Contents
| | 1 The concept of ecological justice | 1 |
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| | PART IHow to think about moral issues: universalist versus contextualist approaches | 11 |
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| | 2 The case for social constructivism considered | 13 |
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| | 3 Contextualist rather than universalist and rationalist morality? | 28 |
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| | PART IIThe case for the moral considerability of all organisms | 43 |
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| | 4 The restriction of moral status to sentient organisms | 45 |
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| | 5 The moral status of the non-sentient | 60 |
|
| | PART IIIThe case for ecological justice | 75 |
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| | 6 The concept of ecological justice: objections and replies | 77 |
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| | 7 Liberal theories of justice and the non-human | 95 |
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| | 8 Ecological justice and justice as impartiality | 110 |
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| | 9 Ecological justice and the non-sentient | 126 |
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| | 10 Ecological justice and the sentient | 140 |
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Publication information:
Book title: A Theory of Ecological Justice.
Contributors: Brian Baxter - Author.
Publisher: Routledge.
Place of publication: New York.
Publication year: 2004.
Page number: ix.
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