dc.description.abstract | In this thesis I will examine how we should treat blameworthy polluters in our efforts to
tackle climate change. I will argue for a clearer distinction between blameless and
blameworthy pollution and a harsher treatment for these blameworthy polluters. This implies,
among other things, that current burden-sharing principles and proposals are insufficient for
not adequately doing so. These findings will inform a new principle for ethical climate
change policy: the Polluter is Prosecuted and Penalized Principle (PPPP). This principle
defends the view that those who are blameworthy of polluting should be prosecuted and
penalized.
Furthermore, while arguing for the PPPP, I will make the case for utilizing the criminal law
when dealing with blameworthy polluters. I will defend a communitarian justification of
criminal law and conclude that we should use the criminal law much more ambitiously. This
means that we should see many more climate complaints on both a global and local level, and
that we should integrate the criminal law in global climate change conventions built around
fair principles, among which the PPPP.
By arguing for a harsher treatment for blameworthy polluters and a larger role for the
criminal law with regards to tackling climate change, I aim to show that we should reframe
how we see pollution. Pollution in our current times is not a regrettable side effect, nor
something that you can compensate your way out of, but a crime worth prosecuting and
penalizing. | |
dc.subject.keywords | Polluter is Prosecuted and Penalized Principle (PPPP), Polluter Pays Principle (PPP), climate justice, blameworthy pollution, environmental ethics, climate change policy, criminal liability, mens rea, voluntariness condition, communitarian criminal law, historical justice, moral responsibility, burden-sharing, climate litigation, climate governance, international environmental law, prosecution of environmental crimes, excusable ignorance, global justice, intergenerational justice, intentionality in pollution, environmental harm, ethical burden distribution | |