Sustainability as Opportunity
This paper explores the relationship between sustainability concepts and contractarian principles of distributional fairness. A commitment to equality of opportunity between contemporaries entails that life opportunities should be nondiminishing from generation to generation. Defining sustainability as nondeclining utility is analytically suggestive but practically problematic given the uncertainties that surround future preferences and technologies. Life opportunities may be sustained, however, by providing future generations with specific endowments of reproduced capital, technological capacity, natural resources, and environmental quality. In this setting, capital-resource substitutions are defensible only if there is compelling evidence that they would benefit both present and future generations.
Year of publication: |
1997
|
---|---|
Authors: | Howarth, Richard B. |
Published in: |
Land Economics. - University of Wisconsin Press. - Vol. 73.1997, 4
|
Publisher: |
University of Wisconsin Press |
Saved in:
Online Resource
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
The Social Contingency of Wants Implications for Growth and the Environment
Brekke, Kjell Arne, (1998)
-
Are there Social Limits to Growth?
Brekke, Kjell Arne, (1998)
-
Status Preferences and Economic Growth
Howarth, Richard B., (1998)
- More ...