Ubuntu through Umuntu: Balancing Ecological Justice and Social Justice in Nature Conservation
Summary
As biodiversity is rapidly declining conservationists call for drastic change. Proposals to give
a significant share of the earth's surface to nature gain support, despite the social justice
concerns they are associated with. Conservationists argue that justice scholars should be more
concerned with ecological justice (justice for nature) anyway. They claim that we should
prioritise ecological justice over social justice in nature conservation. The ethics of ubuntu
offers insights that challenge this claim. In my thesis, I will therefore question: From a
relational ubuntu ethics perspective, should we prioritise ecological justice over social justice
to avert environmental destruction? In two arguments I will set out why we should not
prioritise ecological justice over social justice. First, argue that ubuntu shows that we cannot
live in harmony with nature unless we critically reflect on our conception of social and
ecological justice to make them compatible. Secondly, I argue following the ubuntu logic that
a well-developed sense of social justice combined with engagement with nature allows us to
develop a sense of ecological justice, which underlines an important connection between
ecological and social justice. These arguments add and give relevance to the social justice
concerns about plans to designate significant parts of the earth solely to nature.