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Reconsidering Reparations: Worldmaking in the Case of Climate Crisis

Part of the PHILOSOPHY OF RACE SERIES series
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Reparations for slavery have become a reinvigorated topic for public debate over the last decade. Most theorizing about reparations treats it as a social justice project - either rooted in reconciliatory justice focused on making amends in the present; or, they focus on the past, emphasizing restitution for historical wrongs.

Olúfemi O. Táìwò argues that neither approach is optimal, and advances a different case for reparations - one rooted in ahopeful future that tackles the issue of climate change head on, with distributive justice at its core.

This view, which he calls the "constructive" view of reparations, argues that reparations should be seen as a future-oriented project engaged in building a better social order; and that the costs of building a moreequitable world should be distributed more to those who have inherited the moral liabilities of past injustices.

This approach to reparations, as Táìwò shows, has deep and surprising roots in the thought of Black political thinkers such as James Baldwin, Martin Luther King Jr, and Nkechi Taifa, as well as mainstream political philosophers like John Rawls, Charles Mills, and Elizabeth Anderson.

Táìwò's project has wide implications for our views of justice, racism, the legacy of colonialism, and climate change policy.

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Product Details
Oxford University Press
0197508901 / 9780197508909
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
26/10/2021
United States
English
261 pages
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