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Dickson Kanakulya. On Ethical Sustainability. Objectives. Generate the notion of ethical sustainability (ES) Explain its contribution to sustainability discourse Discuss the nature of ES and its elements Explain the constituent principles that form the pillars of ES
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Dickson Kanakulya On Ethical Sustainability
Objectives • Generate the notion of ethical sustainability (ES) • Explain its contribution to sustainability discourse • Discuss the nature of ES and its elements • Explain the constituent principles that form the pillars of ES • Generate feedback from audience on direction of the notion that is being generated
Quotes from Einstein “we cant solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them”. From: (1934) My World View (Mein Weltbild) “Without ‘ethical culture,’ there is no salvation for humanity.” From: “The Need for Ethical Culture”, January 5,1951
Main problem • Our current political, economic and social development systems are unsustainable. • Indicators the problem: • Climate change • Extinction of natural organisms • Irreversible environmental damage • New and complicated health problems – viruses, epidemics, cancers, etc • Collapse of ecological systems e.g. bee colonies (in the US) • Collapse of social and political systems e.g. refugee crisis; failure of traditional social safety-nets, etc
Main questions • How do we realize sustainable political and social systems and processes for sustainable development? • How would we effectively incorporate ethics in sustainability discourse? • What would characterize ethically sustainable political, social and development systems and processes?
Suggested Causes and failure of proposed solutions • Anthropocentric industrialization (19th century) • Misguided pursuit of economic growth • Irreversible scientific and high-tech engineering of nature Failure of suggested solutions: • IMFs Structural Adjustment Programmes – SAPs (economistic thinking failed) • 1980s Reforestation & Green movement (more forest cover is being depleted each day) • Carbon-trade system ???
Underlying assumptions of problems What are the underlying assumptions of those problems? • Self-interested rationality • “Survival-of-the-fittest” logic • Naturalistic reductionism
Recent observations • That there are complex natural and social systems that are irreducible (systems approach) • Using self-interest (which led us to the unsustainability of current development logic) to solve the problems cannot yield viable results • That underneath all dimensions of sustainability the ethical dimension is critical because all other types depend on it
Hypothesis: DTPr SsDev iEtDev pDTPr pDTPr Et + DTP (iEt + DTP) pDTPr = SsDev
Proposed solution: • Change our conception of rationality from self-interest to conscientious rationality • Focus sustainability discourse towards ethical sustainability • Apply the ES principles of justice, ubuntu, capabilities, and integrity build sustainable political, economic and social systems plus processes.
Ethical foundation Ethics Social Ethics Ethics Economic Ethics Ethics Environment Ethics ETHICAL FABRIC
Defining ES • ethical sustainability (ES) refers to that foundational aspect of sustainability that focuses on i) ensuring the relevance of ethics thinking to sustainability discourse and ii) maintaining the ethical fabric on which to base the realization of sustainable systems and processes. • About i) sustaining the spheres of sustainability and ii) sustaining society’s ethical fabric.
Nature of Ethical sustainability A “scheme of complementary principles” Scheme = systematic plan or arrangement for attaining some particular object or putting a particular idea into effect. These principles include: i) justice, ii) ubuntu, iii) integrity and iv) capabilities. Applied to 1) theorization of sustainability 2) structures and individual action
Nature of ES… Principles of ES scheme are applied in 2 complimentary modes i) Mode 1: Ensuring sustainability that is ethical (re-defining ‘sustainable’) ii) Mode 2: Sustaining the ethical fabric itself (ethics denominators)
Mode 1: Ensuring sustainability that is ethical • Two aspects: i) theoretical ii) practical • Theoretical – undoing the impact of amoral naturalism and self-interest rationality (recognize irreducibility and others on planet) • Practical – ethicalization of the functionings of individuals and institutions (engendering ethical competence and capability within institutions and among individuals).
Mode 2: Sustaining the ethical fabric itself • Sustaining ethics denominators (basic tenets of the ethical-fabric that uphold all the other aspects of society such as business, education, and marriage, etc). • Done at two levels, • i) primary levels of ethical sustenance • ii) secondary levels of ethical sustenance
Principles of ES • Complementary ethical principles that would provide pillars for realization of ES • Justice • Ubuntu • Capabilities • Integrity • Principle = “general axiomatic statement from which particular decisions are drawn by a deductive process of reasoning. • But why use the “principle-approach”?
Why use the “principle-approach”? • There is criticism of this approach e.g. it produces “machine-like” moral decisions. • But principlism is not necessarily exclusive to the virtue approach. The virtue-approach necessarily turns into principles. • PA = neutral, pluralistic and all-embracing …the orderliness and relativity of application appeals to the practical-minded
Why choose these 4 principles 1) Applicability to a contractualist spatial political reality i.e. the EAC (Rawls’ theory of justice; in global justice thinkers e.g. Pogge). 2) Need to reverse-engineer the ethical impact of self-interest rationality & its influence on modern economism. (use Ubuntu to bring a sense of community) 3) Increase peoples’ ethical capabilities 4) Increase trust by people in the functionings of their institutions
Justice principle • Sustainability of political and social systems and processes requires justice. The disadvantaged would seek to destroy it; thus relevance of Rawl’s “justice as fairness”. • Is a contractualist and uses a distributive approach to justice; rational humans come together under the “veil of ignorance” and agree on certain principles to guide society
Justice… • Rawlsian principles: • i) equal liberty principle • Ii) difference principle • Iii) just saving principle (added later-1999v) • In The Law of Peoples (1999) he extends his theory to international relations; he laid out as agenda for the “…extension of a general social contract idea…” to [the international order] (p.4).
Justice… • Need to make Rawls applicable in resolving prob. of self-interest in contractual political and social systems (self-interested agents take advantage contractual systems). In economist assumptions this is termed “rationality” (error) • My view: change the underlying assumption of rationality from “self-interested rationality” to “conscientious rationality”. Rational ≠ selfishness • Rationality means being conscious and careful about existential support provided by nature and the ‘others’ around us
Ubuntu principle • Ubuntu is an African philosophy of humanity and community; it is a philosophy of becoming human, which encourages a holistic and inclusive view of all humans as those who share the same space and resources. • It promotes a spirit and logic of “community”; that can help sustain a contractual political or social arrangement. • But there is need to adapt it to political discourse and allow it to influence contemporary social realities.
Ubuntu… • Enables us realize and appreciate our interconnectedness as humans; thus promote the sustainability of our social and political systems and processes • A “conscientious rationality” is necessary in order to actualize ubuntu; it is important to acknowledge that other beings in nature and society support our existence but are not our competitors (as by Darwinian logic)
Capabilities principle • Generated by Amartya Sen and Martha Nussbaum to address failures and injustices of economistic approach to development. • CA is a theoretical framework for achieving human-centered well-being, development and justice. • Argues that, “…freedom to achieve well-being is a matter of what people are able to do and to be” • Built on: Functionings and Capabilities
Capabilities… • Functionings - various states of ‘beings’ and ‘doings’ • What the person is capable of being and doing • Capabilities - individual’s real freedom and opportunities to achieve functionings • Valuable opportunities from which a person can choose
Capabilities… • Serves as pillar of ES because: • CA is flexible enough to be applied in cultivating ethical capabilities in persons • Need for both intrinsic and extrinsic empowerment to be in position to contextualize their development • Assists in replacing the resourcist or trickle-down theories that are not sustainable
Integrity principle • Means wholesomeness in the consistence of character individually or collectively (i.e. being aligned to) in ethical virtues such as honesty, respect of life, truthfulness, transparency, accountability, etc • A society or institution that has not integrity is falling apart and is unsustainable.
Integrity… • It is a pillar of ES because: • Builds and increases trust of the persons and institutions in society (such as political systems and processes) • Builds character for public officers and ensure sustainability of their offices • However it needs to go beyond legalistic rhetoric of punishment and sanctions, etc to instead cultivate integrity by incentives
Conclusion All other forms of sustainability in society and planet depend on human conduct; therefore the ethical aspect of reality is more fundamental in ensuring sustainability. Ethical sustainability needs to be realized in order to have sustainable political and social systems and processes