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  1. Preference transformation through ‘green political judgement formation’? Rethinking informal deliberative citizen participation processes.Carolin Bohn - 2021 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 24 (5):761-778.
    The focus on deliberation as a central principle represents a common denominator between republican and deliberative theories of democracy (White, 2008, p. 9f). Both proponents of the ‘deliberative...
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  • Freedom and ecological limits.Jorge Pinto - 2021 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 24 (5):676-692.
    Ecological sustainability is essential in order to ensure human flourishing and human freedom.1 There is a scientific consensus regarding the anthropogenic origin of the activities leading to diffe...
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  • Preference transformation through ‘green political judgement formation’? Rethinking informal deliberative citizen participation processes.Carolin Bohn - 2021 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 24 (5):761-778.
    The focus on deliberation as a central principle represents a common denominator between republican and deliberative theories of democracy (White, 2008, p. 9f). Both proponents of the ‘deliberative...
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  • Freedom and ecological limits.Jorge Pinto - 2019 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 24 (5):676-692.
    The need for ecological sustainability has been translated into different indicators such as the ‘ecological footprint’ and the ‘planetary boundaries’. Analysis of both concepts concludes that the planet is currently undergoing a period of ecological unsustainability. For this reason, ecologists argue that various limits are required in order to move to a path of sustainability. The implementation of such limits has mostly been analysed from the perspectives of environmental rights and environmental justice, however research in terms of freedom is (surprisingly) (...)
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  • Resilience as a Political Ideal.Avery Kolers - 2016 - Ethics, Policy and Environment 19 (1):91-107.
    “Resilience” is booming. No longer a mere metaphor or abstract reference to dispositional properties, the resilience of communities or social-ecological systems is increasingly grounded in specific first-order properties. Consequently, resilience now constitutes a contentful and achievable partial conception of a good society. Yet political philosophers have taken little notice. The current article first discerns within recent social-scientific literature a set of attainable and measurable first-order properties that constitute “community resilience” or “ecological resilience.” Then, specifying “resilience” as the resilience of high-HDI (...)
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  • Introduction: Climate change and liberal priorities.Gideon Calder & Catriona McKinnon - 2011 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 14 (2):91-97.
    Is liberalism adaptable enough to the ecological agenda to deal satisfactorily with the challenges of anthropogenic climate change while leaving its normative foundations intact? Compatibilists answer yes; incompatibilists say no. Comparing such answers, this article argues that it is not discrete liberal principles which impede adapatability, so much as the constructivist model (exemplified in Rawls) of what counts as a valid normative principle. Constructivism has both normative and ontological variants, each with a realist counterpart. I argue that normative constructivism in (...)
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