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  1. Addressing more-than-human care through Yorùbá environmental ethics.Aanuoluwapo Fifebo Sunday - forthcoming - Environmental Values.
    This article presents more-than-human care ethics from a Yorùbá (African) perspective with a focus on water in Yorùbá belief. The view I develop in this article to show beyond human care, how nature cares for itself is encapsulated in the notion of ‘mutual courteousness’. The article demonstrates that this mutual courteousness approach engrained in Yorùbá ontology, epistemology, and axiology possesses a sound possibility for enabling the overhauling of our understanding of conservation towards seeing it as a more-than-human process. This shared (...)
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  • African Environmental Ethics: Keys to Sustainable Development Through Agroecological Villages.George Middendorf, Joseph Fortunak, Bekele Gutema, Enrico Wensing, John Tharakan, Flordeliz Bugarin & Charles Verharen - 2021 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 34 (3):1-18.
    This essay proposes African-based ethical solutions to profound human problems and a working African model to address those problems. The model promotes sustainability through advanced agroecological and information communication technologies. The essay’s first section reviews the ethical ground of that model in the work of the Senegalese scholar, Cheikh Anta Diop. The essay’s second section examines an applied African model for translating African ethical speculation into practice. Deeply immersed in European and African ethics, Godfrey Nzamujo developed the Songhaï Centers to (...)
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  • Expanding health justice to consider the environment: how can bioethics avoid reinforcing epistemic injustice?Bridget Pratt - 2023 - Journal of Medical Ethics 49 (9):642-648.
    We are in the midst of a global crisis of climate change and environmental degradation to which the healthcare sector directly contributes. Yet conceptions of health justice have little to say about the environment. They purport societies should ensure adequate health for their populations but fail to require doing so in ways that avoid environmental harm or injustice. We need to expand our understanding of health justice to consider the environment and do so without reinforcing the epistemic injustice inherent in (...)
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  • The relevance of connecting sustainable agricultural development with African philosophy.Birgit K. Boogaard - 2019 - South African Journal of Philosophy 38 (3):273-286.
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  • African Environmental Ethics and Its Ontological Foundations.Franziska Dübgen - 2024 - Yearbook for Eastern and Western Philosophy 7 (1):110-123.
    The article carves out a tripartite ontology and related cosmological views, prevalent in many African philosophical accounts, and shows their significance for environmental ethics. It presents distinct cultural practices towards non-human animals and the environment such as totemism, taboos, and the sacralization of natural sites. In a next step, the author identifies specific moral principles that can be derived from this complex ontology and its related cultural practices, such as sufficiency, care, and sharing. This approach in environmental ethics can be (...)
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