Sufficiency as a Value Standard: From Preferences to Needs

IF 1.5 Q4 ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES Ethics Policy & Environment Pub Date : 2023-10-23 DOI:10.1080/21550085.2023.2269055
Ian Gough
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It then turns to the planetary boundaries literature and utilizes a sequence of causal and normative reasoning to derive an operational ceiling and the concept of ungeneralisable luxuries. The final section addresses how the concepts of floors and ceilings might be operationalized via forms of dialogic democracy but noting the absence of any such institutions at the global level. Its policy conclusion is that a safe climate cannot be achieved through supply-side mitigation alone, and that fair demand-side mitigation necessarily requires a clear distinction between necessities and unnecessary luxuries, between which (hopefully) lies a space of sufficiency.KEYWORDS: Sufficiencyvalue theoryhuman needsplentary boundariesfloorsceilingsdemand-side mitigationsufficientarianismlimitarianism AcknowledgmentsThe research for this article was supported by an Emeritus Fellowship awarded by the Leverhulme Trust, titled ‘Valuing what matters: from efficiency to sufficiency’. I am most grateful for their support.Many thanks to Charlotte Rogers for valuable research assistance. I am grateful to many friends and colleagues who commented on earlier drafts including Richard Bärnthaler, Eric Beinhocker, George Boss, Sam Bowles, Oliver Carr, Anna Coote, Len Doyal, David Fell, Ben Fine, Fergus Green, Geoff Hodgson, Frank Nullmeier, John O’Neill, Ingrid Robeyns, Thomas Schramme and Julia Steinberger. There are also two anonymous referees.Apart from the initial conference in Bremen in late 2019 that forms the basis for this special issue, I have also gained much from presenting to other colloquia, notably the interdisciplinary workshop on “New Approaches to Normative Economics”, Oxford University, and (online) the interdisciplinary workshop on ‘What we Owe the Future: Needs, Capabilities, and Intergenerational Justice’, University of Graz, both in June 2022.Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1. Or of Sen’s capabilities – see Gough (Citation2015).2. I am grateful to George Boss for this clarification.3. The large literature includes Caney (Citation2012, Citation2018), Shue (Citation1993, Citation2014), Raworth (Citation2017), and Di Giulio and Fuchs (Citation2014). See also Schramme in this issue.4. To simplify the analysis, I analyze only climate mitigation here, not climate adaptation.5. For further reflections on the PB see Biermann and Kim (Citation2020), Ulrich Brand and 28 other scholars (Citation2021), and Alcott (Citation2022). These issues are revisited in Section 5.2 below.6. It is also important to note that the discussion below focuses on ‘protected needs’ where ‘governments and other collective actors have an obligation to provide the preconditions for their satisfaction’ (Di Giulio & Défila, Citation2021). As they note, some needs could not form a legitimate obligation of government or any collective organization, for example a need to be loved.7. Di Giulio and Defila (Citation2021) propose a ‘societal debate’ to operationalize the concept of consumption corridors in Switzerland. Building on the tradition of popular referenda, it proposes to simulate a deliberative form of politics by confronting a large representative sample of Swiss citizens with a series of polar opposing views on beliefs relevant to consumption corridors, such as enabling government to limit individual freedoms to achieve a ‘sufficiency strategy’. However, they recognize that the results may apply only to Switzerland, a country where the climate of political discourse is relatively consensual.8. 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Abstract

ABSTRACTThis paper outlines a conceptual framework for a sufficiency economy, defining sufficiency as the space between a generalizable notion of human wellbeing and ungeneralisable excess. It assumes an objective and universal concept of human needs to define a ‘floor’ and the concept of planetary boundaries to define a ‘ceiling’. This is set up as an alternative to the dominant preference satisfaction theory of value. It begins with a brief survey of the potential contributions of sufficientarianism and limitarianism to this endeavor before outlining a theory of objective, universal human need. This recognizes the contextual variable nature of need satisfiers and the distinct methodology required to adjudicate necessities. It then turns to the planetary boundaries literature and utilizes a sequence of causal and normative reasoning to derive an operational ceiling and the concept of ungeneralisable luxuries. The final section addresses how the concepts of floors and ceilings might be operationalized via forms of dialogic democracy but noting the absence of any such institutions at the global level. Its policy conclusion is that a safe climate cannot be achieved through supply-side mitigation alone, and that fair demand-side mitigation necessarily requires a clear distinction between necessities and unnecessary luxuries, between which (hopefully) lies a space of sufficiency.KEYWORDS: Sufficiencyvalue theoryhuman needsplentary boundariesfloorsceilingsdemand-side mitigationsufficientarianismlimitarianism AcknowledgmentsThe research for this article was supported by an Emeritus Fellowship awarded by the Leverhulme Trust, titled ‘Valuing what matters: from efficiency to sufficiency’. I am most grateful for their support.Many thanks to Charlotte Rogers for valuable research assistance. I am grateful to many friends and colleagues who commented on earlier drafts including Richard Bärnthaler, Eric Beinhocker, George Boss, Sam Bowles, Oliver Carr, Anna Coote, Len Doyal, David Fell, Ben Fine, Fergus Green, Geoff Hodgson, Frank Nullmeier, John O’Neill, Ingrid Robeyns, Thomas Schramme and Julia Steinberger. There are also two anonymous referees.Apart from the initial conference in Bremen in late 2019 that forms the basis for this special issue, I have also gained much from presenting to other colloquia, notably the interdisciplinary workshop on “New Approaches to Normative Economics”, Oxford University, and (online) the interdisciplinary workshop on ‘What we Owe the Future: Needs, Capabilities, and Intergenerational Justice’, University of Graz, both in June 2022.Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1. Or of Sen’s capabilities – see Gough (Citation2015).2. I am grateful to George Boss for this clarification.3. The large literature includes Caney (Citation2012, Citation2018), Shue (Citation1993, Citation2014), Raworth (Citation2017), and Di Giulio and Fuchs (Citation2014). See also Schramme in this issue.4. To simplify the analysis, I analyze only climate mitigation here, not climate adaptation.5. For further reflections on the PB see Biermann and Kim (Citation2020), Ulrich Brand and 28 other scholars (Citation2021), and Alcott (Citation2022). These issues are revisited in Section 5.2 below.6. It is also important to note that the discussion below focuses on ‘protected needs’ where ‘governments and other collective actors have an obligation to provide the preconditions for their satisfaction’ (Di Giulio & Défila, Citation2021). As they note, some needs could not form a legitimate obligation of government or any collective organization, for example a need to be loved.7. Di Giulio and Defila (Citation2021) propose a ‘societal debate’ to operationalize the concept of consumption corridors in Switzerland. Building on the tradition of popular referenda, it proposes to simulate a deliberative form of politics by confronting a large representative sample of Swiss citizens with a series of polar opposing views on beliefs relevant to consumption corridors, such as enabling government to limit individual freedoms to achieve a ‘sufficiency strategy’. However, they recognize that the results may apply only to Switzerland, a country where the climate of political discourse is relatively consensual.8. For example: a ban on high-emission vehicles by 2025; a mandate to display GHG emissions in all retail, consumer places and advertisements for brands; prohibiting the advertising of high GHG products; and limiting the use of heating and air conditioning in housing, public spaces and buildings, commercial and industrial buildings.Additional informationFundingThe work was supported by the Leverhulme Trust.
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充分性作为价值标准:从偏好到需求
摘要本文概述了一个充分性经济的概念框架,将充分性定义为人类福祉的一般概念和不可概括的过剩之间的空间。它以客观和普遍的人类需求概念来定义“地板”,以行星边界概念来定义“天花板”。这是作为主导偏好满足价值理论的替代理论而建立的。在概述客观的、普遍的人类需要理论之前,本文首先简要介绍了充分主义和限制主义对这一努力的潜在贡献。这承认需要满足者的上下文可变性质和判断需要的独特方法。然后,它转向行星边界文献,并利用一系列因果和规范推理来推导出操作上限和不可概括的奢侈品概念。最后一节讨论如何通过对话民主的形式来实施最低限度和最高限度的概念,但指出在全球一级没有任何这类机构。它的政策结论是,安全的气候不能仅仅通过供应方面的缓解来实现,而公平的需求方面的缓解必然需要明确区分必需品和不必要的奢侈品,(希望)两者之间有足够的空间。关键词:充分价值理论;人的需要;基本边界;限制;需求侧缓解;我非常感谢他们的支持。非常感谢Charlotte Rogers提供的宝贵的研究协助。我要感谢许多朋友和同事在早期的草稿中提出意见,包括Richard Bärnthaler、Eric Beinhocker、George Boss、Sam Bowles、Oliver Carr、Anna Coote、Len Doyal、David Fell、Ben Fine、Fergus Green、Geoff Hodgson、Frank Nullmeier、John O 'Neill、Ingrid Robeyns、Thomas Schramme和Julia Steinberger。还有两名匿名裁判。除了2019年底在不来梅举行的首次会议(该会议构成了本期特刊的基础)外,我还从其他座谈会上的演讲中获益良多,特别是牛津大学的“规范经济学新方法”跨学科研讨会,以及(在线)格拉茨大学的“我们对未来的亏欠:需求,能力和代际正义”跨学科研讨会,均于2022年6月举行。披露声明作者未报告潜在的利益冲突。或森的能力-见高夫(Citation2015)。我很感谢乔治·博斯的澄清。大型文献包括Caney (Citation2012, Citation2018)、Shue (Citation1993, Citation2014)、Raworth (Citation2017)和Di Giulio and Fuchs (Citation2014)。参见本期的Schramme。为了简化分析,我在这里只分析气候减缓,不分析气候适应。有关PB的进一步思考,请参阅Biermann和Kim (Citation2020), Ulrich Brand和其他28位学者(Citation2021)和Alcott (Citation2022)。这些问题将在下文第5.2节中重新讨论。同样重要的是要注意,下面的讨论侧重于“受保护的需求”,其中“政府和其他集体行为者有义务为满足这些需求提供先决条件”(Di Giulio和d fila, Citation2021)。正如他们所指出的,有些需要不能构成政府或任何集体组织的合法义务,例如需要被爱。Di Giulio和Defila (Citation2021)提出了一场“社会辩论”,以在瑞士实施消费走廊的概念。在全民公决传统的基础上,它提议模拟一种审议形式的政治,通过面对大量具有代表性的瑞士公民样本,他们对与消费走廊相关的信念持有一系列截然相反的观点,例如允许政府限制个人自由以实现“充足战略”。但是,他们认识到,结果可能只适用于瑞士,因为该国的政治讨论气氛是相对一致的。例如:到2025年禁止高排放车辆;要求在所有零售、消费场所和品牌广告中显示温室气体排放量;禁止高温室气体产品广告;限制在住房、公共空间和建筑、商业和工业建筑中使用暖气和空调。这项工作得到了Leverhulme信托基金的支持。
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来源期刊
Ethics Policy & Environment
Ethics Policy & Environment ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES-
CiteScore
2.30
自引率
10.00%
发文量
32
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