This essay discusses the rise of "justice" as a central concept around which environmental thought and debates have been organized over the last thirty years, and briefly places the notions of environmental justice and multispecies justice into the more general context of theories of justice since John Rawls. It uses the case of the Ballona Wetlands Ecological Reserve in Los Angeles, whose future is hotly contested between different environmentalist groups, as a case study to illustrate the complex trade-offs that environmental decision-making currently confronts, and to suggest in what ways the invocation of multispecies justice changes the participants in the community of justice and the way in which their claims on humans' moral consideration should be weighed.
CITATION STYLE
Heise, U. K., & Christensen, J. (2020). Multispecies Justice in the Wetlands. Ecozon@: European Journal of Literature, Culture and Environment, 11(2), 169–177. https://doi.org/10.37536/ecozona.2020.11.2.3566
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