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9780262524445

Deliberative Environmental Politics

by ;
  • ISBN13:

    9780262524445

  • ISBN10:

    0262524449

  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2005-10-01
  • Publisher: Mit Pr
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Summary

In Deliberative Environmental Politics, Walter Baber and Robert Bartlett link political theory with the practice of environmental politics, arguing that the "deliberative turn" in democratic theory presents an opportunity to move beyond the policy stalemates of interest group liberalism and offers a foundation for reconciling rationality, strong democracy, and demanding environmentalism. Deliberative democracy, which presumes that the essence of democracy is deliberation-thoughtful and discursive public participation in decision making-rather than voting, interest aggregation, or rights, has the potential to produce more environmentally sound policy decisions and a more ecologically rational form of environmental governance. Baber and Bartlett defend deliberative democracy's relevance to environmental politics in the twenty-first century against criticisms from other theorists. They critically examine three major models for deliberative democracy-those of John Rawls, Jurgen Habermas, and advocates of full liberalism such as Amy Gutman, Dennis Thompson, and James Bohman-and analyze the implications of each of these approaches for ecologically rational environmental politics as well as for institutions, citizens, experts, and social movements. In order to establish that democracy is ecologically sustainable and that environmental protection can (and must) become a norm of culture rather than a mere fact of government, they argue, new models of ecological deliberation and deliberative environmentalism are required.

Author Biography

Walter F. Baber is Associate Professor in the Graduate Center for Public Policy and Administration, California State University, Long Beach Robert V. Bartlett is Associate Professor of Political Science at Purdue University

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix
1 Green Democracy, Ecological Rationality
1(14)
2 From Rationality to Reasonableness in Environmental Democracy
15(14)
3 Toward Environmental Democracy: Three Points of Departure
29(30)
4 Normative Precommitment in Environmental Politics and Policy
59(22)
5 Deliberative Environmental Democracy: From Public Sphere to Biosphere
81(20)
6 Environmental Governance and Full Liberalism
101(18)
7 Institutional Strategies for Advancing Deliberative Democratization
119(24)
8 Expertise, Adjudication, and the Redemption of Rhetoric
143(22)
9 Environmental Citizenship in a Deliberative Democracy
165(20)
10 Problematic Participants: Experts and Social Movements 185(18)
11 Reconciliation by Enlightenment: The Idols of the Mind 203(22)
12 Prolegomena (To Any Future Politics That Will Be Able to Come Forward as Postmetaphysical) 225(12)
Notes 237(6)
References 243(28)
Index 271

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