenges .- Introduction.- Chapter 6. The Ethics of Blue Urbanism (Timothy Beatley).- Chapter 7. Water Security Challenges in the Canadian Arctic (Andrew Medeiros and Alannah Niemeyer).- Chapter 8. First Nations, Traditional Knowledge, and Water Ethics (Deborah McGregor).- Chapter 9. Water Ethics in the Middle East (Ilmas Futehally).- Chapter 10. The Ethics of Water Securitization: Understanding the 1999 Bombing Campaign in Kosovo (James Horncastle).- III. Contemporary Water Ethics: Policy and Decision Making .-Introduction.- Chapter 11. Water Pricing: A Strategy for Rights Fulfillment or Rights Violation (Kerry Ellen O'Neill).- Chapter 12. Ethics of Infrastructure Reinvestment (Rebecca Dziedzic).- Chapter 13. Philosophical Issues in Water Law (Graham Mayeda).- Chapter 14. Ideas, Values, and Ethics: Integrating a Values-based Approach into Water Policy in Canada (Carolyn Johns).- Chapter 15. Streams of Consciousness: New Demands on Philosophy and Water Policy in a Crowded World (Deborah Harford).- Chapter 16. Ethical Dimensions of the Water-related International Development Agenda Zafar Adeel.- Conclusion .- Chapter 17. Ethics of Shaping Water Futures (Ingrid Leman Stefanovic and Zafar Adeel).-