Sustainability ethics and the eco-feminist ethics of care

College

College of Liberal Arts

Department/Unit

Philosophy

Document Type

Article

Source Title

Journal of Dharma

Volume

38

Issue

2

First Page

131

Last Page

146

Publication Date

4-1-2013

Abstract

Sustainability ethics banks on the program of sustainable development. Sustainable development, however, is riddled with ambivalence (with the weak form or economic sustainability and the strong form or world sustainability) which renders its normative claim questionable. This paper brings into surface this ambivalence, critiques the weak form of sustainability as untenable and endorses strong sustainability substantiated by the principle of care in eco-feminist ethics. Using the ecofeminist practice and language of care, sustainability is challenged to take a serious turn to individual and collective accountability and political will that reinterprets the Biblical notion of rada (dominion) as a capacity to Care. The objective is to emphasize the viability of a sustainable world via the ethics of care and to mitigate the importance of economic or weak sustainability if we care to preserve our natural capital for generations to come. © 2013 Journal of Dharma: Dharmaram Journal of Religions and Philosophies (Dharmaram Vidya Kshetram, Bangalore).

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Disciplines

Applied Ethics

Keywords

Sustainable development—Moral and ethical aspects; Sustainability—Moral and ethical aspects; Ecofeminism; Solidarity

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