The Motivation Problem: Jamieson, Gardiner, and the Institutional Barriers to Climate Responsibility

Ethics, Policy and Environment 26 (3):387-405 (2023)
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Abstract

After decades of institutional failure to address climate change, the need for ethically-motivated collective action is clear. It is equally clear that this issue is not widely perceived as an ethical problem. As founders of climate ethics research, Dale Jamieson and Stephen Gardiner offer compelling accounts to explain why. Nevertheless, questions of ethical motivation in the face of institutional failure arguably mark an impasse in these otherwise essential contributions. This essay identifies the philosophical limits of Jamieson and Gardiner’s accounts of ethical motivation while advancing an alternative philosophy of motivation that reframes the institutional barriers to climate responsibility.

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