Discussing Harm without Harming

Environmental Ethics 42 (2):169-187 (2020)
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Abstract

While the disability community has long argued convincingly that disability is not a negative condition, academic and popular discourses on environmental justice routinely refer to disability as a prima facie harm to be avoided. This perpetuates the harms of ableism, and it is, furthermore, unnecessary in order to advance environmental justice. It is possible to demand an investigation into the state of an environment, to object to toxic environmental conditions and to hold polluting parties accountable without assuming any overall difference in value or desirability between disabled and non-disabled lives.

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Thomas Bretz
Utah Valley University

Citations of this work

Environmental Ethics: The State of the Question.Marion Hourdequin - 2021 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 59 (3):270-308.

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