Lexington Books
Pages: 181
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-1-4985-8667-2 • Hardback • July 2019 • $111.00 • (£85.00)
978-1-4985-8669-6 • Paperback • March 2022 • $41.99 • (£35.00)
978-1-4985-8668-9 • eBook • July 2019 • $39.50 • (£30.00)
Daniel Edward Callies is postdoctoral scholar at the University of California, San Diego’s Institute for Practical Ethics.
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: Research
Chapter 3: Deployment
Chapter 4: Legitimacy
Chapter 5: Substantive Justice
Chapter 6: Procedural Justice
Chapter 7: Conclusion
Bibliography
This book discusses the ethics and politics of geoengineering, an engineering approach for deliberately manipulating Earth's climate for the purpose of counteracting man-made global warming. Author Callies is currently a postdoctoral scholar at the Institute for Practical Ethics (Univ. of California, San Diego). Specifically, the text focuses on one approach: stratospheric aerosol injection (SAI), which has been proposed as a means to reflect solar radiation back to space and hence to reduce the amount of heat that the Earth receives. Callies advocates support for continued research in this area, but under strict scrutiny of the relevant regulatory institutions. The challenge that this book considers: the ethics behind a particular engineering idea, and whether research on that subject should be encouraged or even allowed, represents a common enough critique that has been applied in many other contexts (as in the case of, for example, gene editing). Still, researchers and professionals interested in climate change may well benefit from the present elaboration of arguments for and against a particular geoengineering idea, considered from the point of view of ethics and world environmental justice. The book reads easily, requires no background to follow, and is supported by state-of-the-art references. Summing Up: Recommended. Graduate students, faculty, and professionals. General readers.
— Choice Reviews
Daniel Callies offers a comprehensive and clear discussion of the normative issues in solar radiation management research and governance. He does it with care and enormous sophistication. As policy makers come to terms with the consequences of the weak global response to the urgent need to bring CO2 emissions rapidly down to zero, discussions of climate engineering will grow in frequency and intensity. Callies's book should be the go-to book for the morality of one kind of climate engineering, solar radiation management. It is a truly excellent example of the tools moral and political philosophy applied to one of the most important issues of our time.— Darrel Moellendorf, Goethe University Frankfurt
This is the book to read if you care about the ethics of geoengineering – Daniel Callies dives deep into academic philosophy yet returns with a lucid book that should interest a broad audience.— David Keith, Harvard University